Evaluation for 5.C.2c
Materials include a variety of activities and/or resources in Spanish for students to develop, practice, and reinforce (through cumulative review) their understanding of applying letter-sound correspondence to decode one syllable and multisyllable words in isolation and authentic Spanish decodable connected text. (S)
The materials do not include a variety of activities or resources in Spanish for students to develop, practice, and reinforce their understanding of applying letter–sound correspondence to decode multisyllable words in isolation and authentic Spanish decodable connected text through cumulative review. The materials in the OnoPro Oralidad rimas, retahílas manual offer oral routines that promote phonological awareness, such as clapping syllables, producing rhymes, and playing with suffixes. However, these are conducted entirely through oral language without written decoding practice. For example, in the activity Sol solecito, students recite a rhyme as a group, but there is no task requiring them to decode the words or connect syllables to graphemes. Similarly, in the song "Debajo de un botón," students repeat the syllables "ton, ton" and "tin, tin" while following the rhythm with a maraca or similar instrument. Although this builds syllabic awareness, it does not engage students in decoding or applying letter–sound correspondence. In the "OnoPro Cartilla de lectura," the materials organize words by increasing syllable complexity, such as ma, me, mi, memo, mimo, and mimoso, and by phoneme sequence, starting with vowels and simple consonants like m, s, and l. However, all tasks are limited to reading isolated word lists. Routines like Tome turnos and Asegúrese focus only on taking turns reading words aloud, not on applying phonics skills in meaningful or connected text.