Rooting for new meaning
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Deepa Bharath
Learning about the capricious ways of the English language can be
fascinating and frustrating at the same time.
Students in Jaymi Ropp’s fourth-grade language arts class at Davis
Elementary School in Costa Mesa learned all about discovering the
intricacies of root words and phonetics Monday morning.
Ropp wrote down four words on the board: spectrum, spectacle,
inspect and spectator.
It didn’t take the students long to figure out the common part to
all four words -- “spect.” Easy enough.
“What are these words called?” Ropp asked.
She gave them a hint to make it a little easier.
“It grows at the bottom of a tree trunk,” she said with a smile.
A bevy of hands went up in the air.
“Root words,” student Autumn Robinson said.
Then Ropp wrote four more words: resign, signal and signature.
They spotted the root word, “sign,” and said the words aloud.
“How many thought the word signal should be pronounced like
‘sinal’?” she asked.
A couple of hands went up.
“Yeah, it’s tricky,” the teacher said. “The word sign is
pronounced like sine, but the word signal is pronounced differently.”
Ropp repeated the word with an emphasis on the “g.”
She then handed out sheets of paper with words containing “sign”
or “spect” in them and asked students to underline or circle when
they saw either of those.
The different exercises help students to understand the words,
their meanings and pronunciation, Ropp said after class.
“The tricky part about the English language is that there are so
many exceptions to the rule,” she said. “It takes a lot of repetition
and exposure to words to understand them better.”
Most of the students in the class speak another language,
primarily Spanish, at home, Ropp said.
“So it’s important to increase their exposure to words and their
roots to give them a better understanding of the language,” she said.
“It also helps improve their conversational skills.”
The challenge to the teacher is finding different ways to present
the material, Ropp said.
“Just explaining isn’t going to cut it,” she said. “We use
pictures, sometimes bodily actions, and just find many different ways
of attacking a word.”
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