Monday, May 26, 2025

COR - The Components of Reading - Part 3 - Cognitive Flexibility


COGNITIVE FLEXIBILITY

Continuing our series on COR Instruction, where we highlight the activities explored in the HOT ROD activity books, this month’s topic is Cognitive Flexibility.


What is Cognitive Flexibility?


Cognitive flexibility is an important executive function skill that centers on the ability to switch between different types of information. It can involve switching between different tasks or thinking about more than one concept at a time. Working memory is an important element of cognitive flexibility that helps a person manage more than one task, concept, or piece of information simultaneously. It impacts reading, writing, spelling, and more.


How Cognitive Flexibility Impacts Reading


Specific to reading, cognitive flexibility is essential for both decoding and comprehension. Students need cognitive flexibility to hold different possible pronunciations for a letter or combination of letters in mind while decoding unfamiliar words. At the same time, they must consider the word’s meaning. Working memory enables a reader to compare the possible pronunciations of a word with words in their lexicon (internal dictionary). While figuring out how to pronounce the word and determining what it means, a reader must also keep the rest of the sentence in mind. The content and structure of the sentence will also affect the word's meaning. If a word has multiple meanings, cognitive flexibility is required to hold the possible options in short-term memory while making judgments about the best fit within the context of the sentence and paragraph.


While many tasks help develop cognitive flexibility, few directly relate to reading and decoding. The activities developed for the HOT ROD (Higher Order Thinking through the Reading Of Decodables) activity books address executive function skills that directly relate to a structured literacy scope and sequence, as well as to the content found in our decodable stories. 


Students can work on cognitive flexibility by sorting words that belong to two different categories simultaneously. If you and your students are tired of the same old word card drills, consider spicing up your routine by incorporating Cognitive Flexibility games. The easiest way to understand how these games work is to explore one of them with your students.


Free Level 3 Game


The game above was part of a research project completed by me and Kelly Cartwright, Ph.D., last year that focused on open and closed syllables (long and short vowel sounds) in the first syllable of two-syllable words. Now that the study is over, the 8 different word sorts used in the study are available at Boom TM Learning. The first game is free HERE or at the link above, but you must open a free Boom account. The complete Bundle of 8 digital games is available for $5.99 HERE. It contains several target words from the Level 3 decodable book, The Raven Remix: A Mashup of Poe Titles.  Printable PDF copies of all 8 games may be found in The Raven Remix Activity Book: 50+ Activities and Games for Decoding, Reading Comprehension, Writing, and Speech. Both titles, as well as books for Levels 1 and 2, are available on Amazon or in the online STORE on our website.



The target words in the free online Boom game are from the Category Sort #1 from the activity book and include the categories of Foods and Objects.


This digital Boom Deck has three component parts:


1. First, students sort words into two categories (ex., Foods vs. Objects). 

2. Next, they sort the SAME cards into two different categories: Open vs. Closed Syllables (found in the first syllable of a word).

3.     Finally, students sort the same words on a 2x2 matrix in the Multiple

Classification Activity while considering all 4 categories at once.


The online Bundle of 8 digital Boom TM Learning games is available HERE for $5.99. If you participated in the research study, you should still be able to access these games for free. If that is not the case, please contact me at info@wordtravelpress.com. 


If you would like to receive future information about the study results when they are available, sign up for my newsletter HERE.


References:

Cartwright, K.B. (2023). Executive skills and reading comprehension: A guide for educators (Second Edition). New York, NY: Guilford Press. 


Tunmer, W.E., & Chapman, J.W. (2012). Does set for variability mediate the influence of vocabulary knowledge on the development of word recognition skills? Scientific Studies of Reading16(2), 122–140.


Vadasy, P.F., Sanders, E.A., Cartwright, K.B. (2022). Cognitive flexibility in beginning decoding and encoding. The Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk, in press.


Zipke, M. (2016). The importance of flexibility of pronunciation in learning to decode: A training study in set for variability. First Language. 36 (1), 71–86.


Monday, May 19, 2025

Up and Away - Five Fun First-Flight Facts


Today's Fun First-Flight Facts come from Up and Away: How Two Brothers Invented the Hot-Air Balloon. The talented Jason Henry wrote and illustrated this entertaining and information-packed picture book. It arrived last week, the day before my husband and I went on an impromptu quest to find a missing solar balloon. See last week's blog post, A Rogue Balloon and a Book for Mother's Day, for details of that adventure. 

I'm working on a book of poems about inventions for my HOT ROD series (Higher Order Thinking through the Reading of Decodables), which led me to research hot air balloons. See the titles in the sidebar of this blog or visit my website at https://www.wordtravelpress.com to learn more about decodable books and how to work with emerging readers. 

Up and Away is the type of narrative non-fiction picture book I used to share with upper elementary and middle school students when I worked as an SLP in the public schools. The text is written at an advanced level. It also includes rich vocabulary and concepts like what the discovery of science was like in the mid-1700s when the Montgolfier brothers first experimented with the idea that hot air might be able to lift a flying machine into the air.

I don't want to spoil the story, so I will share a few interesting facts from the narrative and leave you to investigate this delightful book on your own.

#1 - A hot-air balloon, the very first flying machine, was launched in 1783. That's 120 years before the Wright brothers' historic flight at Kitty HawkJoseph and Etienne Montgolfier demonstrated the first recorded flight of the inflatable globe they called an aerostat in the town square near their home in Annonay, France, on June 4, 1783. They asked officials to record the date so no one else could claim credit. 

#2 - King Louis XVI heard about the invention and invited Etienne Montgolfier to show off their invention at the palace in Versailles. Louis and Marie Antoinette invited thousands of people to attend the demonstration that would occur on September 19, 1783. 

#3 - The Montgolfier brothers owned a paper-making factory and decided to cover their experimental balloon in wallpaper. Ettiene Montgolfier asked his friend, Jean-Baptiste Reveillon, a famous wallpaper designer, to embellish the new aerostat for the demonstration at the palace. He covered the taffeta fabric with beautiful royal blue and gold wallpaper. The king's signature, two interlocking Ls, was part of the design. The balloon was named the Aerostat Reveillon. (NOTE: The balloon below was made in October. The September version did not have the faces in gold, but did have the interlocking letter L pattern.)

#4 - The Montgolfier balloon was destroyed in the rain, and the historic flight at Versailles almost had to be cancelled.  Wallpaper may seem like an unlikely choice to use to cover a balloon heated over an open fire, but it was actually rain that proved to be more problematic. While Etienne and Reveillon were doing a test run of their new balloon just days before they were supposed to take it to Versailles, a rainstorm destroyed the paper covering the taffeta fabric. Their balloon was ruined. But all's well that ends well. They got rid of the paper, started from scratch, and this time they covered the taffeta in varnish. They worked day and completed the new design in four days. 

#5 - The very first hot-air balloon passengers were a sheep, a rooster, and a duck. That may seem like an odd combination, but there was a good reason for those choices. Flying was dangerous, and no one knew how the human body would react to being at such a high altitude. The Montgolfiers' father had made the brothers swear that they would not go up in the balloon. A sheep was chosen because it was a mammal of about the same weight as a small man. The duck was expected to be fine, since ducks can fly at significant heights, and the rooster was questionable, since it was a bird that usually stayed near the ground. They all survived, and according to some stories, they got to spend the rest of their days at the king's menagerie in Versailles.

Stay tuned for more fun balloon facts coming later this month. I'm obviously spending a lot of time researching a subject for the purpose of writing one decodable poem. You may wonder why? Content matters. For a deeper discussion of why content learning is so important, check out Natalie Wexler's book, The Knowledge Gap: The Hidden Cause of America's Broken Education System and How to Fix It.


So, the next time you do a balloon-making project, talk about balloons, or even just bring balloons into your classroom or home for an event, remember the history and science behind the hot-air balloon and take a teachable moment to talk to your kids about this fun and exciting precursor to human flight. Also, make sure your library has the book Up and Away.

Check out my books at https://www.wordtravelpress.com/
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Sunday, May 11, 2025

A ROGUE BALLOON AND A BOOK FOR MOTHER'S DAY

This Mother's Day weekend we went on an adventure in the oil fields of Texas that could have been an episode of Landman. It all started with a hunt for a rogue solar balloon.

A friend texted Tom to say he had a strange request. A friend of this friend launched a solar weather balloon from the Albuquerque Balloon Park with a group of middle school students on Friday, and the balloon went rogue. It ended up 400+ miles southeast and from the GPS coordinates appeared to have landed outside Greenwood, Texas. We were in Midland, TX, about an hour away, so he asked if we knew someone who could look for it. 

Naturally, we volunteered.


Surprisingly, the mapping program took us right to the balloon, even though we had to drive through about 15 miles on unmarked oil field/ranch roads past numerous oil pump jacks and tank batteries. 



Fortunately, we didn't encounter any rattlesnakes. It is that time of year.


Once we found the balloon and the parachute, we had to untangle them from the mesquite bush they had landed in. Then we had another problem. The box with the expensive tracking device and camera was nowhere to be found. We had to look around for a bit. You'll never guess where it was!



Yep! It was tangled in an electric wire on a utility pole. 


Climbing poles and dealing with live electric wires was beyond our skill set, so we called for backup. While we waited, we picked pieces of balloon out of the mesquite bushes. We didn't want cows eating them. 


A man from the power company arrived a bit later, and he and Tom were able to get the box down. Yay!! In a couple of weeks, we will drive the contraption back to Albuquerque.


The funny thing is that I spent this last week researching hot air balloons for my new book. The working title is CORN CAKES TO CARS: POEMS ABOUT INVENTIONS. Did you know that the first balloon passengers weren't human? Three animals made the inaugural trip: a sheep, a duck, and a rooster. 

This past Thursday, I was on the website for the Albuquerque Balloon Museum at 
https://balloonmuseum.com/montgolfier-day/ researching the first hot air balloon flight. Friday, I got this book I ordered from Amazon - Up and Away: How Two Brothers Invented the Hot-Air Balloon. 


I haven't read it yet. I got a little distracted searching for the solar balloon this weekend, but stay tuned, and I will keep you posted about my thoughts on the picture book, the progress of my new poetry book, and anything I learn about the solar balloon we rescued this weekend. I'm still not sure what the experiment was about that all those middle school students were running, but I will find out and let you know.

By the way, the logo for my website is a hot air balloon. Check out my books at https://www.wordtravelpress.com/
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