Welcome Phonics Workshop 3 rd November Spelling and reading is taught through phonics. What is phonics ? It is now a requirement that Reception.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Letters and Sounds Principles and Practice of High Quality Phonics
Advertisements

Richardson Endowed Primary School Letters and Sounds Information for Parents.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents 27/9/12.
Phonics Information.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents September 2013.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents Summer 2015 Welcome.
Letters and Sounds November 2012 HC On average how much more does a successful reader earn each year than an unsuccessful one?
Introduction to Phonics Words are made up from small units of sound called phonemes. Phonics teaches children to be able to listen carefully and identify.
Phonics and reading How is it taught?
 A statutory requirement  Daily  20 minutes high quality phonics provision.  Multisensory approach  4 phase approach:  Revisit and review  Teach.
Information for Parents November 2012
Information for Parents November 2011 Welcome
Letters and Sounds Workshop for parents
Information for Parents
So, what exactly is phonics? GPCs Blending Segmenting.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents September 2013.
+ Phonics Workshop Tuesday 20 th October Phonics at Little Melton Primary In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds phonics programme. Letters.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents Autumn 2015 Welcome.
Meadgate Primary School Thursday 22 nd October 2015 PHONICS TALK.
Letters and Sounds Phonics information for Parents October 2012.
6 th October In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education.
Letters and Sounds. Phonics is now taught for 20 mins per day, every day Some schools stream for phonics sessions in their key stages, or as a whole school.
Teaching your child to read Workshop for Parents
KS1 Spelling and Phonics Workshop Debden 27th November 2015
Phonics Workshop For Parents
Phonics Rusthall St. Paul’s CE School. Phonics Consists of: Identifying sounds in spoken words Identifying sounds in spoken words Recognising the common.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents February 2009.
Phonics Meeting for Foundation Stage parents Tuesday 10 th November 2015.
Phonics Information Evening A very warm welcome!.
Learning to read and write at Crowle CE First Information for Parents.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents January 2013.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents. Aims of the session: To increase understanding of what phonics is and the way it is taught. To inform about.
Year 1 Screening Check Wednesday 11 th May Aims   To know the context and background for the Y1 screening check   To be familiar with the structure.
Phonics Letters and Sounds Information for Parents.
Phonics Letters and Sounds
Phonics at a Glance.
Reading and spelling in KS1
Teaching and Learning Phonics at Queen Mary Avenue Infants
Barley Fields Primary School Phonics Workshop Thursday 22nd September
Phonics Meeting for parents
Teaching your child to read Workshop for Parents
Phonics At Broad Town CE Primary School Sept 2016
Phonics at Rugby Free Primary School
Phonics and Early Reading
Phonics and reading How is it taught?
Welcome to Reception.
PHONICS September 2013.
Phonics and Spellings Expectations.
Supporting reading and writing
Teaching Phonics through Letters and Sounds
Phonics Workshop 19th September 2017.
Phonics Workshop 26th September 2017.
Year 1 Phonics Parent Workshop
Wednesday 28th September 2016
Parent Phonics Workshop Thursday 16th November 15th January 2014
Miss Firth and Miss Green
Phonics Meeting for Parents 1
Welcome to Reception.
Phonics Meeting for Parents
Foundation Stage PhoNICS evening 2017
Year One Phonics Evening.
Finding Out About Phonics Workshop for Parents
Phun with Phonics!.
Foundation Stage PhoNICS evening 2018
KS1 Phonics 13th February 2019.
Phonics Workshop.
Summary of Phases Phase 1 (on-going) Phase 2 (recommended - 6 weeks)
Information for Parents & Carers Foundation Stage
Year One Phonics Evening.
Phonics Workshop 9th October 2019.
Presentation transcript:

Welcome Phonics Workshop 3 rd November 2016

Spelling and reading is taught through phonics. What is phonics ? It is now a requirement that Reception children are taught 20 minutes of letters and sounds per day. It is recommended that Year 1 and 2 children also receive 20 minutes per day.

Phonics and reading skills are taught in 6 different phases. These phases are set out in the ‘Letters and Sounds’ document.

Phonics at a glance Phonics is … Skills of segmentation and blending Knowledge of the alphabetic code +

Phonics consists of: Identifying sounds in spoken words Recognising the common spellings of each phoneme Blending phonemes into words for reading Segmenting words into phonemes for spelling

Phase 1 (Nursery) Show an awareness of rhyme and alliteration Distinguishing between sounds in the environment and phonemes Exploring and experimenting with sounds in words Discriminating speech sounds in words Beginning to orally blend and segment phonemes The phases explained

Phase 2 (Reception) Using common consonants and vowels Blending for reading and segmenting for spelling simple CVC words Understanding that words are constructed from phonemes and that phonemes are represented by graphemes

Letter Sets (phase 2) Set 1 – s, a, t, p Set 2 – i, n, m, d Set 3 – g, o, c, k Set 4 – ck, e, u, r Set 5 – h, b, f, ff, l, ll, ss

Teaching phonics requires a technical skill in enunciation Phonemes (sounds) should be articulated clearly and precisely Enunciation

Phase 3 (Reception) Knowing one grapheme for each of the 43 phonemes There are 43 phonemes in the English language!

Phase 3 cont. Reading and spelling a wide range of CVC words Using all letters and less frequent consonant digraphs and some long vowel phonemes

Graphemes: ear, air, ure, er, ar, or, ur, ow, oi, ai, ee, igh, oa, oo Consonant digraphs: ch, sh, th, ng Letter progression: Set 6 – j, v, w, x Set 7 – y, z, zz, qu

Phase 4 (Reception/Year 1) This is a consolidation unit. There are no new graphemes to learn. Reading and spelling of tricky words continues Segmenting adjacent consonants in words and applying this in spelling Blending adjacent consonants in words and applying this skill when reading unfamiliar texts.

Phase 5 (throughout Year 1) Reading phonetically decodable two-syllable and three- syllable words Using alternative ways of pronouncing and spelling the graphemes corresponding to the long vowel phonemes Spelling complex words using phonically plausible attempts

Graphemes: ay, ou, ie, ea, oy, ir, ue, aw, wh, ph, ew, oe, au, a-e, e-e, i-e, o-e, u-e Alternative graphemes for: i, o, c, g, u, ow, ie, ea, er, a, y, ch, ou

Phase 6 (Year 2 throughout) Recognising phonic irregularities and becoming more secure with less common grapheme-phoneme correspondences Applying phonic skills and knowledge to recognise and spell an increasing number of complex words.

Phase 6 cont. Introducing and teaching the past tense Investigating and learning how to add suffixes Teaching spelling long words Finding and learning the different bits in words.

In addition to this, each week the children learn ‘tricky’ spelling words (those that are not spelt phonetically) and key sight vocabulary. In the key sight word list there are 300 words to learn. (100 in Reception/Year1 and an additional 200 in Year 2)

The children always work within the phase that is appropriate to their level of learning. They are assessed regularly and grouped accordingly. Therefore the suggested model of year group and corresponding phase, does not always go hand in hand with the year group that your child is actually in.

Some definitions A phoneme This is the smallest unit of sound in a word How many phonemes can you hear in c a t ?

A grapheme These are the letters that represent the phoneme The grapheme could be 1 letter, 2 letters or more! We refer to these as sound buttons. t ai igh

Put the sound buttons under these words speedcrayon sighttoast broomfoil crawljumper

Phonemes are represented by graphemes A grapheme can consist of 1, 2 or more letters A phoneme can be represented / spelled in more than one way ( cat, kennel, choir) The same grapheme may represent more that one phoneme (me, met) This is where it gets tricky!

How many phonemes are in each of these words? WordPhonemes bleed flop cow jumper chair pencil bleed fl op cow jumper chair pencil

A phoneme you hear A grapheme you see A word always has the same number of phonemes and graphemes!

Digraph – 2 letters making one sound (ai, ee, oo) Trigraph – 3 letters making one sound (igh, dge) Split digraph – where the two letters are not adjacent (a-e, e-e) Grapheme key vocabulary

– Recognising the letter sounds in a written word. E.g. c-u-p sh-ee-p – Merging them into the correct order to pronounce the word cup and sheep Blending (for reading)

– Identifying individual sounds in a spoken word. E.g. h-i-ms-t-or-k and writing down letters for each sound (phoneme) to form the word him and stork Segmenting (for spelling)

Respond to your child’s comments and questions Tolerate interruption Sense when your child is tired Encourage / understand the personal / private conversation your child makes You are in the best position to make phonics a personally rich and rewarding experience. Parent Involvement

Phonic encounters at home need to be ENJOYABLE You might be worried because: You want fast progress Your child is taking a long time to learn the phonemes Your child is finding the tricky words hard Your child cannot blend words Your child loses interest quickly

HELP, ENCOURAGE, FACILITATE The main purpose is ENJOYMENT and SUCCESS Pour out praise with justification – find something to praise Use phrases like: Let’s try again Have another try Slow down Helping your child

Useful websites

Any Questions

Thank you for coming Phonics Workshop 3 rd November 2016