Phonics at Greenways Primary Academy

Slides:



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

Phonics.
Richardson Endowed Primary School Letters and Sounds Information for Parents.
Phonics Information.
How to help at home.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents September 2013.
Being able to read is the most important skill children will learn during their early schooling and has far- reaching implications for lifelong confidence.
Helping at Home Spring Term. Photo Story… Spring 1 Topic: Who Can I Ask for Help? Who can I ask for help at home? Who can I ask for help at school? What.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents Summer 2015 Welcome.
What is ‘Phonics’? Phonics is fun!. Phonics It is using the sounds (Phonemes) of our language to build words for speaking, reading and writing. PHONICS.
At Leavening Community Primary School Progression in reading.
Phonics. Letters and sounds is a six phase teaching programme which starts from Nursery and continues to be taught primarily within Key Stage 1 and within.
An introduction to Letters and Sounds
Ashby C of E Primary School Foundation Stage Foundation Stage Phonics Workshop.
Information for Parents
So, what exactly is phonics? GPCs Blending Segmenting.
Reading in School Reading is an important aspect of the curriculum. We encourage children to read for enjoyment and develop a love for books. The teaching.
Phonics Workshop 19th November 2013.
What is phonics? Phonics is recommended as the first strategy that children should be taught in helping them learn to read. It runs alongside other teaching.
October 2015 Ms V. Azhar (Key Stage 1 Department Leader and English Co-ordinator) Mrs L Johnson and Mrs R Gordon (Reading Recovery Trained Teacher)
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents Autumn 2015 Welcome.
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.
Phonics in the Foundation Stage. Phonics is... Phonics is a method for teaching reading and writing of the English language by developing learners' phonetic.
Teaching children to read – through Phonics 23 rd September 2014.
Learning to read and write at Crowle CE First Information for Parents.
Welcome to our Phonics and Reading workshop Mrs Chadwick Autumn 2015.
East Harling Primary School Letters and Sounds What is phonics? Phonics is the back-to-basics method of reading that teaches children to recognise the.
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.
Developing Phonics.
Phonics at a Glance.
Phonics.
Teaching children to read – through Phonics 23rd September 2015
Learning to read Phonics
Barley Fields Primary School Phonics Workshop Thursday 22nd September
Phonics Meeting for parents
Year 1 Phonics Screening.
Phonics workshop for Parents/Carers
Phonics Information Spring 2017
Fun with Phonics Tuesday 20th September 2016.
Barley Fields Primary School Phonics Workshop Monday 19th October
Phonics and Reading in Reception.
Phonics and Big Maths at Broughton Moor Primary School
Phonics Meeting January 2017.
Phonics for Parents 1st Feb
Teaching your child to read Workshop for Parents
Phonics At Broad Town CE Primary School Sept 2016
Letters and sounds is a six phase teaching programme.
Phonics EYFS and Year One Thursday 10th November 2016.
Parent’s guide to Phonics
Phonics Workshop for Parents September 2017
Teaching Phonics through Letters and Sounds
Phonics At Broad Town CE Primary School Sept 2017
Phonics Workshop Wednesday 3rd October 2018.
Phonics Meeting for Parents
Year One Phonics Evening.
Reading workshop Phonics Ms El-Azizi.
Phun with Phonics!.
Phonics Workshop 2nd May 2018.
Reading & Phonics Parental Workshop
KS1 Phonics 13th February 2019.
Phonics Workshop.
Progression in reading
Information about the Year One Phonics Screening Check
Phonics Workshop for Year 1 Parents Thursday 7th March 2019
Summary of Phases Phase 1 (on-going) Phase 2 (recommended - 6 weeks)
Information for Parents & Carers Foundation Stage
Year One Phonics Evening.
Presentation transcript:

Phonics at Greenways Primary Academy

Why teach phonics? The ability to read and write well is a vital skill for all children, paving the way for an enjoyable and successful school experience. Phonics helps children to develop good reading and spelling skills. For example, mat can be sounded out for reading and spelling.

How we teach phonics at Greenways Children in the Early Years and Key Stage 1 follow the synthetic phonics approach to learning phonics, using the ‘Letters and Sounds’ programme. It is an approach to teaching phonics in which sounds, (phonemes) made by individual letters or a combination of letters (graphemes), are blended and segmented to form words. Children in the Early Years also use ‘Jolly Phonics’ actions to support their learning of the different sounds. Here is an example of some Jolly Phonics songs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6P4cGVOHzE It is very important to use pure sounds – the sounds of the consonants without the added “uh” sound. For example, ‘m’ ‘a’ ‘t’ not ‘muh’ ‘a’ ‘tuh’.

Phase 1 Phase One of Letters and Sounds concentrates on developing children's speaking and listening skills and lays the foundations for the phonic work which starts in Phase 2. The emphasis during Phase 1 is to get children attuned to the sounds around them and ready to begin developing oral blending and segmenting skills.

Phase 2 In Phase 2, letters and their sounds are introduced one at a time. A set of letters is taught each week, in the following sequence: 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 As soon as each set of letters is introduced, children will be encouraged to use their knowledge of the letter sounds to blend and sound out words.

Blending Recognising the letter sounds in a written word, for example r-a-g sh-i-p Segmenting ‘Chopping’ up the word to spell it out. Identifying the individual sounds in spoken words, for example d-o-g r-ai-n

Phase 3 By the time they reach Phase 3, children will already be able to blend and segment words containing the 19 letters taught in Phase 2. Set 6: j, v, w, x Set 7: y, z, zz, qu Consonant digraphs: ch, sh, th, ng Vowel digraphs: ai, ee, igh, oa, oo, ar, or, ur, ow, oi, ear, air, ure, er

Phase 4 In Phase 4, no new graphemes are introduced. The main aim of this phase is to consolidate the children's knowledge and to help them learn to read and spell words which have adjacent consonants, such as trap, string and milk.

Phase 5 When children reach phase 5 children will already be able to read and spell words such as trap, string and flask. In phase 5, children will learn more graphemes and phonemes. They will already know ai as in rain, but now they will be introduced to ay as is in day and a-e as in make. During phase 5, the children will continue to look at tricky words (which can’t yet be decoded) for example people, their, called.

Phase 6 By the beginning of Phase Six, children should know most of the common grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCSs). They should be able to read hundreds of words, doing this in three ways: Reading the words automatically if they are very familiar; Decoding them quickly and silently because their sounding and blending routine is now well established; Decoding them aloud. Children’s spelling should be phonemically accurate, although it my still be a little unconventional at times . Spelling usually lags behind reading, as it is harder. During this phase, children become fluent readers and increasingly accurate spellers.

Reading At this stage many children will be reading longer and less familiar texts independently and with increasing fluency. The shift from learning to read to reading to learn takes place and children read for information and pleasure. Children need to learn some of the rarer GPCs and be able to use them accurately in their reading. In Phase Six, many children will be able to read texts of several hundred words fluently at their first attempt. Those children who are less fluent may benefit from reading shorter texts several times, not in order to memorise texts, but to become more familiar with at least some of the words that cause them to stumble, and to begin to experience what fluent reading feels like

Reading To become successful readers, children must understand what they read. They need to learn a range of comprehensive strategies and should be encouraged to reflect upon their own understanding and learning. Such an approach, which starts at the earliest stages, gathers momentum as children develop their fluency. Children need to be taught to beyond literal interpretation and recall, to explore the greater complexities of texts through inference and deduction. Over time they need to develop self-regulated comprehension strategies: Activating prior knowledge; Clarifying meanings – with focus on vocabulary work; Generating questions, interrogating the text; Constructing mental images during reading; Summarising

Spelling In phase 6, children need to be taught : Introducing and teaching the past tense – the past tense dealt with in this section is simple past tense, e.g I looked, not continuous past tense e.g I was looking. Investigating and learning how to add suffixes – to reinforce understanding and application of the –ed suffix for the past tense. Teaching spelling long words – to investigate how adding suffixes and prefixes changes words. Finding and learning the difficult bits in words – to help children learn high-frequency and topic words by developing their ability to identify the potentially difficult element or elements in a word (e.g the double tt in getting, the unusual spelling of /oo/, and the unaccented vowel I in beautiful).

Terminology Phoneme: The smallest unit of sound. It is the sound and not the letter. We dot a phoneme underneath. Grapheme: The representation of a sound. Diagraph: Two letters that make one sound, such as ‘ch’, ‘sh’, ‘oa’ Trigraph: Three letters that make one sound, as in ‘ear’, ‘air’, ‘igh

High Frequency Words Common Exception Words Within lessons we teach the children high frequency words. These are words that appear most often in print. Common Exception Words Children are also taught to read and spell ‘common exception’ words – also known as ‘tricky words.’ These are words with spellings that are unusual and not decodable. These include the words ‘to’, ‘was’ and ‘said’.

Pseudo Words Pseudo words also known as ‘nonsense’ or ‘alien words’ are made up words where different phonic sounds are put together. Keri

Phonics Screening Test All the children will take part in the government phonics screening test. They will read a set of 40 words 20 real words and 20 pseudo words. The children are familiar with the pseudo words with them being used regularly during phonics lessons. The children will recognise the format of the assessment as they will have seen the format during the year to ensure they feel comfortable during the screening test week.

Useful website addresses and apps Phonics Websites www.phonicsplay.co.uk http://www.topmarks.co.uk/interactive.aspx?cat=40 http://www.letters-and-sounds.com/ http://jollylearning.co.uk/gallery/ http://www.crickweb.co.uk/ http://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/Reading/ Phonics Apps Reading eggs Hairy letters Mr Thorne does phonics