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Published byKelly Watts Modified over 9 years ago
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Phonics Guide Year 1
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Read this to your partner. I pug h fintle bim litchen. Wigh ar wea dueing thiss? Ie feall sstewppide!
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Some definitions A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a word. C-u-pc-a-td-o-g
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Count the phonemes How many phonemes can you count in the following words? Mask Car Jumper Language Communication Success
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Some definitions Grapheme Letter(s) representing a phoneme taiigh
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Some definitions Blending Recognising the letter sounds in a written word, for example c-u-p, and merging or synthesising them in the order in which they are written to pronounce the word ‘cup’.
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Some definitions Oral blending Hearing a series of spoken sounds and merging them together to make a spoken word – no text is used. For example, when a teacher calls out ‘b-u-s’, the children say ‘bus’. This skill is usually taught before blending and reading printed words.
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Some definitions Segmenting Identifying the individual sounds in a spoken word (e.g. h-i-m) and writing down or manipulating letters for each sound to form the word ‘him’.
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Some definitions Digraph Two letters, which make one sound A consonant digraph contains two consonants shckthll A vowel digraph contains at least one vowel ai ee ar oy
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Some definitions Trigraph Three letters, which make one sound igh dge
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Some definitions Split digraph A digraph in which the two letters are not adjacent (e.g. make).
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CVC Words C consonant phoneme V vowel phoneme Cconsonant phoneme
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Words sometimes wrongly identified as CVC bow few saw her Why are these words not CVC words? Discuss.
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Consonant digraphs ll ss ff zz hill pufffizz sh ch th wh shipchat thin ck ng qu x fox singquick
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p i gs h e e p s h i p c a r b o yc o w f i l l w h i p s o n gf o r d a ym i s s w h i z zh u f f CVC words – clarifying some misunderstandings
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p i gc h i c k s h i p c a r X b o y Xc o w X f i l l w h i p s o n gf o r X d a y Xm i s s w h i z zhuff
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ll ss ff zz ck fill misswhizz huff chick Why do these words end in double letters?
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Examples of CCVC, CVCC, CCCVC and CCVCC b l a c ks t r o ng c c v c c c c v c f e l tb l a n k c v c cc c v c c
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A segmenting activity
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s s
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s l l s
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s l i il s
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s l i p il sp
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Segment these words into their constituent phonemes: shelf dress think string sprint flick
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Segmenting WORDPHONEMES shelf dress think string sprint flick
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Segmenting WORDPHONEMES shelfshelf dressdress thinkthink stringstring sprintsprint flickflick
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A basic principle The same phoneme can be represented in more than one way: burn first term heard work
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A basic principle meatbread hebed bearhear cowlow
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The same phoneme can be represented in more than one way aa-eaiayeyeigh ee-eeaeey ii-eieighy oo-eoaoeow uu-eueooew oououl owouough oioy ara oraworeaough airareear eerear
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High frequency words The majority of high frequency words are phonically regular. Some exceptions – for example the and was – should be directly taught.
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