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An introduction to phonics
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Phonics at a glance phonics is skills of segmentation and blending knowledge of the alphabetic code +
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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
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Phonemes and graphemes phoneme smallest unit of sound in a word grapheme a letter or sequence of letters that represents a phoneme Terminology
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Phonemes and graphemes Phonemes are represented by graphemes. A grapheme may consist of one (t), two (kn) or more letters (igh). A phoneme can be spelled in more than one way cat, kennel, sock. The same grapheme may represent more than one phoneme me, met.
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Enunciation Teaching phonics requires a technical skill in enunciation Phonemes should be articulated clearly and precisely Letters and sounds DVD Phase 3
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Letters and phonemes Letters: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Some of the 140 (approx.) letter combinations illustrated within words: cat, look, would, put, peg, bread, cart, fast, pig, wanted, burn, first, term, heard, work, log, want, torn, door, warn, plug, love, haul, law, call, pain, day, gate, station, wooden, circus, sister, sweet, heat, thief, these, down, shout, tried, light, my, shine, mind, coin, boy, road, blow, bone, cold, stairs, bear, hare, moon, blue, grew, tune, fear, beer, here, baby, sun, mouse, city, science, dog, tap, field, photo, van, game, was, hat, where, judge, giant, barge, yes, cook, quick, mix, Chris, zebra, please, is, lamb, then, monkey, comb, thin, nut, knife, gnat, chip, watch, paper, ship, mission, chef, rabbit, wrong, treasure, ring, sink. Phonemes: /b/ /d/ /f/ /g/ /h/ /j/ /k/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /p/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /v/ /w/ /wh/ /qu/ /y/ /z/ /th/ /th/ /ch/ /sh/ /zh/ /ng/ /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/ /ae/ /ee/ /ie/ /oe/ /ue/ /oo/ /ar/ /ur/ /or/ /au/ /er/ /ow/ /oi/ /air/ /ear/
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Some definitions Digraph: Two letters, which make one phoneme. A consonant digraph contains 2 consonants: shckthll A vowel digraph contains at least one vowel: ai ee ar oy Trigraph: Three letters, which make one phoneme. 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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Phonics and Spelling My spelling is Wobbly. It's good spelling but it Wobbles, and the letters get in the wrong places ORTHOGRAPHY The science of spelling by the eye instead of the ear.
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‘ss’ at the end of a word Double ‘ss’ appears at the end of a word when: …a short vowel is in the middle of a one-syllable word. aeiou massmessmissmossfuss lassdresskissloss grassBesshissboss guessRoss Jesstoss less Tess bus gasyesthispus
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Why has ‘think’ got a ‘k’ at the end and not ‘ck’ or ‘c’? ‘k’ sound is preceded by a consonant eg. ‘nk’, ‘sk’ ‘ck’ is always preceded by a vowel ducksocknecklockrocktick kickpeckracksickclockshock
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123 cat bird fish knight These words each have three phonemes (separate sounds). Each of these phonemes is represented by a grapheme.
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Sound buttons rainbright witchslaughter
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speedcrayon slighttoast broomfoil
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speedcrayon slighttoast broomfoil
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Using a Phoneme frame
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Segmenting WORDPHONEMES bleed creed deed speed weed greed
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Segmenting WORDPHONEMES bleedbleed creedcreed deeddeed speedspeed weedweed greedgreed
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CVC words - some points to note…
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Words sometimes wrongly identified as CVC bow few saw her
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Words sometimes wrongly identified as CVC bow few saw her
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CVC words containing consonant digraphs ll ss ff zz hill, mess, puff, fizz sh ch th wh ship, chat, thin, whip ng qu ck sing, quick
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pig chick church car boydown curl wheel thorn for daydear head shirt CVC words – clarifying some misunderstandings
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pigchick churchcar boydown curlwheel thornfor daydear headshirt
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Examples of: CCVC, CVCC, CCCVC and CCVCC b l a ck s t r ea m c c v cc c c v c f ou n db l a n k c v c cc c v c c
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Teaching the split digraph tietime treethese toetone cuecube ?aecave
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Which of these words contain a split digraph? time made spike have come bride some shine
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Which of these words contain a split digraph? time made spike have come bride some shine
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Direct teaching of phonics
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Developing phonics learning across a week Every day – direct teaching of phonics At least once a week – Guided reading Once a week minimum – Guided writing
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Every day Children are provided with: Opportunities throughout the day to engage in independently in speaking, listening, reading and writing activities across the curriculum Interactive multi-sensory phonics session Session led by the practitioner of shared reading and / or shared writing Opportunities to hear a wide-ranging selection of stories, poems, rhymes and non-fiction
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Model for daily teaching of phonics skills and knowledge REVIST AND REVIEW recently and previously learned phoneme-grapheme correspondences, and blending and segmenting skills as appropriate TEACH new phoneme-grapheme correspondences; skills of blending and segmenting PRACTISE new phoneme-grapheme correspondences; skills of blending and segmenting APPLY new knowledge and skills while reading/writing
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