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St. James & St. John CE Primary School

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Presentation on theme: "St. James & St. John CE Primary School"— Presentation transcript:

1 St. James & St. John CE Primary School
Tuesday 5th February 2019 Phonics Workshop

2 Aims of the meeting What is Phonics? Key Terminology Assessment
How you can help at home Useful links

3 What is Phonics? Phonics is a method of teaching children to read by linking sounds and the symbols that represent them. Phonics teaches children to decode words by sounds rather than recognising whole words. There are 44 different sounds in the English language.

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5 Key Terminology Phoneme – smallest unit of sound (s/p/x).
Grapheme – symbols which represents a phoneme. Digraph - two vowels which make one sound (oa / oo / ee / ai). Trigraph - a group of three letters that makes a single sound ('igh' as in 'sigh’). Split digraph - a vowel sound has been split (slope, gripe, rage, huge). Sounding out - saying each sound within a word (‘r-e-d’) Blending - running the sounds in the word together to read the whole word.

6 How is Phonics assessed?
The Phonics screening check is a compulsory assessment that all children in Year 1 in England take. It is used to assess a students phonic decoding skills. To pass a student must correctly read around 32/40 words correctly. The 40 words in the check are split into sections progressing from simple word structures to trickier words often with more than 6 letters. The test contains a mixture of real and pseudo words. The test is administered by the class teacher on 1-1 basis.

7 Phonics Screening Week Timetable
The phonics screening test will take place during the week commencing Monday 10th June to Friday 14th June 2019. You will receive the results in the Summer Term. They are not published in a league table (like with KS1/KS2 SATS). They are shared with the LA (Local Authority).

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10 How can parents help? Saying sounds correctly – don’t add an ‘uh’ at the end of consonant sounds. Check with Miss Koltai if there are any particular areas that you should focus on at home to ensure that you are working together. Practice high frequency ‘tricky words’ – said/does/my etc. Read. Read. Read. Make it multisensory (Visual/Auditory/Kinesthetic). Celebrate success - keeping a word diary. Link it to handwriting. .

11 Useful Links How to pronounce each phoneme
Mr Thorne Phonics Play Past Papers Ruth Miskin List of high frequency words

12 Thank you for coming. Any questions?


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