what is phonics? phonics is recommended as the first strategy that children should be taught in...
TRANSCRIPT
What is Phonics?
• Phonics is recommended as the first strategy that children
should be taught in helping them learn to read.
• Words are made up from small units of sound called phonemes.
• Phonics teaches children to be able to listen carefully and
identify the phonemes that make up each word. This helps
children to learn to read words and to spell words using the
corresponding graphemes (GPCs).
What’s the problem?
humptydumpty saton the wallhumptydumpty ranto the hall
The Alphabetic Code
How many letters in the alphabet?
26
How many speech sounds (phonemes) make up the English language?
44
Why is phonics so important?
• It is very important that we teach phonics early on, clearly and
systematically to enable children to learn to read and to spell.
• The English written language is basically a kind of a code.
• Teaching phonics is just teaching children to crack that code.
• Children learn the simple bits first and then easily progress to
get the hang of the trickier bits.
So what do we do?
• We use the phonics scheme ‘Letters and Sounds’ which is the
government recommended scheme.
• It was created by the Department of Education in order to develop
children’s phonic knowledge and skills with the aim of making children
competent readers by the age of seven.
• We also use the ‘Jolly Phonics’ scheme and resources to support the
teaching of the sounds.
• We will be learning four sounds a week and on a Friday we will have a
catch-up/review day.
Phonics Lessons• Our Phonics lessons take place each morning for twenty minutes.
• We introduce a new letter sound through an action.
• The children are taught the letter sounds, rather than the letter
names to prevent them getting muddled. (Once their letter
sounds are secure, they can be introduced to the letter names
later on in Phase 3).
• Children will also learn a song that reinforces the letter sound
being taught.
Phase 2
• The purpose of this phase is to teach at least 19 letters.• This phase moves children on from oral blending and segmentation to blending and segmenting with letters. • By the end of the phase many children should be able to read
some VC and CVC words and to spell them either using magnetic letters or by writing the letters on paper or on whiteboards. • During the phase they will be introduced to reading two-
syllable words and simple captions. • They will also learn to read some high-frequency and
‘tricky’ words.
Letter Sound Groups
Set 1: s a t pSet 2: i n m dSet 3: g o c kSet 4: ck e u rSet 5: h b f, ff l, ll ss
• The first group of letters contains sounds that can be
put together to make many simple, three letter words.
• E.g. sat, pin, tin, tip, sit, pat, pit, nip, sip, sap, nap, tap…
• Notice how /c/ is introduced relatively early on. This is
because its letter formation is the basis for several
others – /d, o, g, q/. If the children know how to write /c/,
it will help them write the others more accurately.
Lesson Structure Introduction
Objectives and criteria for success
Revisit and review
Teach
Practise
Apply
Assess learning against criteria
Practise previously learned letters
Practise oral blending and
segmentationTeach a new letter
Teach blending and/or segmentation with
lettersTeach one or two tricky words
Practise reading and/or spelling words
with the new letter Read or write a caption (with the teacher) using one or more high-frequency words and words containing the new letter
Actions to support…
• Children will be shown the grapheme that goes with the phoneme we
are learning.
• We also teach them an action to perform when saying the sound.
• We say the sound and do the action at the same time.
Songs in Jolly Phonics
• We will also play the children a song for the phoneme they are learning.
• We sing this several times with them and perform the actions alongside
it.
• Learning these songs is a fun way to reinforce the sound they have just
learnt.
Phase 3
• The purpose of this phase is to teach another 25 graphemes, most of them comprising two letters (e.g. oa), so the children can represent each of about 42 phonemes by a grapheme. • Children also continue to practise CVC blending and segmentation in this phase and will apply their knowledge of blending and segmenting to reading and spelling simple two-syllable words and captions. • They will learn letter names during this phase, learn to read
some more tricky words and also begin to learn to spell some of these words.
Letter Sound Groups
• 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
Digraphs and Trigraphs
• Another thing to notice is that in Phase 3 there are letter
sounds made from two letters, called ‘digraphs’. There are
also sounds made from three letters, called ‘trigraphs’.
• These come later because they are slightly harder to learn,
but they are very important to learn. Many common words
will be unavailable to the children if they don’t know the
digraphs and trigraphs – such as ‘lunch’!
Lesson StructureIntroduction
Objectives and criteria for success
Revisit and review
Teach
Practise
Apply
Assess learning against criteria
Practise previously learned letters or graphemes Teach new graphemesTeach one or two tricky
words
Practise blending and reading words
with a new GPC
Practise segmenting and spelling
words with a new GPC Read or write a caption or sentence using one or more tricky words and words containing the graphemes
Phase 4
• Towards the end of the year we will be moving on into Phase 4 of letters and sounds.• 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 milk.
BlendingBlending is a process of saying the sounds in the word and then running
them together to make the word. There are two types of blending:
• Oral Blending - This involves hearing phonemes and being able to
merge them together to make a word. Children need to develop this skill
before they will be able to blend written words.
• Blending- This involves looking at a written word, looking at each
grapheme and using knowledge of the grapheme-phoneme
correspondence to work out which phoneme each grapheme represents.
Then merging these phonemes together to make a word. This is the
basis of reading.
Blending
c-a-t catth-i-ck thicks-qu-e-l-ch squelch
Segmenting
There are also two types of segmenting:
• Oral Segmenting - This is the act of hearing a whole word and then
splitting it up into the phonemes that make it. Children need to develop
this skill before they will be able to segment words to spell them.
• Segmenting - This involves hearing a word, splitting it up into the
phonemes that make it, using knowledge of grapheme-phoneme
correspondence to work out which graphemes represent those
phonemes and then writing those graphemes down in the right order.
This is the basis of spelling.
Segmenting
cat c-a-tthick th-i-cksquelch s-qu-e-l-ch
High Frequency Words
• High frequency words are quite simply those words which
occur most frequently in writing, for example, "and", "the",
"as" and "it". They are often words that have little meaning
on their own, but they do contribute a great deal to the
meaning of a sentence. Some of the high frequency words
can be sounded out using basic phonic rules, e.g. "it" is an
easy word to read using phonics.
Tricky Words
• However, there are many common words that cannot be sounded out
so easily.
• For example, ‘the’ cannot be sounded out correctly.
• Tricky words are taught to children by getting them to sound-talk the
word, and then find the tricky sounds. These are the parts of the
word where the spelling does not correspond to the sounds they hear.
• Reading the word regularly and practising this will help children to
remember these tricky words.
• Tricky words will be sent home once we start to introduce these.
Alternative Spellings
• Some sounds can have more than one spelling.
• Children are initially only taught one way to spell some sounds such
as ‘ai’.
• Although there are alternative ways of spelling the same sound it is
easier for children to learn one way of spelling a sound and then when
they have mastered it, they can begin to learn the alternative ways –
e.g. ‘ay’.
• Being able to read words with the alternatives exposes the children to
a much wider vocabulary and will help them later on in their spelling.
Sound Sheets in Jolly Phonics• The children will each be given a sound sheet for the sound they have
been learning that day.
• On it there is a picture to remind them of the action for that sound which
they can colour in.
• They have to trace the letters on the line and then try to draw the letters
on their own.
• The sheet shows the child where the letter starts and how they should
draw it.
• On the back of the sheet, an adult draws the letter for the children to
trace over three times in different colours.
What can you do to help?• It is very important that children are using pure sounds.
• Becoming familiar with how the sounds should be said will be one of the most
important things that you can do in supporting your child.
• Mr Thorne does phonics.
• Playing games with phonics is also a really good way of engaging children.
• www.phonicsplay.co.uk www.bbc.co.uk/schools
• www.ictgames.com www.letters-and-sounds.com
• Most importantly, sharing lots of books and encouraging children to use their phonics
knowledge.
• Other text sources – reading labels, signs, anything that might engage your child!
Sound Books• You will soon have a sound book sent home with your child in their book bag –
just look for the bright pink book!
• Each week, the new sounds they are learning will be added.
• They are put in so that you can see what sounds they have learnt that week and
practise with them at home.
• Each sheet explains the actions that have been taught to go alongside the sound.
• There are also some words from the picture and story so they can recognise the
sound in words.
• I will also have put in some letter formation practise examples.
Any questions?