phonics for parents

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Phonics for Parents. Why phonics?. Not the only way, but the most effective way for most children to learn to read Breaks it down into learnable chunks Systematic. Rose Review of Early Reading 2006 Found that: Speaking and listening skills are essential as a basis for reading and writing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Phonics for Phonics for ParentsParents

Phonics for Phonics for ParentsParents

Why phonics?

• Not the only way, but the most effective way for most children to learn to read

• Breaks it down into learnable chunks

• Systematic

Rose Review of Early Reading 2006

Found that:• Speaking and listening skills are essential as a

basis for reading and writing• Children learn best in a broad and rich language

environment

Recommended that:• Systematic discrete phonic work to teach

accurate and fluent reading• Using phonics for spelling

How do we read a word we don’t know?

Antejentacular• Break it down• Sound it out• Use spelling patterns e.g. ‘ante’

(It means before breakfast!)

Phonemes and Graphemes

• Phonemes – sounds44 phonemes in the English language we learn the pure sounds (listen to the sounds on the next page)

• Graphemes – the letters representing each sound e.g. c ai igh

We start by learning one way of writing each sound

The 44 phonemes

/b/ /d/ /f/ /g/ /h/ /j/ /k/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /ng/

/p/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /v/ /w/ /y/ /z/ /th/ /th/ /ch/

/sh/ /zh/ /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/ /ae/ /ee/ /ie/ /oe/

/ue/ /oo/ /ar/ /ur/ /au/ /er/ /ow/ /oi/ /air/ /ear/ /ure/

Blending

c-u-p ‘blend’ them in the order in which

they are written to pronounce the word ‘cup’

Blend these words…

•drep•blom•gris

Segmenting

• ‘Chopping Up’ the word to spell it out

• The opposite of blending

Once children are good with single phonemes…

• digraphs – 2 letters that make one soundll ss zz oa ai

• trigraphs – 3 letters that make one soundigh dge

We use sound buttons to show the phonemes more clearly: f igh t

Segmenting Activity

• How many sound buttons would you need for these words?

• shelf• thick• sprint

Did you get it right?

• shelf = sh – e – l – f = 4 phonemes

• dress = th - i - ck = 3 phonemes

• sprint = s – p – r – i – n – t = 6 phonemes

Tricky words

• Words that are not phonically decodeable

e.g. was, the, I, said

• Some are ‘tricky’ to start with but can be decoded once we have learned the harder phonemes e.g. we

Each year group has a list of tricky words to learn

Letters and Sounds• Systematic daily phonics lessons• Keep practicing what we have learnt• Use what we have learnt in reading and

writing• Multisensory – songs, actions,

movements• Throughout KS1 and beyond

Keep on Speaking and Listening

• Explaining what you are doing• Listening to their thoughts• Modelling not correcting• Singing and saying rhymes• Sharing books• Retelling stories

Example of a phonic Reading Book

Reading

• Little and often• Daily if possible – a few minutes• Also continue reading to your

child regularly.

Writing

• Let them use as many sounds as they can hear

glgdeeloks

Once you have a grapheme for each

sound...

...You can have a go at anything!

‘antee dis establishment air ee anism’

‘sparkling, glitering, fierwirk!’

Thank you for listening!

• Any questions?

Useful websites

• www.bbc.co.uk/schools/parents

• www.jollylearning.co.uk/

• http://www.mrthornedoesphonics.com/

• http://www.starfall.com/n/levela/learn-to-read/play.htm?f

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