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Phonics

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Title: Phonics


1
Phonics Phonemic Awareness
  • Dr. Peterson

2
Four Cueing Systems
  • English language is made up of four systems
    together these systems make communication
    possible.
  • Children and adults use all four systems
    simultaneously as they read, write, listen, and
    talk.
  • Priority and use can vary by person
  • Beginning readers rely on phonological
  • Four Cueing Systems
  • Phonological sound system
  • Syntactic structural system
  • Semantic meaning system
  • Pragmatic social or cultural use system

3
Four Cueing Systems
  • Phonological
  • Phoneme smallest unit of sound
  • Grapheme written expression of a phoneme using
    one or more letters
  • Phonological awareness knowledge about the sound
    and structure of words phoneme, onset-rime,
    syllable level
  • Phonemic awareness the ability to manipulate the
    sounds in words orally
  • Phonics instruction about the phoneme-grapheme
    correspondence and spelling rules

4
Four Cueing Systems
  • Syntactic system
  • Syntax structure or grammar of a sentence
  • Morpheme smallest meaningful unit of language
    (i.e., base word or root word)
  • Free morpheme a morpheme that can stand alone
    (e.g., color)
  • Bound morpheme a morpheme that must be attached
    to a free morpheme (e.g., -ing, -ed, -er, and
    pre-. )
  • color -less colorless
  • Free bound word

5
Four Cueing Systems
  • Semantic System
  • Semantics meaning
  • Synonyms words that mean the same or nearly the
    same thing
  • Antonyms words that are opposites
  • Homonyms words that sound alike but are spelled
    differently

6
Four Cueing Systems
  • Pragmatic
  • Function purpose for which a person uses
    language
  • Standard English the form of English used in
    textbooks and television newscasters
  • Nonstandard English other forms of English

7
Phonemic Awareness
  • Definition
  • The ability to hear, identify, and manipulate
    individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words.
  • Phonemes
  • Smallest part of spoken language that makes a
    difference in the meaning of words.
  • 44 phonemes
  • Examples
  • If (has two phonemes /I/ /f/)
  • Check (has three phonemes /ch/ /e/ /k/

8
Phonemic Awareness Includes
  • Sound Matching Recognizing which words in a set
    of words begin with the same sound.
  • Bell, boy, bat
  • Sound Isolation Isolating and saying the first
    or last sound in a word.
  • Dog begins with the sound /d/
  • Sound Blending Combining or blending the
    separate sounds in a word to say the word.
  • /m/ /a/ /p/ map
  • Segmentation Breaking or segmenting a word into
    its separate sounds.
  • Up /u/ /p/
  • Sound Addition Adding or changing sounds at the
    beginning, middle, or end of words.
  • Row, row, row your boat
  • Fow, fow, fow your boat

9
Phonics
  • Definition
  • Teaches children the relationships between the
    letters (graphemes) of written language and the
    individual sounds (phonemes) of spoken language.

A
apple
10
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Synthetic phonics
  • Teaching students explicitly to convert letters
    into sounds (phonemes) and then blend the sounds
    to form recognizable words.
  • Sounds and letters are taught in all positions of
    the words, but the emphasis is on
    all-through-the-word blending and segmenting from
    week one.
  • Learning the phonemes and their representative
    sounds
  • 44 phonemes
  • Learning to read words using sound blending
  • Reading stories featuring the words the students
    have learned to sound out

c
a
t



cat
11
44 Phonemes
  • Consonants (25)
  • /b/ boy, rabbit
  • /ks/gz/ box exist
  • /c/k/ cat /key, duck, school
  • /ch/ chip, watch
  • /d/ dog, ladder
  • /f/ fish, coffee, photo, tough
  • /g/ gate, egg, ghost
  • /h/ hat, whole
  • /j/ jet, giant, cage, bridge
  • /l/ lip, bell, sample
  • /m/ man, hammer, comb
  • /n/ nut, dinner, knee, gnat
  • /ng/ ring, sink
  • /p/ pan, happy
  • /kw/ queen
  • /r/ rat, cherry, write
  • /s/ sun, dress, house, city, mice
  • /sh/ ship, mission, station, chef
  • Vowels (19)
  • /a/ mat
  • /ae/ ape, baby, rain, tray, they, eight
  • /air/ square, bear
  • /ar/ jar, fast
  • /e/ peg, bread
  • /ee/ sweet, me, beach, key, pony
  • /i/ pig, wanted
  • /ie/ kite, wild, light, fly
  • /o/ log, want
  • /oe/ bone, cold, boat, snow
  • /oi/ coin, boy,
  • /oo/ book, would, put
  • /ow/ down, house
  • /or/ fork, ball, sauce, law,
  • /u/ plug, glove
  • /ur/ burn, teacher, work, first
  • /ue/ blue, moon, screw, tune
  • /uh/ (schwa) button, computer, hidden, doctor

12
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Analytic phonics
  • Teaching students to analyze letter-sound
    relationships in previously learned words to
    avoid pronouncing sounds in isolation.
  • Studying sounds within the context of the
    whole-word
  • The /c/ /see/ is the sound heard at the beginning
    of /cat/.

13
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Analogy-based phonics
  • Teaching students unfamiliar words by analogy to
    known words (recognizing words with the same
    rime).
  • Use parts of word families they know to identify
    words they dont know that have similar parts.
  • Example
  • ick brick, sick, tick
  • ump stump, dump, lump

14
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Phonics through spelling
  • Teaching students to segment words into phonemes
    and to select letters for those phonemes.
  • Teaching students to spell phonemically

15
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Embedded phonics
  • Teaching students phonics skills by embedding
    phonics instruction in text reading, a more
    implicit approach that relies to some extent on
    incidental learning
  • Whole-language approach
  • Letter sound relationships taught during the
    reading of text.

16
Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Onset-rime phonics instruction
  • Synonymous with analogy phonics (recognizing
    words with the same rime and changing the onset)
  • Identify the sound of the letter or letters
    before the first vowel (onset) in a one-syllable
    word and the sound of the remaining part of the
    word (rime).

17
Onsets and Rimes
  • Onsets
  • Definition the consonant sound, if any, that
    precedes the rime.
  • Rime
  • Definition vowel and consonants that follow the
    onset.
  • Example
  • /b/ /-at/

Onset
Rime
18
Consonants
  • Phonemes are classified as either consonants or
    vowels.
  • Consonants

19
Vowels
  • Remaining five letters
  • A, E, I, O, U,
  • Sometimes y
  • Happy
  • Baby
  • Sometimes w (vowel combination)
  • Bow
  • Snow

20
Phonics Generalizations Rules
21
Phonics Generalizations
  • Hard G
  • Game
  • Soft G
  • Giant

22
Phonics Generalizations
car
  • ar
  • er
  • ir
  • or
  • ur

sir
paper
turn
for
23
Phonics Generalizations
  • -igh
  • When /gh/ follows /i/ the /i/ is long and the
    /gh/ is silent.
  • Kn- and Wr-
  • In words beginning with kn-
  • and wr- the first letter is
  • pronounced.

SHHH! Quiet!
24
Phonics Generalizations
  • CV these words have a long vowel sound.
  • CVC these words have a short vowel sound.
  • CVVC these words have the long vowel sound of
    the first vowel.
  • CVCe these words have the long vowel sound of
    the middle vowel and the e is silent.

seat
so
met
me
take
25
Vowel Digraph
  • Combination of two or three vowels in the same
    syllable that make one single sound.
  • Mail
  • Heal
  • Caught
  • Drew
  • Few
  • Boot
  • Cook
  • Cough
  • Rough

26
Vowel Diphthong
  • Represented by two vowels in the same syllable
    that combine to make a sliding sound.
  • Boil
  • Boy
  • Cow
  • Couch

27
Schwa Uh
  • In multi-syllable words, often the unaccented
    syllable, contains a vowel sound that sounds like
    uh.
  • Ability
  • America
  • Indelibly
  • Medium

28
Consonant Digraph
  • Combination of consonants that make a new
    consonant sound.
  • th
  • wh
  • sh
  • ch
  • ph

29
Consonant Blends
  • Combination of consonants in which you hear both
    consonants.
  • bl
  • cl
  • str
  • dr

30
Irregular
  • Word that looks like it ought to fit a phonetic
    pattern, but sounds like something else.
  • head
  • have
  • Which phonics generalizations purely by sight
    would you say that these two words should fit?
  • CV
  • CVC
  • CVVC
  • CVCe

High Crime Words
31
Syllabic Generalizations
  • Most prefixes and suffixes form separate
    syllables (-ing, -er, re-, un-)
  • Compound words are usually separate syllables
  • When two consonants appear between two vowels,
    the word generally divides between them win-ter,
    con-cept. Digraphs are not split broth-er,
    with-er
  • When one consonant appears between two vowels, it
    often becomes a part of the syllable on the
    right ma-jor, e-vil. Some exceptions sev-en,
    wag-on.
  • The letters le at the end of a word are usually
    combined with a preceding consonant to create a
    separate syllable crad-le, ma-ple
  • A limited number of words split between two
    vowels i-de-a, di-al

It is not necessary for students to divide the
word exactly right, which is a highly technical
process. All that matters is whether the
students are able to arrive at the approximate
pronunciation by decoding an unfamiliar word into
its syllabic parts and then combining the parts
into a whole.
32
Multisyllabic Patterns
  • Easy affixes play-ing, quick-ly
  • Compound words base-ball, any-one
  • Closed-syllable words rab-bit, let-ter
  • Open-syllable words ba-by, ti-ny
  • e marker words es-cape, do-nate
  • Vowel digraph words a-gree, sea-son
  • Other patterns cir-cle, sir-loin

Refer to Table 4.12 page 221-223 Gunning text for
other patterns and examples.
33
Teaching Phonics to ELL
  • Be Aware of Similarities Differences Between
    English Native Language
  • Determine Degree of Literacy in Native Language
  • Help with Sounds Not Present in Native Language
  • Enlist Help of ESL Teacher
  • Build on What Students Know

34
Scope and Sequence
  • High-Frequency Initial Consonants
  • High-Frequency Short Vowel Patterns
  • Consonant Digraphs
  • More Short Vowel Patterns
  • Consonant Clusters
  • Long Vowels
  • Final e
  • Digraphs
  • Other Vowels and R Vowels

What do you teach first?
35
How Words Are Read
  • Predicted
  • Sounded Out
  • Chunked
  • Read by Analogy
  • Recognized Immediately

36
Reinforcement
  • Childrens Books
  • Sorting
  • Games
  • Software
  • Rhymes
  • Word Wall
  • Word Building
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