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Introduction to Phonemic Awareness

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Title: Introduction to Phonemic Awareness


1
Introduction toPhonemic Awareness Phonics
2
I know how to spell S
  • E - S

3
Although a bit mixed up
  • Joseph had a beginning inkling that letters and
    sounds work together

4
Goal of Reading
  • We read for many purposes
  • We read to get meaning from the text (NRP)
  • Reading involves the manipulation of a complex
    reading process to get meaning

5
Interactive Model
  • Interactive Model of Reading

Prior knowledge, experiences, skills, strategies,
interest, purpose
Words, text and situation features,authors
message, assumptions about reader, difficulty
6
National Reading Panel
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonics
  • Fluency
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension

7
Miscue Analysis
  • Allows understanding of way reader is using
    phonics when reading in context
  • Different to reading word lists where reading in
    isolation
  • List miscues and look for patterns based on the
    phonics sequence

8
Phonemic Awareness
9
Talk with your neighbor What is Phonemic
Awareness?
10
First, lets define what were talking about
11
Phoneme
  • Smallest meaningful unit of sound in spoken
    language

12
Phonemes
  • /h/ /e/ /n/
  • hen

/b/ /l/ /e/ /n/ /d/
blend
speech
/s/ /p/ /e/ /ch/
knight
/n/ /i/ /t/
13
Phonemic Awareness
  • Understand howspoken languagecan be broken
    downinto individual sounds

14
Phonics
  • Understand howlettersrepresent speech sounds

15
Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonemes - smallest units of sound in a language
  • Phonemes 44 phonemes in English
  • Phonemic Awareness is the aural discrimination of
    phonemes
  • Hearing the sounds in words
  • A type of Phonological Awareness
  • Umbrella concept for different sound awareness
  • i.e. word, syllable, rhyme, phonemic awareness
    (Fox)
  • Different to Phonics which is letter-sound
    relationships (aural and visual)

16
Activity Understanding Phonemic Awareness
  • Read through the activity your group has been
    given
  • Prepare a 2 minute presentation to the class that
  • Describes the nature of the activity
  • Describes benefits and weaknesses of the activity
  • Determines if it is teaching students phonemic
    awareness

17
PA and phonics help readers
  • See the connection between what we say and what
    we read
  • Manipulate sounds and letters
  • Understand how words work in reading and spelling

18
Think of them as
  • The starter motorsof reading comprehension

19
Common Types of Phonemic Awareness
  • Isolating
  • Hear and isolate sounds in initial, medial or
    final positions in word (e.g. hear bat, ball and
    say bell)
  • Segmenting
  • Pronounce each phoneme in order as it occurs in
    word (hear bat and say b-a-t)
  • Blending
  • Combine phonemes to make a word (hear sh-ip and
    say ship)
  • Manipulating
  • Add or delete sounds in word to make new word
    (hear add a t to an and say ant replace the
    sound d in sad with a t and say sat)

20
PA (sounds)
Phonics (letters)
  • Beginning sound of dog is /d/
  • (isolation)
  • Beginning letter of dog is d

21
PA
Phonics
  • hat is /h/ /a/ /t/
  • (segmenting)
  • hat is spelled h-a-t

22
PA
Phonics
  • /d/ /o/ /g/ is dog
  • (blending)
  • d - o - g spells dog

23
PA
Phonics
  • Take off the last sound of cart and you get
    car
  • CART is spelled c-a-r-t

If you take off the t cart
  • (manupulation)

you get car
24
ELL Students
  • Each language has its own phonetic structure
  • E.g. None of the English short vowel sounds or
    the final blends are in Spanish
  • E.g. English has 15 vowel sounds and Spanish has
    5
  • Learn the differences (you students)
  • Differentiate Instruction

25
Early Literacy Profile
26
Areas of Emergent Literacy we will assess
  • Rhyme Awareness
  • Phonemic Awareness isolating sounds
  • Letter Recognition
  • We will leave Emergent Writing

27
Phonics
  • Called different things
  • Grapho-phonic cues
  • Letter-sound associations
  • Sound-symbol correspondences
  • All refer to students knowing the relationship
    between the letters (graphemes) of written
    language and the individual sounds (phonemes) of
    spoken language.

28
Goals of Phonics Instruction
  • To help children learn and use the alphabetic
    principle
  • Enables recognition of familiar words accurately
    and automatically
  • Enables "decoding of new words.

29
Research on Phonics Instruction
  • Improves K-1 word recognition and spelling
  • Improves reading comprehension
  • Effective for various social and economic groups
  • Beneficial for struggling readers
  • Most effective when introduced early
  • Is not an entire reading program

30
Use Three Approaches to Phonics Instruction
  • Embedded Phonics phonics skills learned by
    embedding phonics instruction in text reading.
  • Implicit and relies on incidental learning
  • Contextualized and meaningful
  • Analytic Phonics Teach students to analyze
    letter-sound relations in known whole words to
    detect patterns and split word into parts
  • Focus on whole to part (to whole) word reading
  • Avoids pronouncing sounds in isolation
  • Helps with non-decodable words
  • Synthetic PhonicsTeach students all sounds, then
    letters, then how to convert letters into sounds
    and then blend the sounds to form recognizable
    words.
  • Considered an isolated skills approach,
    decontextualized
  • Often uses multi-sensory approaches (e.g. clay)
  • Most often used for stalled readers

31
Sequence of Instruction
  • Lists differ slightly
  • Idea is to build from simple to complex
  • Single consonants (names and sounds order from
    front to back of mouth)
  • Short vowels (sounds of vowels as in cat, peg,
    bin)
  • Consonant Vowel Consonant words (CVC e.g. cab,
    pic, hen)
  • Beginning blends (CCVC e.g. bl, cl, sw, st)
  • Final blends (CVCC e.g. ink, ang, ump)
  • Beginning and end consonant digraphs (two
    consonants, one sound e.g. chip, sash)
  • Long vowels with silent e (names of vowels e.g.
    fade, joke)
  • Long vowels in Vowel diagraphs (two vowels, one
    sound, e.g. ai, ay, ea, ee, oa)
  • Dipthongs (two vowels, two sounds almost e.g.
    boil, hook, house)
  • Vowels controlled by r, l, and w (e.g. card,
    bird, bald, lawn, cow, flew)
  • See Handout for full sequencing
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