Transcript Slide 1

Catsfield
C of E Primary
School
Phonics for Parents
31.1.13
What is phonics?
Phonics is a way of teaching children to read quickly and
skillfully.
They are taught how to:
• recognise the sounds that each individual letter makes;
• identify the sounds that different combinations of letters make such as ‘sh’ or ‘oo’; and
• blend these sounds together from left to right to make a word.
Research shows that when phonics is taught in a structured
way - starting with the easiest sounds, progressing through to
the most complex - it’s the most effective way of teaching
young children to read. It’s particularly helpful for children
aged 5–7.
How is it taught?
• The children will have a daily multisensory
phonic session, which is normally up to
about 20 minutes
• This session is practical and enjoyable
• The children need to practise phonic skills
‘little and often’
Enunciating sounds
• Phonemes (the smallest unit of sound in a word) should be
articulated clearly and precisely
Blending and segmenting
• Blending: building words from their sounds in order to read
• Segmenting: breaking words down into their sounds to spell
c
a
t
Phase 1
• Discriminating between sounds
• Developing awareness of rhythm and rhyme
• Developing awareness of alliteration
• Exploring voice sounds
• Tuning into, listening to and talking about
sounds
• Orally blending and segmenting
Phase 2
the
to
I
no
go
Phase 3
he she we me be was
my you her they all are
What is a phoneme?
sat
shirt
moss
catch
train
caught
Phase 4
• Blending to read words with consonant clusters
• Segmenting to spell words with consonant clusters
frog
crab
chips
Phase 5
The same grapheme
can be pronounced in
different ways:
i fin, find
o hot, cold
c cat, cent
g got, giant
ow cow, bow
The same phoneme
can be represented in
more than one way:
burn
first
term
heard
work
Different ways to spell the same sounds
Best guesses
• The best guess is:
• You (usually) only get this in the
middle of the word:
• You (usually) only get this at the
end of a word:
• Not as common:
a_e
ai
ay
a eigh ey ei
What is the phonics screening
check?
• It helps your school confirm whether your child has
made the expected progress
• It happens in June in Year 1 and possibly Year 2
• Your child will sit with a teacher they know and be asked
to read 40 words aloud
• Some of the words they may have read before and some
words will be completely new to them
• The check normally takes just a few minutes to complete
and there is no time limit. If your child is struggling, the
teacher can easily stop the check. The check is carefully
designed not to be stressful for your child.
The check will contain a
mix of real words and
‘non-words’ (or ‘nonsense
words’). Your child will be
told before the check that
there will be non-words
that they will not have
seen before. Children will
be familiar with this
because schools already
use ‘non-words’ when they
teach phonics.
How to help at home
•
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Point out letters in signs when out and about
Talk about words seen in everyday life
Children need lots of experience of hearing and reading books
Children need to build a stock of rhymes through hearing them
repeated over and over again
Sing songs
Play letter games, such as ‘I Spy’
Make words with magnetic letters on the fridge
Play ‘Pairs’, turning over two words at a time trying to find a
matching pair
Write a shopping list together
Key messages
• Enunciate sounds carefully
• When children don’t know how to read a word – support them to say
and blend the sounds from left to right
• Try to make time to read with your child every day. Grandparents and
older brothers or sisters can help, too
• When children don’t know how to spell a word – support them to
‘sound it out’ and then choose the right letters
Foster a love of reading!
Sharing a book should be a
relaxed, exciting and special
experience
Glossary
Phoneme: the smallest unit of sound in a word
Grapheme: the letters representing a phoneme
Digraph: a two-letter grapheme where two letters
represent one sound e.g. ‘ea’ in seat
Trigraph: a three-letter grapheme where three
letters represent one sound e.g. ‘igh’ in night
Split digraph: has a letter that comes between the two letters in
the digraph, as in time and lime, where ’m’ separates the digraph
‘ie’
Websites
• http://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/Reading/
• http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/wordsandpictures/te
achers/
• http://www.phonicsplay.co.uk/freeIndex.htm
• http://www.letters-and-sounds.com/phase-2games.html
• http://www.kenttrustweb.org.uk/kentict/content/ga
mes/literacy_menu.html
• http://www.ictgames.com/letterlifter.html
• http://www.mrthorne.com/category/start/
• http://www.literacytrust.org.uk/sitemap_overview