Chapter Title - Emerson Alternative High School

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Transcript Chapter Title - Emerson Alternative High School

Chapter 6—Phonics
The aim of phonic instruction is to help children acquire
alphabetic knowledge and use it to read and spell words.
-EHRI 2004
Kendra McLaren
Doug McLaren
Table of Contents
• What?
– Slides 3-7
• Why?
– Slide 8
• When?
– Slide 9
• How?
– Slides 10-14
• Conclusion
– Slide 15
Click on ‘Slide’ to link
Quality Phonic Instruction
• Understand Alphabetical Principles
– Ability to decode words
• Incorporate Phonemic Awareness
– Introduce individual sounds and spellings
• Provide Sufficient Reading Practice
– Learning to read words
• Automatic Word Recognition
– Decode words quickly
• Part of Comprehensive Reading Program
– Phonics need to be used with vocabulary and comprehension
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Approaches to Quality Insruction
• Synthetic
– Letters → Sounds → Recognizable Word
• Analogy
– Using rimes of familiar words to identify and learn new words with
the same rime
• Analytic
– Using medial sound of familiar words to identify and learn new
words with same medial sound
• Embedded
– Using context, pictures, familiar word parts, and first/last letters of
words
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Instructional Techniques
Sequence for Teaching Phonics
MODEL
LEAD
•Single consonants & short vowels
•Consonant digraphs
•Long vowels with silent e (CVCe)
•Long vowels at end of words/syllables
•Y as a vowel
•R control vowels
•Silent consonants
•Vowel digraphs
•Variant vowel digraphs and dipthongs
Presentation Techniques
•Corrective Feedback
•Monitor Students
•Pace Students
•Signal Students
CHECK
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Decoding
• Blending Routines pp 181-182
–
–
–
–
Sound by Sound
Continuous
Whole Word
Spelling Focused
d
d o
d o g
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Word Work
• Word Sorting
– Calling attention to word elements pp 188
• Elkonin Boxes
– Segment words into sounds (manipulative)
• Word Building
– Experiment changing one letter of a word
• Dictation
– Sound by sound or whole word
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Why Phonics?
English is an alphabetic language; thus, knowing
how written letters represent spoken sounds gives
readers a systematic method of reading
unfamiliar words when they are encountered in
text.
Phonics is a means to aid in fluent reading and
writing.
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When to Teach
• Phonics should be implemented during
Kindergarten and 1st Grade when it exerts the
greatest impact.
• Use frequent assessment to ensure that phonic
instruction is appropriate. Phonic instruction
should change as students’ skills develop.
• When older students do not receive phonic
instruction, they struggle greatly. Remediation is
much more difficult than early instruction.
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Phonic Instruction
Strategy
•Letter-Sound
Review
•Review with students
that some letter names
can help to learn the
letter sounds.
Exceptions to this are:
h, y, w. Using pictures
is a great way to learn
these letters.
Teach/Model
•1.Connect picture to
letter sound 2. Copy
picture 3. Trace letter
and make into picture
4. Write letter and
connect to picture
name For example a
house for the letter h.
Follow-Up
•Before
introducing a new
sound, follow the
same steps as a
review.
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Phonic Instruction
Consonant
Digraphs
two letters making one sound
Short
Vowels
•Phonemic Awareness-display picture card with target
sound
•Teach/Model-print letters on board, say letters, model
sound, students repeat
•Guided Practice-teacher says words with digraphs,
students discriminate initial/final sounds of words
•Word Work-students use picture cards to discriminate
initial/final sounds
•Sound/Spelling-students identify sounds from digraph
chart
•Phonemic Awareness-students identify how many sounds
are in spoken words
•Teach/Model-print vowel on board, say letter, model
sounds, students repeat
•Guided Practice-teacher says words with vowel sound,
students discriminate initial/medial sound of words
•Word/Work-students use picture cards to discriminate
initial/medial sounds
•Sound/Spelling-students identify vowel sounds from letter
chart
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Phonic Instruction
CVC
Consonant Vowel Consonant
CCVC
Consonant Consonant Vowel
Consonant
•Phonemic Awareness-matching letter cards to
teacher led pictures for initial sound
•Teach/Model-model/lead/check sound by sound
blending
•Word Work-Elkonin Boxes with letters
•Example: m-a-p Teachers says word, we all
identify sounds in word, teacher puts m in first box
as sound is recognized by students; repeat with
remaining sounds/letters
•Phonemic Awareness-utilize ‘Say-It/Move-It’
boards to practice blending
•Teach/Model-model/lead/check continuous
blending
•Word Work-sound by sound dictation for
automaticity using white boards (print words)
•Example: s-l-a-m Teacher says words, we all blend
word, students write word, we all say and spell
word
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Phonic Instruction
CVCe
Consonant Vowel Consonant
followed by final e
Vowel
Combinations
•Phonemic Awareness-use picture cards to identify
if word has long or short vowel sound
•Teach/Model-mode/lead/check whole word
blending
•Word Work-students build words on white board
then change one consonant to make new word
(vowel/final e stays same)
•Example: mate→ make→ male→ sale→ save
•Phonemic Awareness-use letter cards to show
relationship between the letter name and vowel sound
in words
•Introduce-vowel combination
•Teach/Model-model/lead/check spelling-focused
blending
•Word Work-whole word dictation
•Example: teacher says word, students repeat, we all
blend word, students print word, teacher writes word
on board
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Phonic Instruction
Phonograms
Nonlinguistic term for rime
Reading
Decodable
Text
•Phonemic Awareness-students substitute one sound
for another to make new word (sock-lock)
•Introduce-write on board and describe
•Onset-Rime Blending-use magnetic letters to
identify letter patterns (might-sight)
•Word Work-students select phonogram and build
as many words as they can by adding onset to
phonogram
•Books or passages where most words are decodable
•Irregular Words-review previously taught irregular
words
•Example:
•Introduce book-identify title, author, illustrator and
browse book
•Read one page at a time as a whole group (whisper or
choral read)
•Students take turns reading
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Conclusion
• Phonic instruction is vital to help students learn to
read and spell words.
• Introduce to young students. Focus should be on
Kindergarten and 1st Grade.
• Model, lead, and check to ensure instruction is
appropriate and students are progressing.
• Phonic instruction does not need to be boring.
Keep it brisk and to the point. Make it fun for the
teacher and the students.
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