Showing posts with label Phonics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phonics. Show all posts

Friday 18 April 2008

Teaching the alternative spellings of /air/




Thank you to Suem who wrote this little story for my year one/twos. Click on the image to open it. Right click and save to your computer. Insert into a word document.

Read the story to the children and get them to raise their hands each time they hear the /air/ sound. Then give children copies of the story for them to read and to underline each word with the /air/ sound. Children to shout out the words whilst you write them on the whiteboard into the different spelling patterns.




Thursday 17 April 2008

Poetry to teach phonics

Hurt no living thing
Christina Rossetti

I like to use poetry if I can when teaching phonics. I found this poem on the internet and made it into a poster.

It has all the different spellings for the /ur/ sound.

Photobucket

Thursday 3 April 2008

Segment the words


Click on the image to open it. Right click and save to your computer. Insert into a word document set for landscape. Stretch to fit. Print out and then laminate. Use with children to practise segmenting words. Write the word at the side and children to split it into phonemes.

Tuesday 1 April 2008

Letters and Sounds Phase 5

A collection of links for phase 5 of Letters and Sounds. I will keep adding to these links as I find resources. If anyone knows of any other ones then please leave a comment after this post.


Standards site pdf
Planning sheets
Phase 5 tricky word bingo
Choose the right answer
Yes and No questions
Sentence substitution
Alternative pronunciation
Brenden's resources

To teach the alternative spellings of /air/

Click here for lesson plan and resources

To teach the alternative spellings of /ai/

Click here for lesson plan and resources

Buried treasure interactive game

Click here.
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Monday 24 March 2008

g y confusion

Charlie has requested a poster to help a child who gets confused over g and y. Her idea was to have the g with a football to make it look like a goal. Here are a couple of posters to try and address that problem.







Sunday 23 March 2008

b d p q confusion

Children often get these letters the wrong way round when first learning to read and write. Also some children continue to do this well into their education at school. Here are a few posters and ideas that might help these children. I found these on the internet

b d poster
b d p q posters
b d p q posters and ideas

Some nice ideas from posters from the SEN TES forum I got this idea from Old Senco on that thread. I photographed my daughter's hands so thank you to my daughter.


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Vee had just sent me this game just click the link. Thank you Vee!
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Virtual word dice

Great for blending for reading. Type in the words you are working on. Great for IWB.

Word Dice
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Thursday 20 March 2008

Saturday 15 March 2008

Letters and Sounds Phase 3

Some links and resources for phase 3 of 'Letters and Sounds'

You will have to go through the long vowel worksheets to find the sound you are working on. Use the synopsis of 'Letters and Sounds' to find the sounds you need for phase 3.

Phase 3 pdf
Planning sheets and resources
Phase 3 sound buttons interactive
Brenden's resources
Long vowel worksheets/activities
Lots of long vowel worksheets
Parents handout covering phase 2 and 3
Word lists

Interactive game

click here

Friday 14 March 2008

Letters and Sounds synopsis of the phases 1 - 5

This is a synopsis of phases 1 - 5 from the Sounds ~ write website. A very useful document to have.

Click here

I just found another useful synopsis of the Letters and Sounds document

Click here

This is useful for all phases

Phoneme checker

Friday 7 March 2008

Poetry for kids rhyming dictionary online

I just love this site. Fantastic for writing poetry or even finding lists for phonics lessons.

Click here

Saturday 23 February 2008

Phonics glossary

Glossary of terms
The following terms and their definitions have been taken from Jim Rose's (2005) Independent Review of the Teaching of Early Reading - Interim Report.

blend (vb) — to draw individual sounds together to pronounce a word, e.g. s-n-a-p, blended together, reads snap
cluster — two (or three) letters making two (or three) sounds, e.g. the first three letters of 'straight' are a consonant cluster
(vowel) digraph — two letters making one sound, e.g. sh, ch, th, ph. Vowel digraphs comprise two vowels which, together, make one sound, e.g. ai, oo, ow
split digraph — two letters, split, making one sound, e.g. a-e as in make or i-e in site
grapheme — a letter or a group of letters representing one sound, e.g. sh, ch, igh, ough (as in 'though')
grapheme-phoneme correspondence (GPC) — the relationship between sounds and the letters which represent those sounds; also known as 'letter-sound correspondences'
mnemonic — a device for memorising and recalling something, such as a snake shaped like the letter 'S'
phoneme — the smallest single identifiable sound, e.g. the letters 'sh' represent just one sound, but 'sp' represents two (/s/ and /p/)
segment (vb) — to split up a word into its individual phonemes in order to spell it, e.g. the word 'cat' has three phonemes: /c/, /a/, /t/
VC, CVC, CCVC — the abbreviations for vowel-consonant, consonant-vowel-consonant, consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant, and are used to describe the order of letters in words, e.g. am, Sam, slam.

Another very useful glossary from the Jelly and Bean website

Jelly and Bean glossary

Magic 'e' or split digraph

What is the best way to teach the split digraphs?
I personally like teaching them as split digraphs rather than magic e.

Here is a little drama I made up with inspiration from people from the HLTA forum

To teach the split digraph i_e

Once upon a time there was a letter and his name was 'i' [Child with a big laminated i on his chest] and he met up with a letter called 'e' (another child with an 'e') and they held hands and went for a walk. (Children go for a walk)

Now 'i' loved telling people his name (ask child his name) but 'e' wouldnt talk at all. (Ask child his name but child wont talk) He was soooo quiet. One day a little consonant came along and he was a very naughty consonant because he wouldnt say his name, (another child with 'p') he just kept making a sound p, p, p he wanted to join 'i' and his friend 'e' so he went up to them and held hands. So p and ie went for a walk...(ASK THE CHILDREN TO BLEND 'pie')

Suddenly another very very naughty consonant arrived and he wanted to join in. He wouldn't say his name either he just kept saying llllllll. (Another child with 'l' on his chest). Now 'l' wanted to go for a walk too but he didnt want to go at the end next to the 'e' who wouldnt talk so he went up to the 'ie' and he made them step apart ...he split them up and he squeezed inbetween them.

Now ask each child in turn their name....first one says 'p' second says 'I' third one says 'l' and last one wont talk. What is the word? PILE.

Now give children some more smaller cards to make some more split digraph words.mile, tile, mine, wine, etc Have plenty of words and plenty of letters to enable them to do this ( you could use magnetic letters)

Another one I did a few years ago for 'magic e' was to make a magic e wizzard/witch hat with a wand and a big e stuck on the end. I had lots of cvc words that would convert to the long vowel sound. I made some little laminated frogs and stars and children won the stars if they were right and managed to read the cvc and then the word with the 'e' on the end and they got turned into a frog if they read it wrong. They all loved this!

How about this? A bit of retro tv

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-Gq17O-HRc

Friday 8 February 2008

Phonics International

http://www.phonicsinternational.com/

Debbie Hepplewhite's International Online Synthetic Phonics Programme

Download the first unit for free

Well worth a look!

Sunday 3 February 2008

Handwriting Alphabet



Paste into a word document, stretch to fit, print, laminate and use for practising letters.

Count the phonemes


I made this for my Letters and Sounds group. Say a word and children have to break it down into the phonemes. I copied it, laminated it and children write on it with a dry wipe pen.
You could just use it as a worksheet, at least this way you have a record of how children are progressing.
How do you count phonemes?
A phoneme is the smallest sound you can hear in a word. So for example the word 'cat' has 3 phonemes /c/ /a/ /t/. The word 'ship' has 3 phonemes /sh/ /i/ /p/. The word 'sheep' has 3 phonemes /sh/ /ee/ /p/. The word 'shape' has 3 phonemes /sh//a_e/ /p/. It takes practise to get it right but soon becomes automatic.


Worksheet


Phonics Rocket

The idea is to write a word at the bottom and children have to change one letter each time to make a new word. The aim is to get to the top.

Phonics sites

There are some great sites out there to find out more about phonics.
Any TA who is teaching children to read needs to make sure they know exactly how to teach phonics systematically.

This link is a fantastic alphabetic code overview and everyone should have one if they are teaching phonics. Print it out and give it to all the staff in school.
http://www.syntheticphonics.com/DH%20Alph%20Code%20overview%20with%20teaching%20points%20-%20A4x7.pdf

http://www.rrf.org.uk/
The reading reform foundation, well worth a look

http://www.syntheticphonics.com/
Debbie Hepplewhite's excellent site

http://www.jollylearning.co.uk/
Jolly phonics

http://www.dyslexics.org.uk/
Lots of information on learning to read

http://www.societyforqualityeducation.org/stairway.html
A fantastic site with lots of materials for teaching children to read, best for one to one support and older children

http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/local/clld/las.html
Letters and Sounds