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Phonics Workshop July 2014. Welcome to the phonics workshop. I hope that this help you to understand how a child feels when they are learning to read. Wellcum too v fonicks wurckshop. I hoap theat yoo ar beegining two undurstand hou a chighld fealls wen thai ar lerning tue reed.
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Welcome to the phonics workshop. I hope that this help you to understand how a child feels when they are learning to read.
Wellcum too v fonicks wurckshop. I hoap theat yoo ar beegining two undurstand hou a chighld fealls wen thai ar lerning tue reed.
What is systematic phonics teaching? This teaches children the correspondence between graphemes in written language and phonemes in spoken language, and how to use these correspondences to read and spell.
Oral blending: • Hearing a series of spoken sounds (phonemes) and merging them together to make a spoken word. No text is used. • For example, ‘Can you get me a tin of b-ea-n-s? ‘Where is the p-e-n?’
Letters: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z • Some of the 140 (approx.) letter combinations illustrated within words: • cat, look, would, put, peg, bread, cart, fast, pig, wanted, burn, first, term, heard, work, log, want, torn, door, warn, plug, love, haul, law, call, pain, day, gate, station, wooden, circus, sister, sweet, heat, thief, these, down, shout, tried, light, my, shine, mind, coin, boy, road, blow, bone, cold, stairs, bear, hare, moon, blue, grew, tune, fear, beer, here, baby, sun, mouse, city, science, dog, tap, field, photo, van, game, was, hat, where, judge, giant, barge, yes, cook, quick, mix, Chris, zebra, please, is, lamb, then, monkey, comb, thin, nut, knife, gnat, chip, watch, paper, ship, mission, chef, rabbit, wrong, treasure, ring, sink. • Phonemes: • /b/ /d/ /f/ /g/ /h/ /j/ /k/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /p/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /v/ /w/ /wh/ /qu/ /y/ /z/ /th/ /th/ /ch/ /sh/ /zh/ /ng/ /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/ /ae/ /ee/ /ie/ /oe/ /ue/ /oo/ /ar/ /ur/ /or/ /au/ /er/ /ow/ /oi/ /air/ /ear/
What is a phoneme? A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound and can comprise of more than letter. Eg a or ai • A grapheme is the symbol for a phoneme.
Digraph • 2 letters that make 1 phoneme • ee, ch, oa • Trigraph • 3 letters that make 1 phoneme • igh, dge
Split digraph • o-e hope • a-e cake • u-e cube • i-e dive
Segmenting words for spelling. (finger counting) • Blending for reading (running finger along) • And that these are reversible processes
Reception • Beginning of systematic high quality phonic work (grapheme phoneme correspondence) • s a t p i n
c-a-t blend sounds together to read ‘cat’ • To segment (chop / spell) c-a-t • boat = b-oa-t • chip= ch-i-p • might = m-igh-t • hill = h-i-ll
Complete the teaching of the alphabet. • Learn 1 representation for at least 42 of the 44 phonemes of British Received Pronunciation • Children should be working securely in this phase by the end of Reception
How many items can your child find that begin with ‘m’? • Can your child make something that begins with ‘s’ using playdough? • Can you find something in the supermarket beginning with ‘b’? • Play ‘I-spy’ using this weeks letter sounds.
Can your child see the chosen letter in a book or outside? • Put several items on a tray that all begin with the same sound and one that begins with a different sound. Can your child tell you the odd one out?
If your child is ready to start writing letters, please help them to write lower case letters only. • Please encourage your child to use our ‘Penpal’ script. • Children may like to do this outside using chalk or water and a large paint brush.
If your child knows all their letter sounds and is able to write them, they may like to write a list of words beginning with each sound and bring it in to share with the class. Please help your child to write the sounds they can hear in each word.
Most important of all: • Only carry out activities for 5 or 10 minutes, but on a regular basis. • Be positive and use lots of praise.
www.hayes-pri.bromley.sch.ukyear groups/reception/phonicscontainsphonic alphabet/phonic alphabet actions/handwriting rhymes/phonic code and video
Please watch Pip’s phonic video with your child for the correct annunciation of phonemes either via the school website or www.phonicbooks.co.uk/teaching_parent.php Another useful website is www.phonicsplay.co.uk