Cracking the Code Phonics (2) Year 1 February 2012

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Cracking the CodePhonics (2)

Year 1February 2012

Objectives

• to consider children’s early experience of learning how to read

• to be introduced to phonics and phonological awareness

• to understand how children use phonics to read unknown words

• to know a range of teaching strategies to help children develop understanding of phonics

Reflection on assignment• Think about your English assignment• Reflect on your own work• Can you identify what you feel you did well and/or

where you can identify targets for development?• Might be: structure/reading/referencing/building an

argument etc• Now share your reflections with the person next to

you

Directed task

•Last week you were asked to choose one of the phonics games to make•In your tables take turns to share your games•What are the key elements of phonics games? Make a list to share.

What is phonological awareness?

• The awareness of sounds within words• Syllables• Onset and rime• Phonemes• Refers only to speech i.e. you don’t need

to be able to read

Phonemic awareness: Phonics

• Phonics is the ability to apply that phonemic knowledge to the alphabet.

• To be able to apply sounds to graphemes.• Phonics is when a child can attach a

drawing from the symbols in the alphabet to a sound – it is a code

The alphabetic principle

• There are 44 phonemes• A phoneme can be represented by one or

more letters (cat, that, hair, caught)• The same phoneme can be

represented/spelled in more than one way (Rain, may, lake)

• The same spelling may represent more than one phoneme (mean deaf)

Mr Thorne Does Phonics

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wGfNiweEkI

• Synthetic phonics

Vowels and consonants

• Vowels are phonemes where air flows through the mouth unobstructed, e.g. the letters a, e, i, o, and u

• Consonants are phonemes marked by constriction or closure in the breath channel - letters other than a, e, i, o and u.

What are phonemes and graphemes

• A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a word e.g.

p-i-nm-a-nc-o-t• A grapheme is the written representation of a

sound

Phoneme hearing exercises

a) How many phonemes in:• cat • dog• ship• leg• chin• Pen• Crop• lap

spintripmapshopnetphotostickthin

What is synthetic phonics?

• Children are taught individual letters, or groups of letters and their sounds. They learn to blend (synthesise) letters together to form words

• They read unknown words by breaking them down in to phonemes (decoding). E.g. c-a-t

Digraphs-consonant

• A digraph is two letters together which make one sound.

• There are consonant digraphs e.g:sh, th, ch, ng, ph As a group can you make a list of ten words using consonant digraphs on your paper?

• What do you notice about the phonemes and graphemes?

Digraphs-vowel

• There are 5 vowels in the alphabet but more vowel sounds

• • ae• ee• ie• oe• ue• oo• ar• ur• or• au• er• ow•

Vowel digraph (the phonemes)

ae ee ie oe ue oo

ar ur or au er ow

Trigraphs

• A trigraph is a three letter grapheme where three letters represent one phoneme

• Can you think of any words which have phonemes which need three letters?

• Write them on your wipe board with a partner• Can you think of any words which have

phonemes with 4 letters? In pairs

What is a split digraph?

• A split diagraph has a letter that splits, i.e. comes between, the two letters in the diagraph.

• For example what happens with words like• Gate• lake• made• site• time

phonemic awareness

phonic knowledge

grapheme phoneme correspondence

cueing strategies comprehension:

literal and inferential

motivation

enjoyment

choicesexperience of different genres

talking about books and reading

How do children develop as readers?

The Simple View of Reading (The Rose Cross)

What does teaching look like?Letters and Sounds

Phase 1 • Prepares children for phonic work. Based on listening and

discriminating between sounds.

Phase 2• Single phonemes/graphemes are introduced. They

understand that segmenting and blending are reversible processes. Read and spell simple CVC words.

Phase 3• In this phase the digraphs are introduced but not the split

digraphs.

What does teaching look like?Letters and Sounds

Phase 4• Here children are introduced to the adjacent consonants –

e.g. ‘slip’ and ‘camp’.

Phase 5 • Here they will learn that some spellings have alternative

pronunciations e.g. cow and blow. And some sounds have alternative spellings e.g. ‘ jump’ and ‘hedge’.

Phase 6• A lot of teaching in this phase revolves around spelling e.g.

prefixes ‘return’ and suffixes ‘sitting’. Also reading for meaning is emphasised.

Letters and Sounds-timescale for discrete teaching

• Phase 2-six weeks• Phase 3-twelve weeks• Phase 4-four weeks• Phase 5 (throughout Year 1) 1-30 weeks• Phase 6 (through year 2) • The teaching is structured and fast paced. • There are excellent examples on the DVD• Please look at the Phase 2 timetable you have

been given. Any comments?

Sequence of teaching in a discrete phonics session

• Introduction• Objectives and criteria for success• Revisit and review• Teach• Practise• Apply• Assess against learning criteria

Letters and Sounds

• Hear and say sounds in words in the order in which they occur

• Link sounds to letters, naming and sounding the letters of the alphabet

• Use their phonic knowledge to write simple regular words and make phonetically plausible attempts at more complex words

How much have you learned? 1

• What is a vowel?• What is a consonant?• What is a phoneme• What is a grapheme• What is phoneme –grapheme correspondence?• How many phonemes are there?• How many letters are there?

How much have you learned? 2

• What is a vowel digraph?• What is a consonant digraph?• What is a split digraph?

• What is phonemic segmentation (hint: spelling) and blending (hint: reading)?

• What is synthetic phonics? (hint: it’s got something to do with sequence)

Guidance for W7 – Independent studyReinforcing phonics

(Do not come to the seminar rooms)

Task 1Go to the Reading Collection section of the library adjacent to the normal fiction selection • Look through the phonics resources• Select one of the following resources

and review it in 100 -200 words• Big Cat• Thrass• Read Write Inc• Jolly Phonics

• Be prepared to share your review with other students in your group in Week 8

Task 2Watch some Mr Thorne Does Phonics on You Tube or on the Times Educational Supplement Resource site (you may have to enrol)

Task 3Go to your reading pack and read the “What is Phonics and which type is most effective” article by Johnstone and Watson

Watch these in Week 7

• • http://teachfind.com/node/85235?current_search=lett

ers%20and%20sounds• Letters and Sound Phase 2 • • http://teachfind.com/national-strategies/letters-and-so

unds-principles-and-practice-high-quality-phonics-phase-one-teachi?current_search=letters%20and%20sounds%20principles%20of%20high%20quality%20phonics

• Letters and Sounds Phase 1• • http://teachfind.com/national-strategies/letters-and-so

unds-notes-guidance-practitioners-and-teachers?current_search=letters%20and%20sounds%20principles%20of%20high%20quality%20phonics%20notes%20and%20guidance%20for%20practitioners

• Letters and Sounds: notes and guidance for practitioners and teachers

Analytic phonics

Analytic phonics• Children are taught to decode words they do not

know by using words or word parts they do know.

• Using onset and rime is part of this system. If you can hear and spell c-at, then you can work out how to spell b-at. (analogy)

• It works only for words where the rime is spelt identically.

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