Phonics Workshop How to support your child’s reading and writing. Thorpe Lea Primary School and...

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Transcript of Phonics Workshop How to support your child’s reading and writing. Thorpe Lea Primary School and...

Phonics Workshop How to support your child’s

reading and writing.Thorpe Lea Primary School and Nursery

Monday 21st September 2015Rachel McRae – Early Years Leader

Aims• To develop knowledge and confidence of supporting your child’s

phonetic understanding.

• To have a clear understanding of the terminology related to the teaching of phonics.

• To explore some activities you can use at home to support your child.

Phonics – Developmental Phases

• Phase 1 – developing phonological awareness• Phase 2 – introduction of some phoneme/grapheme correspondence• Phase 3 – one grapheme for each of 44 phonemes• Phase 4 – adjacent consonants• Phase 5 – alternative pronunciation and spellings• Phase 6 – Support for spelling/spelling rules

TerminologyPhoneme – the smallest unit of sound in a wordGrapheme – a letter or sequence of letters that represent a phoneme.

1 2 3

c a t

b ir d

f i sh

kn igh t

These words each have three phonemes (separate sounds). Each of these phonemes is represented by a grapheme. A grapheme may consist of one, two, three or four letters.

Oral blending: Hearing a series of spoken sounds (phonemes) and merging them together to make a spoken word. No text is used.For example, when a teacher calls out ‘b-u-s or c-r-ay-o-n, the children say ‘bus’ or ‘crayon’.

Terminology

Blending • Merging the individual phonemes

together to pronounce a word.• To read unfamiliar words a child must

recognise (sound out) each grapheme, not each letter, then merge the phonemes together to make a word.

Segmentation • Hear and say the individual phonemes

within a word.• In order to spell, children need to

segment a word into its component phonemes and choose a grapheme to represent each phoneme.

TerminologyDigraph:Two letters which make one sound (phoneme) such as: ee oo aiTrigraph:

Three letters, which make one sound (phoneme) such as:

igh dge ear

Teaching phonics - enunciation

• When teaching and supporting phonics it is vital that phonemes are articulated clearly and precisely.

Phase One

• Environmental Sounds• Instrumental Sounds• Body Percussion• Rhythm and Rhyme• Alliteration• Voice Sounds• Oral Blending and Segmenting(see attached sheet)

By the end of Phase 2 children should:• Be able to give the sound when shown, any Phase 2 letter: s,

a, t, p, i, n (19 sounds).

• Be able to orally blend and segment CVC words

• Be able to read the five tricky words: the, to, I, no, go

Strategies at home

• Sound buttons• Initial sounds• Toy talk• Phonic games• Sudo words• Shopping lists, postcards, letters, treasure maps

Phase Three

• Completes the teaching of the alphabet

• Introduces the children to a further 25 graphemes mostly compromising of 2 letters

• To learn one representation for each of the 44 phonemes

Homework files and Phonic Support• Phonic Workbook• Phonic pack• Reading diaries and books• Homework• Wow cards• Reading Eggs