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Phonics Phonics Helping you to help them’ Helping you to help them’ Workshop 1 Workshop 1

PhonicsPhonics ‘Helping you to help them’ Workshop 1

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Page 1: PhonicsPhonics ‘Helping you to help them’ Workshop 1

PhonicsPhonicsPhonicsPhonics‘‘Helping you to help them’Helping you to help them’

Workshop 1Workshop 1

Page 2: PhonicsPhonics ‘Helping you to help them’ Workshop 1

Can you read this?

Wigh ar wea dueing thiss?

Ie feall sstewppide!

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Aims • To ensure all parents have an

overview of the teaching of phonics in school.

• To ensure consistent messages regarding the teaching of phonics.

• To update phonic subject knowledge.

Page 4: PhonicsPhonics ‘Helping you to help them’ Workshop 1

The simple view of reading

• In 2006 Sir Jim Rose completed his independent review of the teaching of early reading. The review report provided clear recommendations on what constitutes 'high quality phonics work'.

• The 'simple view of reading'• The Rose Report makes a number of

recommendations for the teaching of early reading.

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Successful reading demands both word level reading and the ability to comprehend what has been read.

This is formalised in “The Simple View of Reading”

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Rose Recommendations

• More attention needs to be given to speaking and listening from the outset.

• High quality, systematic phonic work should be taught discretely and daily and in line with the definition of high quality phonic work as set out in the Rose report.

• Phonics should be set within a broad and rich language curriculum that takes full account of developing the four interdependent strands of language.

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The Simple View of Reading

• Word-level reading and language comprehension are both necessary to reading

• Neither is sufficient on its own• This is formalised in “The Simple

View of Reading”• Reading comprehension is a product

of word recognition and language comprehension

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Enunciation

• Teaching phonics requires a technical skill in enunciation.

• Phonemes should be articulated clearly and precisely.

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Letters and Sounds• DVD clip -

enunciation

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Phonic terminology:some definitions

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Some definitions

A phoneme is the smallest unit ofsound in a word.

C-u-p c-a-t d-o-g

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Count the phonemes• How many phonemes can you count in

the following words?

• Mask• Car• Back• Bull

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Some definitionsGrapheme

Letter(s) representing a phoneme

t ai igh

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Some definitions

BlendingRecognising the letter soundsin a written word, for examplec-u-p, and merging them in the order

in which they are written to pronounce the word ‘cup’.

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Some definitions

Oral blending

Hearing a series of spoken sounds and merging them together to make a spoken word – no text is used.

For example, when a teacher calls out ‘b-u-s’, the children say ‘bus’.

This skill is usually taught before blending and reading printed words.

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Some definitionsSegmenting

Identifying the individual sounds in a spoken word(e.g. h-i-m) and writing down or manipulating letters for each sound to form the word ‘him’.

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Some definitionsDigraphTwo letters, which make one sound

A consonant digraph contains two consonantssh ck th ll

A vowel digraph contains at least one vowelai ee ar oy

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Some definitionsTrigraph

Three letters, which make one sound

igh air

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Some definitions

Split digraph

A digraph in which the two letters are not adjacent (e.g. make).

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CVC Words

• C consonant phoneme

• V vowel phoneme

• C consonant phoneme

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Words sometimes wrongly identified as CVCbow

few

saw

her

Why are these words not CVC words? Discuss.

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Examples of CCVC, CVCC, CCCVC and CCVCC

b l a c k s t r o ngc c v c c c c v c

f e l t b l a n kc v c c c c v c c

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A segmenting activity

s l i pils p

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A segmenting activitySegment these words into their

constituent phonemes:shelfdressthinkstringsprintflick

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SegmentingWORD PHONEMES

shelf

dress

think

string

sprint

flick

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Segmenting

WORD PHONEMES

shelf sh e l f

dress d r e ss

think th i n k

string s t r i ng

sprint s p r i n t

flick f l i ck

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Sorting activity• field• grow• moon• swarm• learn• bear• grass

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Word Mistakefield /ie/grow /ow/moon /oo/swarm /ar/learn /ear/bear /ear/grass regional pronunciation

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The same phoneme can be represented in more than one way

a a-e ai ay ey eighe e-e ea ee yi i-e ie igh yo o-e oa oe owu u-e ue oo ewoo u oulow ou oughoi oyar aor aw ore a oughair are eareer ear

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High frequency words

• The majority of high frequency words are phonically regular.

• Some exceptions – for example the and was – should be directly taught.

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To considerAny questions?