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Phonics Guide Year 1. Read this to your partner. I pug h fintle bim litchen. Wigh ar wea dueing thiss? Ie feall sstewppide!

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Presentation on theme: "Phonics Guide Year 1. Read this to your partner. I pug h fintle bim litchen. Wigh ar wea dueing thiss? Ie feall sstewppide!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Phonics Guide Year 1

2 Read this to your partner. I pug h fintle bim litchen. Wigh ar wea dueing thiss? Ie feall sstewppide!

3 Some definitions A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a word. C-u-pc-a-td-o-g

4 Count the phonemes  How many phonemes can you count in the following words?  Mask  Car  Jumper  Language  Communication  Success

5 Some definitions Grapheme Letter(s) representing a phoneme taiigh

6 Some definitions Blending Recognising the letter sounds in a written word, for example c-u-p, and merging or synthesising them in the order in which they are written to pronounce the word ‘cup’.

7 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.

8 Some definitions Segmenting 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’.

9 Some definitions Digraph Two letters, which make one sound A consonant digraph contains two consonants shckthll A vowel digraph contains at least one vowel ai ee ar oy

10 Some definitions Trigraph Three letters, which make one sound igh dge

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

12 CVC Words  C consonant phoneme  V vowel phoneme  Cconsonant phoneme

13 Words sometimes wrongly identified as CVC bow few saw her Why are these words not CVC words? Discuss.

14 Consonant digraphs ll ss ff zz hill pufffizz sh ch th wh shipchat thin ck ng qu x fox singquick

15 p i gs h e e p s h i p c a r b o yc o w f i l l w h i p s o n gf o r d a ym i s s w h i z zh u f f CVC words – clarifying some misunderstandings

16  p i gc h i c k  s h i p c a r X  b o y Xc o w X  f i l l w h i p  s o n gf o r X  d a y Xm i s s  w h i z zhuff

17 ll ss ff zz ck fill misswhizz huff chick Why do these words end in double letters?

18 Examples of CCVC, CVCC, CCCVC and CCVCC b l a c ks t r o ng c c v c c c c v c f e l tb l a n k c v c cc c v c c

19 A segmenting activity

20 s s

21 s l l s

22 s l i il s

23 s l i p il sp

24 Segment these words into their constituent phonemes: shelf dress think string sprint flick

25 Segmenting WORDPHONEMES shelf dress think string sprint flick

26 Segmenting WORDPHONEMES shelfshelf dressdress thinkthink stringstring sprintsprint flickflick

27 A basic principle The same phoneme can be represented in more than one way: burn first term heard work

28 A basic principle meatbread hebed bearhear cowlow

29 The same phoneme can be represented in more than one way aa-eaiayeyeigh ee-eeaeey ii-eieighy oo-eoaoeow uu-eueooew oououl owouough oioy ara oraworeaough airareear eerear

30 High frequency words  The majority of high frequency words are phonically regular.  Some exceptions – for example the and was – should be directly taught.

31 More Ideas

32


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