Phonics Workshop 19th September 2017.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Letters and Sounds Principles and Practice of High Quality Phonics
Advertisements

Richardson Endowed Primary School Letters and Sounds Information for Parents.
Phonics Parents Workshop November 2013
Phonics Information.
Introduction to Phonics Words are made up from small units of sound called phonemes. Phonics teaches children to be able to listen carefully and identify.
3 rd October In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education.
In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education and Skills which.
Information for Parents
So, what exactly is phonics? GPCs Blending Segmenting.
4th November 2014 Delivered by Miss Charnock and Mrs Hardman.
Mrs Daniels 24 th September Aims of today... To find out what phonics is To understand the terminology used in phonics To learn how to pronounce.
22nd September E ARLY READING... Looking at words will initially be like looking at patterns of shapes on a page.
Phonics Workshop 19th November 2013.
+ Phonics Workshop Tuesday 20 th October Phonics at Little Melton Primary In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds phonics programme. Letters.
Letters and Sounds Information for Parents Autumn 2015 Welcome.
Meadgate Primary School Thursday 22 nd October 2015 PHONICS TALK.
Phonics Phase 1 & 2 21st October 2015
Letters and Sounds Phonics information for Parents October 2012.
6 th October In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education.
In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education and Skills which.
Phonics Workshop 12th October 2015.
4th March In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education.
Learning to read and write at Crowle CE First Information for Parents.
Tuesday 20 th September In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds programme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department.
Miss Lee & Miss Newton November 2015
Reading and spelling in KS1
Teaching and Learning Phonics at Queen Mary Avenue Infants
Miss O’Boyle Mrs Chowdhury
Phonics Information Spring 2017
Fun with Phonics Tuesday 20th September 2016.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics Workshop 14th October 2016.
Phonics Workshop 8th October 2015.
Phonics At Broad Town CE Primary School Sept 2016
Reception Phonics Workshop
Parents Phonics Workshop
Phonics Meeting 2014 Miss Martin.
Phonics workshop 16th December 2016.
Year 1 is a really important year for children- particularly when learning to read. Children learn to read using a range of skills, for example: phonics,
Phonics and reading How is it taught?
Phonics Workshop.
Supporting reading and writing
Coffee Morning Phonics, Reading & Writing
Phonics “Crash Course”
Phonics Workshop 8th November 2017.
Phonics Workshop 26th September 2017.
Reception Phonics Meeting
Year 1 Phonics Parent Workshop
Parent Phonics Workshop Thursday 16th November 15th January 2014
Did you know? There are letters of the alphabet
Phonics Workshop Tuesday 26th September.
Miss Firth and Miss Green
Phonics Workshop February 2018.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics Workshop Friday 2nd March 2018.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics At Broad Town CE Primary School Sept 2017
EYFS Phonics 15/11/18.
Phonics Workshop 18th April 2018.
Phonics Workshop 2nd May 2018.
Phonics Workshop.
KS1 Phonics 13th February 2019.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics Workshop 15th March 2018.
Phonics Workshop 11th January 2018.
Phonics Workshop.
Phonics Workshop 3rd October 2019.
Phonics Workshop October 2019.
Phonics Workshop 9th October 2019.
Presentation transcript:

Phonics Workshop 19th September 2017

In school, we use the Phonics Play programme which follows the Letters and Sounds scheme. Letters and Sounds is a phonics resource published by the Department for Education and Skills which consists of six phases.

Terminology Phoneme - The smallest unit of sound. There are approximately 44 phonemes in English (it depends on different accents). Phonemes can be put together to make words. Grapheme - A way of writing down a phoneme. Graphemes can be made up from 1 letter e.g. p, 2 letters e.g. sh, 3 letters e.g. tch or 4 letters e.g ough. GPC - This is short for Grapheme Phoneme Correspondence. Knowing a GPC means being able to match a phoneme to a grapheme and vice versa. Digraph - A grapheme containing two letters that makes just one sound (phoneme). sh Trigraph - A grapheme containing three letters that makes just one sound (phoneme). igh CVC- It refers to words with a consonant phoneme, a vowel phoneme and then a consonant phoneme - it is not referring to letters. Therefore hot, bed, boat and ship are all CVC words but cow and toy are not.

Terminology Oral Blending - This involves hearing phonemes and being able to merge them together to make a word. Children need to develop this skill before they will be able to blend written words. Robot voice Blending- This involves looking at a written word, looking at each grapheme and using knowledge of GPCs to work out which phoneme each grapheme represents and then merging these phonemes together to make a word. This is the basis of reading. D-o-g Oral Segmenting - This is the act hearing a whole word and then splitting it up into the phonemes that make it. Children need to develop this skill before they will be able to segment words to spell them. Sounding out...C-a-t Segmenting - This involves hearing a word, splitting it up into the phonemes that make it, using knowledge of GPCs to work out which graphemes represent those phonemes and then writing those graphemes down in the right order. This is the basis of spelling.

Phase 1 The 7 aspect: A1 – Environmental A2 – Instrumental sounds Phase 1 develops children's ability to listen to, make, explore and talk about sounds. This phase is split into 7 aspects that are explored and developed through games. The 7 aspect: A1 – Environmental A2 – Instrumental sounds A3 – Body Percussion A4 – Rhythm and rhyme A5 – Alliteration A6 – Voice sounds A7 – Oral blending and segmenting.

Phase 2 Set 1: s, a, t, p Set 2: i, n, m, d Set 3: g, o, c, k During this phase, individual phonemes are introduced. Actions are used to help children learn them. Set 1: s, a, t, p Set 2: i, n, m, d Set 3: g, o, c, k Set 4: ck, e, u, r Set 5: h, b, f, ff, l, ll, ss

Tricky Words Tricky words are those words which cannot be sounded out correctly using the sounds. The only way these words can be read and spelt correctly is by learning them and having plenty of practise. Phase 2 tricky Words: I go no to the into

Phase 3 Set 6: j, v, w, x Set 7: y, z, zz, qu Consonant digraphs: ch, sh, th, ng Vowel digraphs: ai, ee, igh, oa, oo, ar, or, ur, ow, oi, ear, air, ure, er

Tricky Words Phase 3 tricky Words: you they all are my her he she we me be was

Phase 4 This phase consolidates everything the children have learnt in the previous phases. The main challenge in this phase is to help children to blend and segment words with adjacent consonants e.g. truck, help. These adjacent consonant phonemes can both be heard when you say the word which makes them different from a digraph where there are two letters that make just one sound.

Phase 5 Children will be taught new graphemes and alternative pronunciations for these graphemes. ai/ay, igh/ie Vowel digraphs: wh, ph, ay, ou, ie, ea, oy, ir, ue, aw, ew, oe, au Split digraphs: a_e, e_e, i_e, o_e, u_e

Phase 6 The focus is on learning spelling rules for suffixes. -s -es -ing -ed -er -est -y -en -ful -ly -ment -ness

Segmenting Breaking down words for spelling. cat c a t

Segmenting Queen qu ee n

Building words from phonemes to read. Blending Building words from phonemes to read. c a t cat

Blending Qu ee n queen

What does a Phonics lesson look like? Revisit/review Flashcards to practice phonemes learnt so far. Teach Teach new phoneme ear Practice Buried treasure ear, zear, fear, vear, thear Apply Read captions: The goat had a long beard. The quack was right in his ear.

Resources We use this resource to support the teaching and learning of phonics at school. http://www.phonicsplay.co.uk

Phonics at Home Tips for teaching your child the sounds:   It is important for a child to learn lower case or small letters rather than capital letters at first. Most early books and games use lower case letters and your child will learn these first at school. Obviously you should use a capital letter when required, such as at the beginning of the child's name, e.g.. Paul. When you talk about letters to your child, remember to use the letter sounds rather than the alphabet names of the letters: ay bee see dee ee . The reason for this is that sounding out words is practically impossible if you use the alphabet names. e.g. cat, would sound like: see  ay  tee When saying the sounds of b, d, g, j and w you will notice the 'uh' sound which follows each, for example buh, duh... You cannot say the sound without it; however, try to emphasise the main letter sound.