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Phonics Concepts

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How to Teach Long Vowels. Teachers can display pictures that begin with the long vowel sound. Pictures will help students remember the long vowel sound. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Phonics Concepts


1
Phonics Concepts
  • By Tashawna King

2
Phonics Concepts
  • Phonics concepts include
  • consonants
  • vowels
  • blending sounds into words
  • phonograms
  • phonics rules
  • Phonics is the key to reading because without
    phonics students would not be able to recognize
    words, spell, or be a successful reader. Phonics
    involves the association of phonemes, or sounds
    with written symbols, called graphemes. Phonics
    is the key to word recognition.

3
Why is Phonics Important for Reading?
  • When educators talk about phonics, they are
    referring method of teaching beginners to read
    and pronounce words by learning to associate
    letters or letter groups with the sounds they
    represent. Teachers teach the relationships betwee
    n phonemes (the sounds that make up spoken words)
    and graphemes (the written representations of
    language) so that students can decode (sound out)
    words. Children must learn to break words down so
    that they can decode them in order to read
    therefore, phonics is extremely important.

4
44 Sounds in English Language
  • Teachers have to teach children to learn the
    sounds of the English language. Teachers should
    remember to choose words that help children
    understand all of the 44 sounds. (19 vowel sounds
    including 5 long vowels, 5 short vowels, 3
    diphthongs, 2 'oo' sounds, 4 'r' controlled vowel
    sounds and 25 consonant sounds).

5
What are Consonants?
  • There are two types of letters in the
    alphabet consonants and vowels. Consonants are
    all the letters in the alphabet except for the
    vowels (a, e, i, o, u).
  •  
  • So, the full list of consonants are
  • b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t,
    v, w, x, y, z.

6
What are Vowels?
  • Vowels are five letters in the alphabet which
    are a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes w and  y that
    represents a speech sound. Wand y are vowels when
    used in the middle and at the end of syllables
    and words. For example, the word day has the two
    phonemes, /d/ and /a/, and a and y are vowels.
    Interestingly, y is not always a vowel it is a
    consonant at the beginning of a word and a vowel
    at the end.
  • The 2 most common vowels are short (marked with
    the symbol  ?, called a breve) and long sounds
    (marked with the symbol , called macron). 

7
How to Teach Short Vowels in Kindergarten
  • Teachers can show students the vowel letter and
    say the short vowel sound. For example, tell them
    "This is 'a' and it says /a/.
  •  
  • Teachers can display pictures that begin with the
    short vowel sound. Pictures will help students
    remember the short vowel sound. For this sound,
    use pictures that begin with short "a" such as
    apple and ant. Once students understand the short
    "a" sound, show them other pictures that contain
    the short "a" sound such as hat, bat, and
    cat. Tape the pictures to the board, write the
    words underneath the pictures and underline the
    letter vowel to emphasize that sound.

8
How to Teach Long Vowels
  • Teachers can display pictures that begin with the
    long vowel sound. Pictures will help students
    remember the long vowel sound. For this sound,
    use pictures that begin with long "a" such as
    acorn and apron. Once students understand the
    long "a" sound, show them other pictures that
    contain the short "a" sound such as snake, cake,
    and tape. Tape the pictures to the board, write
    the words underneath the pictures and underline
    the letter vowel to emphasize that sound. 

9
Vowel Combinations
  • Vowel combinations are vowel digraphs
    or diphthongs. When two vowels represent a single
    sound, the combination is a vowel digraph (e.g.,
    nail, snow), and when the two vowels represent a
    glide from one sound to another, the combination
    is a diphthong.
  • Here is a list of some vowel digraphs
  • ee as in feet, seed, feel
  • ea as in eat, easy, heat, peach, each
  • ai as in snail, pail, details, nail
  • oo as in food, look, took
  • au as is taught, caught, laugh
  • aw as in saw
  •  
  • Here is a list of some diphthongs 
  • io as in foil, soil, oil
  • oy as in toy, boy
  • ou as in bound, house  
  •  ow as in cow  

10
Consonant Digraphs and Blends
  • Two kinds of combination consonants are blends
    and digraphs. Consonant blends occur when two or
    three consonants appear next to each other in
    words and their individual sounds are "blended"
    together, as in grass, belt, and spring. Examples
    of consonant blends are the fr in frame, the cl in
     click, and the br in bread.  Consonant
    digraphs are letter combinations representing
    single sounds that are not represented by either
    letter the four most common are ch as in
    chair and each, sh as in shell and wish, 
  • th as in father and both, and wh as in while.
    Another consonant digraph is ph, as
    in photo and graph. 

11
Blending Sounds Into Words
  • Readers blend or combine sounds in order to
    decode words. Even though children may identify
    each sound, one by one, they must also be able to
    blend them into a word. For example, to read the
    short-vowel word best, children identify /b//e/
    /s/ /t/ and the combine them to form the word.
    For long-vowel words, children must identify the
    vowel pattern as well as the surrounding letters.
    In pancake , for example, children identify /p/
    /a/ /n/ /k/ /a/ /k/ and recognize that the e at
    the end of the word is silent and marks the
    preceding vowel as long.

12
Phonograms
  • A phonogram is a letter or group of letters that
    represent a single sound.  One-syllable words and
    syllables in longer words can be divided into two
    parts, the onset and the rime The onset is the
    consonant sound, if any, that precedes the vowel,
    and the rime is the vowel and any consonant
    sounds that follow it. For example, in show,
    sh is the onset and  ow is the rime, and
    in ball, b is the onset and all is the rime.
    For  at and  up, their is no onset the
    entire word is the rime. Research has shown that
    children make more errors decoding and spelling
    the rime than the onset and more errors on vowels
    than on consonants (Caldwell Leslie 2005). In
    fact, rimes may provide an important key to
    word identification.

13
The End
  • Brought to you by Tashawna King
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