Title: Phonics Dr. Kristen Pennycuff Trent
1PhonicsDr. Kristen Pennycuff Trent
2Key Vocabulary
- Analytic approach to phonics instruction
- Cloze procedure
- Context clues
- Homographs
- Inflectional endings
- Onset
- Phonemic awareness
- phonics
- Rime
- Semantic clues
- Sight words
- Structural analysis
- Syntactic clues
- Synthetic approach to phonics instruction
- Word configuration
3Word Recognition Strategies
- Purpose Help readers recognize written words
- Development of a store of words that can be
recognized immediately on sight and - Word attack strategies and skills
- Ability to use context cues,
- Phonics,
- Structural analysis, and
- Dictionaries for word identification
4Word Recognition Strategies
- Sight Words
- The larger the store of words a reader has, the
more rapidly and fluently he or she can read a
selection. - Comprehension and reading speed suffer when
reader has difficulty with sight word
application. - The more mature and experienced readers have
larger sight word vocabularies.
5Word Recognition Strategies
- Reasons for developing basic sight word
knowledge - Multitude of irregularly spelled wordsof,
through, two, know, give, come, and once - Gives children chance to have successful early
reading experiences and promotes positive
attitude about reading - Presenting children with whole words at the
beginning allows them to associate reading with
meaning rather than with meaningless memorization - Begin analytic phonics instruction after child
has developed a small store of sight words
6Word Recognition Strategies
- Sight words to teach
- Irregularly spelled wordscome, to, two
- Frequently used wordsat, it, and, am, go
- Word familiesban, fan, tan
- Childs name
- Days of the week
- Months of the year
- Names of school subjects
- Sight Word Lists
- Dolch list
- Frys Instant Words
7Word Recognition Strategies
- How to teach sight words
- Children must look at the printed word when it is
identified in order to associate the letter
configuration with the spoken word or picture - Children taught to pay attention to the details
of words by - Noticing ascending letters (b, d, h) and
descending letters (p, g, q) - Word length
- Particular letter combinations (double letters)
- Visual configuration cautiously used
- Compare and contrast new word with known word
8Word Recognition Strategies
- Repetitions
- Ashton-Warner Key Vocabulary approach
- Children pick out words that are meaningful to
them - Teacher has children say word, trace word, use
words in stories, games, etc. - Plan practice that is
- Varied and interesting (game format)
- Using words in context
- Pronunciation of words clearer (read, read)
- Understand meaning of words (thing, think)
9Word Recognition Strategies
- How to teach sight words continued
- Reading aloudmost natural and holistic approach
- Using highly predictable bookspictures,
repetitive sentence structure - Language experience approach (LEA)
- Connecting words with pictures or actual objects
- Constructing picture dictionaries
- Labels
- Physically active and passive games more
effective than worksheets - Flashcards
10Word Recognition Strategies
- Context clueswords, phrases, and sentences
surrounding the words to be decoded - Picture cluesearliest context clue children use
- As a teacher using picture clues
- Combine with the printed word not separately
- Do not overemphasize use of picture cues, become
less useless with more advanced material read - Semantic and syntactic cluesmeaning and grammar
clues - Teaching strategies
- Oral context
- Read before the unknown word, after the unknown
word, and with the unknown word - Cloze procedure
- Prefixes and suffixes and ending sounds
- Homographswords that look the same but have
different meanings and sometimes pronounced
differently (bow, wind, read, content, minute)
11Phonics
- Association of speech sounds (phonemes) with
printed symbols (graphemes) - Teaching sequence
- auditory discrimination
- visual discrimination
- work with words,
- sentences and short paragraphs,
- whole selections
- Predictable text and decodable text
12Phonics Terminology
- Phonemesmallest unit of sound in a language
- Graphemewritten symbol for a phoneme
- Vowelsa ,e, i, o, and u. w and y take on
characteristics of vowels when they appear in the
final position in a word or syllable. Letter y
also has characteristics of a vowel when in the
middle position in a word or syllable - Consonantsletters other than a, e, i, o, u.
Letters w and y have the characteristics of a
consonant when they appear in the initial
position in a word or syllable - Consonant blends (or clusters)two or more
adjacent consonant letters whose sounds are
blended together with each individual sound
retaining its identity strikestr, framefr,
clickcl, breadbr - Consonant digraph two or more adjacent
consonants that represent a single speech sound
shoresh, (p. 93) - Vowel digraph two adjacent letters that
represent a single speech sound footoo - Dipthongsvowel sounds closely blended and
treated like one vowel unit out ou
13Word Recognition Strategies
- Phonics
- Prerequisites for Phonics Instruction
- Visual discriminationability to distinguish
likenesses and differences among forms - Understand difference between like and different
- Auditory discriminationability to distinguish
likenesses and differences among sounds - Understand difference between like and different
- Phonemic awarenessawareness that speech is
composed of separate sounds (phonemes)
14Phonics Generalizations
- Should be used taught as guides to better guesses
rather than as unvarying rules - Some of the most useful found on page 154-155
- Cautions in teaching generalizations
- Requiring verbalization of the generalization
- Teach only one generalization at a time
- Generalizations have temporary value
15Phonics Generalizations
- 1. C and G rules
- When the letters c and g are followed by e, i, or
y, they generally have a soft sound the s sound
for c and the j sound for g. - Cent, city, cycle, gem, ginger, gypsy
- When the letters c and g are followed by o, a, or
u, they generally have a hard sound the k sound
for c and a special g sound. - Cat, cake, cut, go, game, gum
16Phonics Generalizations
- 2. When two consonants are next to each other,
only one is sounded. - Hall, glass
- Ch usually has the sound heard in church,
although sometimes it sounds like sh or k. - Child, chill, china
- Chef, chevron
- Chemistry, chord
17Phonics Generalizations
- 4. When kn are the first two letter in a word,
the k is not sounded. - Know, knight, knife
- When wr are the first two letters in a word, the
w is not sounded. - Write, wrong
- When ck are the last two letters in a word, the
sound of k is given. - Check, brick
18Phonics Generalizations
- The sound of a vowel preceding r is usually
neither long nor short. - Car, fir, her
- In the vowel combinations oa, ee, ai, and ay, the
first vowel is generally long and the second one
is not sounded. - Boat, feet, rain, play
- This may also apply to other double vowel
combinations.
19Phonics Generalizations
- The double vowels oi, oy, and ou usually form
diphthongs. The ow combination may also form a
diphthong, although it frequently stands for the
long o sound. - Boil, boy, out, now
20Phonics Generalizations
- If a word has only one vowel, and that vowel is
at the end of the word, the vowel sound is
usually long. - Me, go
- If a word has only one vowel and that vowel is
not at the end of the word, the vowel usually
represents the short sound. - Set, man, cut, hop, list
21Phonics Generalizations
- If a word has two vowels and one is a final e,
the first vowel is usually long and the final e
is not sounded. - Cape, cute, cove, kite
22Two Types of Phonics Instruction
- Synthetic
- teacher first instructs children in the speech
sounds that are associated with individual
letters. There is no connection between sound and
symbol associations - Blending occurs next usually using two and three
letter words and progressing to longer words - Successful only if direct instruction used to
transfer skills taught into unknown words - Nonsense words used
- Analytic
- Teaching some sight words first followed by
teaching the sounds of the letters within those
words - To avoid distortion have children isolate vowel
sound and produce it, then blend the remaining
consonant blends with the vowel sound, next blend
the remaining consonants at the end of the word
with the onset-vowel chunk
23Variation of Analytic Method
- Trachtenburg Method
- Teacher reads to class a literature selection
that contains examples of the phonetic element
studying. Students discuss or dramatize the story
when the teacher finishes. - Teacher introduces phonic element that is the
target for the lesson by explaining that the
children are going to learn one of the sounds for
a specific letter or letter combination - Teacher writes a portion of the story that
contains the target element on chalkboard or
transparency. Teacher reads this portion of the
story aloud, underlining the words containing the
target element as he or she reads. - Teacher identifies the sound involved and asks
the children to read the story portion with him
or her and listen to the sound. Teacher can
suggest a key word to help them remember the
sound. - Teacher guides practice with the new sound, using
a mechanical device where the initial consonants
are varied while the medial vowel remains the
same (p. 104) - Teacher presents another book that has numerous
examples of the phonic element targeted. Children
read the book independently, chorally, or partner
depending on their individual achievement level
24Word Recognition Strategies
- Trade Books can use
- The Cat and the Hatshort a sound
- The Paper Cranelong a sound
- Caps for Salelong and short a sound
- Elephant in a Wellshort e sound
- Ten Sleepy Sheeplong e sound
- Whistle for Willieshort i sound
- Why I Cant Fly--long i sound
- Fox in Socksshort o sound
- The Giants Toelong o sound
- Thumb and Plunkshort u sound
- The Troll Musiclong u sound
25Teaching Approaches
- Onset and Rime approach
- Teacher breaks down a syllable into the part of
the syllable before the vowel (onset) and the
remainder of the syllable (rime) that begins with
the vowel - Phonograms or word families
- Example Word Onset Rime
- black bl - -ack
- Benchmark Word Identification Programanalogy,
phonogram, or word family approach - Children compare an unknown word with a familiar
word in order to decode the words by analogy,
then they use context to check their predictions
26Onset Rime Strategies
- Word Building
- Class first builds words by adding onsets to
rimes then adding rimes to onsets, followed by
reading that allows practice with the patterns
studying - Direct instruction
- Teachers inform the children about what they are
going to teach, why it is important, when it can
be used, and how to use it, followed by teacher
modeling and group and individual guided practice
for the students.(p. 101) - Knowledge of phoneme-grapheme correspondences
- Students need instruction on individual
phoneme-grapheme correspondences, especially
vowels, rather than relationships between groups
of phonemes and groups of graphemes
27Other Strategies
- Programs emphasizing phonics or code approach to
word identification produces superior
word-calling ability, use analytic approach is
the better choice - Phonics generalizations that involve the use of
phonics terms, and other technical terminology
should be deemphasized when working with student
who have not mastered the terms. - Key words help children learn sounds associated
with vowels, consonants, vowel digraphs,
consonant digraph, diphthong, consonant blends - Consonant substitution activities (p. 103)
- Word walls
- Jump rope rhyme
- Game format for letter-sound associations
- Practice exercises preceded by instruction and
followed by feedback
28Structural Analysis Strategies
- Inflectional endings
- Added to nouns to change number, case or gender
(boyboys, hosthostess, KarenKarens) - Added to verbs of change tense or
person(looklooked, makemakes) - Added to adjectives to change degree
(meanmeaner, happyhappily) - Prefixes and suffixes (affixes)
- letters or sequences of letters that are added to
root words to change their meanings
(happyunhappy) and or parts of speech
(amuseamusement from verb to noun) - prefix added before root word
- Suffix added after root word
- Contractions
- Apostrophe indicates that one or more letters
have been left out when two words were combined
into one word (IllI will)
29Structural Analysis Strategies
- Compound words
- Two or more words that have been joined together
to form a new word (dish pan dishpan) - Syllabication/Accent
- Syllable is a letter or groups of letters that
forms a pronunciation unit. - Every syllable has a vowel sound
- Diphthongs contain more than one vowel sound,
although treated like a single sound - Types
- Openend in vowel sounds
- Closedend in consonant sounds
- Other features
- Accentedgiven greater stress
- Unaccentedgiven less stress
- Generalizations that can be taught to children
30Word Recognition Strategies
- Structural Analysis
- The syllable divisions shown in the phonetic
spellings are more helpful for children than the
ones indicated in the bold entry words - Accentuation is generally not taught until
children have a good background in word attack
skills and is presented with dictionary skills - Dictionary Study
- Students should turn to it only as last resort
for pronunciation - Skills needed to pronounce words correctly
- Interpretation of phonetic respellings
- Interpret accent marks
- Activities on pages 113 and 114
31Five Steps for Decoding Unfamiliar Words
- Strategy for teaching children to independently
decode unfamiliar words - Apply context cluesread before the word, after
the word - Try the sound of the initial consonant, vowel, or
blend along with context clues - Check for structure clues (prefixes, suffixes,
inflectional endings, compound words, or familiar
syllables) - Begin sounding out the word using known phonics
generalizations - Consult the dictionary