Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels.

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Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels

Transcript of Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels.

Page 1: Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels.

Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels

Page 2: Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels.

Setting the Scene

• Reviewing…– # of phonemes in a word– Key categories of activities for emergent readers?

• Looking ahead…WTW Ch. 5• Early Middle Late (Letter Name Alphabetic)• BD for bed STEK for stick SEP for ship

• DRIV for drive FT for float LOP for lump

Page 3: Phonics Instruction II: Moving on to Long Vowels.

Sequencing Phonics Instruction

• Tompkins (4th ed.) p. 128-131• Tompkins (5th ed.) p. 159-163• See WTW p. 145• CVC > decodable texts and word families (common

rimes) • Consonants > short vowels > word families• WTW p. 151: keep in mind the challenges of

pronouncing sounds in a different language• Word study routines: picture sorts for initial sounds >

word sorts with short vowels

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Long Vowel-Silent e

• Demonstrate what happens when an “e” is put at the end of certain CVC words

• Hid > hide; mat > mate; • Can you think of others? Make a list.

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Correspondence between two letter vowel combinations and their phonemes

• Connect a two-letter grapheme found within a word with the phoneme the letters represent

• Connect the printed letters with the phoneme.• Discriminate among words that may

“compete” with ea and ee words

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Successive Blending

• Rather than s ….a…..t• s…a > sa > s…a > sa > sa…t > sat• Model individual sounds and blending procedure and

use finger cues• Child imitates the model with verbal & finger cues• Teacher repeats, but no sounds – only finger cues• Child performs pointing, sounding, and blending steps