Yolanda Soryl Phonics
Yolanda Soryl Phonics
Yolanda Soryl Phonics
Introduction to Phonics
Marie Clay’s searchlight model
Components of Reading
Management
Resources
Introduction to Phonics
Blending sounds is necessary for reading, it involves putting the bits together into the whole sound.
Segmentation is when you have the whole sound, and you have to break it down into bits, as you do in
spelling.
Blending and segmentation are opposites.
Phonics is the skills of segmentation & blending plus a knowledge of the alphabetic code.
Poor readers tend to focus in on only one searchlight, and don’t use any of the others. The best students
(and teachers!) use all four.
HFW - only 100 words make up half of all reading. Lowest readers don’t have this graphic knowledge yet
(Year 1/2) and so phonics is all the more important. Principles of teaching phonics are the same no matter
the level.
Components of Reading
1. Decoding is being able to read black squiggly lines
2. Comprehension is understanding what you are reading. A large vocabulary is essential to reading
comprehension. Never before is it more important to talk before and during reading, to prime them
with vocabulary. Comprehension is underpinned by:
a. Decoding
b. Vocab
c. Fluency
3. Fluency is when you read easily and effortlessly. Stilted reading results from the brain being so
focussed on decoding that they cannot understand or appreciate a story. Reading needs some
automaticity to allow fluency. We need fluency at word level, i.e. instant recognition of words. We
can actually start this before they even start school!
Our brains are not wired for reading, we have only done it for 4,500 years. We are wired for speaking and
walking, but not reading. The brain will not just flick on instantly, we have to help them to turn the light on.
Reading is a left-brain dominant activity. A good reader will do this, a struggling reader will use both sides.
Switching on the left hand side of the brain:
1. Phonological experiences. Phonics can rewire the brain.
2. Repetition, repetition, repetition. Especially true for a dyslexic child.
It is never too late! This works for adults, too.
Children who are taught phonics are better at reading and writing for years in the future. Children who get a
particular advantage from learning phonics:
1. Boys
2. ESL children
3. Māori and Pasifika
4. Children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds
5. Children with any type of reading or learning difficulty, e.g. dyslexia, Down’s syndrome
Everyone benefits from phonics in the first two years of school, but it particularly helps the five groups
above.
Single most effective way of accelerating a child who is struggling is to hear them read out loud every day
at instructional level.
Stage 1
Objectives:
1. Listen to and discriminate sounds in language
a. This is harder for children who live in high-noise environments (they tune out), who have
constant sound around them (music,TV, iPads), or who have missed out on repeated
conversations about sounds in the world around them.
b. Children need to tune into and discriminate between sounds, e.g. between t and d.
c. Ask chln to close their eyes and listen to the sounds that they can hear. Ask them to identify
sounds they heard, and if they cannot identify any sound or tell you that there were no
sounds, only silence, then this tells you they can’t hear/differentiate sounds in their
environment.
i. Use Soundtracks bingo
ii. Have a sounds table in your classroom, change every week
d. Play “I say, you say” when reading books, e.g. when reading a big book say word and get
them to copy, to feel the sound son their tongue
2. Hear alliteration, rhythm, sounds breaks and rhyme
a. Animalia is a wonderful book for this, especially before children start school. Perfect 4th
birthday present, read it daily!
b. Rhythm - hear and copy a rhythm, including in a different way, e.g. by stomping feet to
rhythm that teacher has given them, but the teacher clapped the rhythm.
c. Kapa haka and singing are perfect for this
d. Start reading lessons with singing, as it lights up the same parts of the brain
e. Can children clap out the syllables of their name? The only way for children to learn this is
for you to teach this, every day practice clapping out the syllables three words and/or their
names.
f. Memorising nursery rhymes is absolutely key for three year olds. Key indicator for reading
success. Every junior teacher needs to have a book of nursery rhymes with them, read them
before the bell! Can also use Roald Dahl’s revolting rhymes for older children. Teach
children nursery rhymes and repeat them, repeat them, repeat them! For senior students,
have a poetry recital once per year. Dr Seuss is good for this.
Robot walking: Hands alternate, one foot for each syllable. “C-a-t” and then sweep finger from left to right
and blend sounds into a whole word: “CAT”.
Have to teach these things highlighted in green systematically, repeatedly, throughout the year. It needs to
be integrated into your classroom programme.
Train the brain for automaticity by asking children to do things they already know faster and faster, e.g.
making the sounds of known animals faster and faster, naming fruit that has been lined up.
Stage 2
Objectives:
1. Hear, read and write the initial phoneme
2. Hear, read and write
Phonics is best taught little and often! One letter a day, keep moving to a different letter.
Every day is a new letter! Keep going, don’t do a letter to death for a week. Keep coming around.
Use lowercase letters only. If you teach both capital and lowercase together, then children think that they
are equivalent. When you have taught ALL of the lowercase letters, then introduce capitals with caution.
“Oh Max, I see you have a capital. What’s your reason?” If Max has no reason, then rub it out and correct it.
If he has a reason, he can “keep it”. Teach children that if they don’t know if it’s a capital or lowercase letter,
then use the lowercase letter because most of the time they will be right.
Everyone has to be joining in, eyes open and looking, mouths open and working. Not joining in is just as
naughty as climbing the curtains, it is disengagement. Get a TA to sit behind and work with those not
joining in.
TA can also take a revision group later in the day. Must be done in a quiet space.
X = “ks”
Q = “qw” (technically this is two phonemes, unpick this in Stage 5”
W = quiet “w”, don’t let Ss make the sound “wuh”
Writing
PW cards:
● Phonics on one side, Words on the other
● Use during writing modelling as well as guided/independent writing
With an English accent, get Ss to model the vowel sound for you, e.g. “John, what’s the first sound in
”
apple?
Stage 3
Objectives:
1. To be able to hear, read and write the final phoneme
Use a puppet, model the puppet saying a word and getting the last sound wrong.
Ask them to help the puppet fix it up.
E.g. Show a picture of a fish, puppet says “fig”, Ss help to fix up the last sound and say “sh”
Be explicit about transfer, tell Ss that when they have learnt something they need to show you this skill in
writing, e.g. “We’re stage 3 now, we have to write 2 sounds now!”
Stage 4
For words where phonics doesn’t work, e.g. “rocket” where children are likely to write “rockit”, then say
“There’s a trick” and this is your cue to children that there is some graphic (visual) knowledge of the word.
For words like “cog”, ask what the sound is and then say that it could start with a C or a K. Use the cue
“there’s a tick”
Stage 4 Lesson
2. Hear
a. Key word but NOT on a word card yet, e.g. hog
b. RIBS:
i. Rhyme
1. Free, as many as they can think of
2. String, e.g. hog, cog, log
3. Middle sound, like eating an orange
ii. Identify first, last and middle sounds
iii. Blending of sounds, first by the teacher then by the Ss
iv. Segment: One volunteer S segments the word by being a robot, this allows you to
monitor their ability
3. Read
a. Word cards
b. Robot with T pointing at letters
c. Freeze the pointer: say sound only when T points at letter, makes sure everyone is watching
and paying attention
d. Robot with no T pointing
e. Dump the robot! Blend sounds together
f. In second week, start mixing the sets of words (e.g. cat and dog sets)
g. Go fast with Ss saying the words!
h. Transfer: use this in reading, from now on in reading it is not good enough to look at the first
letter only, they have to look through to the last and the middle sounds.
4. Write
a. Write on whiteboards
b. Some words have “a trick”, e.g. cog not kog. This is the place to teach this graphic
knowledge trick. Get Ss to say the “trick” out loud with you, this aids their memory.
c. Give ticks for writing a word correctly, and two ticks if they remember a “trick” e.g. cog starts
with c not k
d. Experiment:
i. Change the first, middle, last letter to make a new word, Ss tell you the word
ii. Then tell Ss you want them to change “cog” to “cot”, get them to talk out loud about
how they will do this
iii. Transfer: you can use this to help you get many words. Now it’s not good enough to
have two sounds, use three. Use a word you already know to get the new word
e. Silly sentence! “The cat sat on the top”. Tell them they have only one capital that they can
use, they have to work out where it goes. Reminder that there has to be a full stop. Ss get a
tick for using capital at the start of the sentence, but have to take it away if there’s a capital
anywhere else! Also tick for the full stop.
i. Once they have the basics, you can move on to question marks, speech marks, etc.
ii. If Ss slow, tell them this is OK and they might not finish. If finish early, then they have
to check that they didn’t miss anything out.
5. Revise
a. All about going FAST!
b. Take a word to fluency, i.e. going as fast as they can. Ss write word “dog” but can only start
when told to. Repeat, repeat, repeat with same word, focus on fluency without losing
accuracy.
c. Letter cards (mix up from week 2 onwards)
d. Word cards (mix up from week 2 onwards)
Seesaw phonics
If Ss don’t get the segmentation of words during robot part of phonics, then line them up and go down the
line taking their hands and pulling/pushing them
Progression
If doing the “cat” rhymes is tough, don’t move on yet. Keep working on “a” cvc words starting with cat,
before moving on to “can” words.
How to get children to produce quantity in writing
Once they can write a sentence without T help, then you want two from them. When they can do this, you
want three.
We have to teach fluency in writing as well as reading:
1. Phonics - revising writing a word again and again faster and faster, e.g. with DOG
2. Vocabulary - expect them to know how to write “the” and “is” without looking. Do this through shared
writing:
a. Everyone has a whiteboard
b. When T gets “stuck” with a word, everyone picks up their whiteboard and has a go writing
“rocket”
c. Ben thanks for the R, Jenny thanks for the O, Charlie thanks for the CK, etc.
d. Can do similar things for what to use at the end instead of a full stop, e.g. exclamation mark
e. Take one word that would be great to know off by heart, e.g. “like”, tell them we will be
learning how to spell this word. Spell out the letters pointing at them, then say the word. Ss
join in and spell with you then say the word. Sing the letters, shout them, whisper them, say
them silently in their heads. Write them on the whiteboard over and over. Cover your
modelling, they write it again, check their word looks like yours.
Stage 5
Stage 5 lesson
1. Hear
a. Key word but NOT on a word card yet, e.g. clock
b. RIBS:
i. Rhyme
1. Free, as many as they can think of
2. String, e.g. block, sock, smock
ii. Identify all sounds, count on fingers
iii. Blending of sounds, first by the teacher then by the Ss
iv. Segment: One volunteer S segments the word by being a robot, this allows you to
monitor their ability
2. Read
a. Word cards
b. Ask what is the last phoneme in clock, then ask what the grapheme is for this (ck)
c. Robot without T pointing at letters
d. Freeze the pointer: say sound only when T points at letter, makes sure everyone is watching
and paying attention
e. Robot with no T pointing
f. Dump the robot! Blend sounds together
g. In second week, start mixing the sets of words (e.g. cat and dog sets)
h. Go fast with Ss saying the words!
i. Transfer: use this in reading, from now on in reading it is not good enough to look at the first
letter only, they have to look through to the last and the middle sounds.
3. Write
a. Write on whiteboards
b. Introduce phoneme lines, e.g. b l o ck
c. Give ticks
d. Experiment:
i. Tell Ss you want them to change “block” to “clock”, get them to talk out loud about
how they will do this
ii. Transfer: you can use this to help you get many words.
e. Silly sentence! “It is bad to shock a duck”. Tell them they have only one capital that they can
use, they have to work out where it goes.
i. Change it into a question
ii. If Ss slow, tell them this is OK and they might not finish. If finish early, then they have
to check that they didn’t miss anything out.
4. Revise
a. All about going FAST!
b. Take a word to fluencey, i.e. going as fast as they can. Ss write word “clock” but can only
start when told to. Repeat, repeat, repeat with same word, focus on fluency without losing
accuracy.
c. Grapheme cards (mix up from week 2 onwards)
d. Word cards (mix up from week 2 onwards)
e. Write some stage 4 words as revision as well, e.g. hot, hat, cat
By this stage, qu is not a digraph, it is two separate phonemes. So by this stage it is q u ee n
Stage 6
See the book!
Management
What to do when there are children in your class are at different stages!
Resources
See the back of the phonics manual to find where to get all the resources