#phonologicalawareness Archives - TeachHUB https://www.teachhub.com/tag/phonologicalawareness/ TeachHUB is an online resource center for educators and teachers Wed, 27 Jul 2022 15:24:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.teachhub.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/teachhub-favicon-150x150.png #phonologicalawareness Archives - TeachHUB https://www.teachhub.com/tag/phonologicalawareness/ 32 32 Phonological Awareness in the Classroom https://www.teachhub.com/teaching-strategies/2020/07/phonological-awareness-in-the-classroom/ Fri, 24 Jul 2020 14:28:06 +0000 https://www.teachhub.com/?p=3087 What is Phonological Awareness? Phonological awareness refers to the awareness or knowledge of the sound structures in language. It focuses on the ability to hear, recognize, identify, distinguish, and manipulate individual phonemes, or sounds, in words. It also includes the understanding of the number of words in a sentence, the number of syllables in a...

The post Phonological Awareness in the Classroom appeared first on TeachHUB.

]]>
What is Phonological Awareness?

Phonological awareness refers to the awareness or knowledge of the sound structures in language. It focuses on the ability to hear, recognize, identify, distinguish, and manipulate individual phonemes, or sounds, in words. It also includes the understanding of the number of words in a sentence, the number of syllables in a word, and rhyme pairs. Children should be able to recognize words within a sentence and sounds within a word. This oral practice of literacy instruction is evident through the use of movement or response including clapping, stomping, tapping, singing, or reciting nursery rhymes.

The full understanding of the spoken word is a critical part of a primary classroom’s learning process. Some children pick it up instantly while others require more repetitive practice. Phonological awareness is considered the foundation to learn to read, as it is the basis of the alphabetic principal. Phonological awareness provides children with the skills they need to understand phonics, which are letter-sound relationships through print.

Why is Phonological Awareness Important?

Phonological awareness is a strong indicator of a child’s reading ability that will be later developed in elementary school. In fact, students that struggle with phonological awareness in kindergarten are often considered struggling readers in third grade. While phonological awareness is usually considered an early literacy skill, the elements of phonological awareness are used throughout a person’s entire reading journey. Blending, segmenting, and manipulating sounds will help students quickly decode, which means reading the words on a page, and encode, which refers to the spelling of words.

Syllabication is also an effective strategy to help students with decoding and encoding. Onset and rime help students understand the similarities and differences of word families, which are also essential when learning to read and spell. The study of word families in phonics is easier for students to grasp when they have a strong sense of phonological awareness. Alliteration, another important component of phonological awareness, is also an element of figurative language. Students learn this language skill in the upper elementary school level. Reading is a developmental process, and phonological awareness is the first part of the literacy learning experience.

Phonological Awareness Activities

A variety of phonological awareness activities can be implemented into daily literacy instruction to increase reading and writing success for all students. One phonological awareness activity that can be used to address several key skills is the use of sorting pictures. The visual images or picture cards can be sorted by initial sound, final sound, syllables, or rhyme. Students can complete these activities independently, in small groups, or in an oral whole-group lesson led by the teacher. Poetry, nursery rhymes, and traditional songs are a fun way to begin each morning to increase phonological awareness and engagement. After the recitation or singing takes place, teachers can ask students to clap out the number of words in a sentence or the number of syllables (or beats) in a word. Children can also put their thumbs up when hear a rhyme pair.

Activities that encourage children to segment and blend one-syllable words are another way to teach phonological awareness. Patting out beginning, middle, and ending sounds on the arm is beneficial activity for this purpose. A teacher should say a CVC (consonant, vowel, consonant) word like mat. The student should respond by making each individual sound of each of the three letters. Say the first sound while patting the shoulder, the middle sound while patting the elbow, and the third sound while patting the wrist.

Sound boxes are an extension of how to practice blending or segmenting words. Students can use pennies, coins, or beans as a manipulative to represent each sound. Playing a game like “I’m thinking of” is an oral clue game for children to guess a word from the clues provided. An example of this would be the following: This word begins with the m sound and ends with the p sound. Any guesses? The middle sound makes the same sound as the first sound of the word octopus. Any new guesses? Yes, the word is mop.

Teachers can also incorporate movement by having students toss beanbags to blend or segment words or jump rope the words. Phonological awareness activities are appropriate for young children, older students, students with special needs, or students that are considered English language learners. When students are provided many opportunities to learn, practice, and implement phonological awareness skills, they are receiving the best knowledge and support to increase their reading and writing skills as they grow as readers.

The post Phonological Awareness in the Classroom appeared first on TeachHUB.

]]>
How to Help Struggling Emergent Readers https://www.teachhub.com/teaching-strategies/2020/01/how-to-help-struggling-emergent-readers/ Fri, 31 Jan 2020 22:09:51 +0000 https://www.teachhub.com/?p=1393 We often take learning to read for granted, as though it is something that nearly every child will naturally do, like learning to walk. The truth is learning to read is not a natural process but one that takes solid instruction, both in school and at home. Direct Explicit Instruction Direct explicit instruction is nothing...

The post How to Help Struggling Emergent Readers appeared first on TeachHUB.

]]>
We often take learning to read for granted, as though it is something that nearly every child will naturally do, like learning to walk. The truth is learning to read is not a natural process but one that takes solid instruction, both in school and at home.

Direct Explicit Instruction

Direct explicit instruction is nothing new in education. It emphasizes teacher-student interaction to teach skills. There are six steps generally recognized in direct explicit instruction:

  1. Review and check previous work.
  2. Present new material.
  3. Provide guided practice.
  4. Provide feedback and corrections.
  5. Provide independent practice.
  6. Provide weekly and monthly reviews.

Essentially, direct explicit instruction involves a gradual release from teacher-directed instruction to independent practice. The more specific the learning objective, the more direct explicit instruction is recommended.

Phonological Awareness

Phonological awareness is a broad set of skills that involves being able to break language down into discreet units: sentences into words, words into syllables, onsets from rimes, and syllables into sounds. Phonemic awareness is the specific skill of being able to break syllables into sounds. It is usually the last phonological skill to develop. It is important to note that phonological awareness is oral and auditory, as opposed to written. This oral and auditory awareness is a precursor to decoding the written word.

For most students, phonological awareness begins before formal schooling even starts, without any direct explicit instruction. Parents can help develop this awareness by:

  • Reading aloud to their children. Point out words that have the same onset (beginning sound) and rime (ending syllable). For example, “fox” and “fish” have the same onset, while “fox” and “box” have the same rime. Find examples of these patterns in everyday conversations.
  • Talking with their children. Point out rhyming and alliteration in everyday conversations with children.
  • Singing songs with their children. Sing nursery rhymes with your child and encourage silly variations, substituting some sounds for others. Practice clapping out the syllables in the songs.

 

For grade school students who still struggle with phonological awareness, systematic instruction is required. This instruction is direct and explicit. While there are a variety of strategies, interventions, and programs available, it is important that any instruction is research-based. The What Works Clearinghouse, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, is a good resource for effective phonological awareness instruction.

Sound-Letter Correspondence

Sound-letter correspondence refers to a reader being able to associate certain sounds with certain letters. This is the instruction that takes emerging readers from phonological awareness to actually being able to decode the written word using phonics, a method of teaching people to read by correlating sounds with letters or groups of letters.

Sound-letter correspondence is best taught using direct explicit instruction. The following sequence is typically used to teach sound-letter correspondence:

a, m, t, p, o, n, c, d, u, s, g, h, i, f, b, l, e, r, w, k, x, v, y, z, j, q

Though it may seem strange to teach letters out of alphabetical order, this sequence teaches high-frequency letters first, allowing students to begin reading as soon as possible. Letters that are easily confused, such as “b” and “d”, are separated from each other in sequence. Short vowel sounds are taught before long vowel sounds.

Blended Reading and Segmented Spelling

Once students understand letter-sound correspondence, they are able to begin blending those sounds to decode words. Blending is often referred to as “sounding out” a word. For instance, given the word “bat”, the emerging reader will at first sound it out slowly, “bbbbaaaatttt”, and eventually will blend the sounds together to form the word “bat”.

Segmentation is the skill of splitting words up into their separate phonemes to help emergent readers spell words. Given the word “bat” orally, the student will separate the individual sounds into b/a/t. Knowing the letter that corresponds to each of these sounds, the student is able to spell the word correctly, “b-a-t”.

Sight Words

While phonics-based instruction is shown to be effective in teaching most students to read most words, there are situations that call for the use of sight words. Sight words are words that students should be able to pronounce within three seconds of seeing them in print.

There are two types of sight words. The first type includes words that are used frequently. Learning to recognize this type of word by sight allows readers to move quickly through text, saving energy for deciphering less frequently used words. Examples of these words include “and”, “the”, and “like”.

The second type of sight word does not follow typical phonetic rules, so they cannot be taught using phonics instruction. Some examples include “have”, “said”, and “women”.

Sight word instruction should complement phonics instruction, not replace it. Instruction should not last more than ten minutes at a time. Words should be introduced in isolation, but then reinforced in reading material. Students should only be exposed to a limited number of words (2-7) at any given time. The Dolch sight word list and the Fry sight word list are two well-established resources from which teachers can find sight words.

Handwriting

Handwriting also plays a surprisingly important role in reading instruction. Students who practice handwriting more tend to be better readers and spellers. Typing does not seem to have the same effect. It is hypothesized that writing words by hand while saying the words aloud activates brain circuits that promote literacy.

In a world that is increasingly digital, it is worth implementing often neglected handwriting practice. Having students write their spelling words or sight words may help them learn them more quickly.

Learning to read is not a process that just occurs naturally. Turning a child into a reader requires direct explicit instruction in phonological awareness, phonics, sight words, and handwriting.

The post How to Help Struggling Emergent Readers appeared first on TeachHUB.

]]>