Ashby C of EAshby C of EPrimary SchoolPrimary SchoolAshby C of EAshby C of E
Primary SchoolPrimary School
Foundation Stage Foundation Stage
Phonics WorkshopPhonics Workshop
• Children start school with an awareness of print around them.
• Some are aware that the print carries meaning.
• How we teach reading: Phonics Tricky words Understanding
Main approach to supporting children with unknown words...
Phonics!
•Children need to use the letter sounds (not names) to decode words.
What is Phonics?• Knowledge of letters and the
sounds they make. • Skills of blending these sounds
together to read words.• Skills of segmenting the sounds in
a word and choosing the correct letters needed to spell it.
There are 44 phonemes (sounds) that the children learn
throughout the Letters and Sounds Programme.
s a t p i n m d
g o c k ck e u r
h b f ff l ll ss j
v w x y z, zz qu ch sh
th ng ai ee igh oa oo ar
or ur ow oi ear air ure er
Phoneme- The sounds in a word
How many sounds in the word clap?
c-l-a-p
How many sounds in the word chat?
ch-a-t
How do we teach phonics?
• The children are taught using LCP Phonics scheme of work that follows the Primary National Strategy Letters and Sounds.
• Letters and Sounds is broken up into phases 1-6.
• Children start from phase 1.• They receive 15-20 minutes phonics
teaching each day.
Phase 1
• Children explore sounds and words and develop awareness of rhyme, rhythm and alliteration. They learn how to orally blend sounds and distinguish different sounds in words.
• All children in the Foundation Stage have started on Phase 1.
Phase 2• Children are introduced to at least 19
letters and corresponding sounds. They begin to read and spell simple CVC words. They also begin to read High Frequency words.
• All children will start phase 2 after half term.
Phase 2 letter sets• Set 1 – s, a, t, p • Set 2 – i, n, m, d • Set 3 – g, o, c, k • Set 4 – ck, e, u, r • Set 5 – h, b, f, ff, l, ll, s, ss
• CVC words – Consonant-Vowel-Consonant
These are simple words which children start with when they begin to blend sounds e.g. sat pin
Phase 3• Phase 3 continues in the same way as Phase 2
and introduces new sounds. By the end of Phase 3 the children will know one way of writing down each of the 44 sounds.
• Set 6 – j, v, w, x • Set 7 – y, z, zz, qu • Consonant digraphs – ch, sh, th, ng • Vowel digraphs (and trigraphs) ai, ee, igh,
oa, oo, oo (short), ar, or, ur, ow, oi, ear, air, ure, er,
Phase 4The main challenge in this phase is to help children to blend and segment words with adjacent consonants e.g. truck, help.
had, hand, handstandcap, clap, clampsad, sand, stand
• High Frequency Words (HFWs)These are common words that are useful for children to
learnto read and spell. As children progress through the
phases ofLetters and Sounds they are introduced to sets of HFWs.Some words are decodable which children can blend to
reade.g. then.
Some are tricky words e.g. said, which are notphonically decodable and are learned by sight.
Some ways we teach phonics
Blending to read•This involves looking at a written word, looking at each letter and to work out which sound (phoneme) each letter represents and then merging these sounds (phonemes) together to make a word. This is the basis of reading.
dog tree
Sound Buttons
c l a p
ch a t
Have a try!• Put the sound buttons under these
words speed cat slight
pram toast bin coin• farm• jumper
Spellings• In the Foundation Stage children will bring
home a word sheet at first before they start formal spellings. These words will be linked to the sounds learnt in school.
• Later in the academic year your child will be given a small number of spellings to learn each week, with the number of spellings increasing over time to a maximum of 10 words.
Silly/alien words• Words that are not real but have been
made up with sounds your child knows.• Good way of seeing how well a child
knows the sounds and can blend sounds to read and segment sounds to spell.
sproip