22
Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Welcome to our Reading and

Phonics Evening

30th September 2015

Page 2: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

The Power of Reading!

Creating a love of reading in children is potentially one of the most powerful ways of improving academic standards in school.

There can be few better ways to improve pupils chances in school, or beyond in the wider world than to enable them to become truly independent readers.

Page 3: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Reading

Success in reading is fundamental to success in school.

Reading is all about acquiring meaning; for enjoyment, information and understanding.

Page 4: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Reading requires two skills

Phonics and

Word Recognition

The ability to recognise words presented in and out of context.

The ability to blend letter

sounds (phonemes)

together to read words.

Understanding

The ability to understand the meaning of the

words and sentences in a text.

The ability to understand the

ideas, information and themes.

Page 5: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Understanding(Comprehension)

Being able to read words does not mean you understand what you read.

Your child might sound like a good reader but may not necessarily understand what the text means.

The best way to develop understanding is to talk about texts. Please see handout with suggested questions.

The next slide is easy to read but do you understand what it means?

Page 6: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

An extract taken from a computer manual

According to the previous ATA/IDE hard drive transfer protocol, the signalling way to send data was in synchronous strobe mode by using the rising edge of the strobe signal. The faster strobe rate increases EMI, which cannot be eliminated by the standard 40-pin cable used by ATA and ultra ATA.

Page 7: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Why Phonics?

Phonics teaches children to be able to listen carefully and identify the sounds that make up each word. This helps children to learn to read words and to spell words.

Reading and writing are like a code: phonics is teaching the child to crack the code.

Page 8: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Vocabulary A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a

word. A phoneme may be represented by 1, 2, 3 or 4 letters. E.g. t ai igh

A syllable is a word or part of a word that contains one vowel sound. E.g. hap/pen bas/ket let/ter

A grapheme is the letter(s) representing a phoneme. Written representation of a sound which may consist of 1 or more letters eg. The phoneme ‘s’ can be represented by the grapheme s (sun), se (mouse), c (city), sc or ce (science)

Page 9: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Vocabulary A digraph is two letters, which make one

sound. A consonant digraph contains two

consonantssh th ck ll

A vowel digraph contains at least one vowel

ai ee ar oy A split digraph is a digraph in which the

two letters are not adjacent (e.g. make)

A trigraph is three letters, which make one sound. E.g. igh dge

Page 10: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

How to say the sounds

• Saying the sounds correctly with your child is extremely important

• Sounds should be pronounced softly and in a clipped, short manner.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqhXUW_v-1s

Page 11: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Skills used in phonics

Blending for readingMerging phonemes together to pronounce a word.In order to read an unfamiliar word, a child must link a phoneme to each letter or letter group in a word and then merge them together to say the word.

sh – o – p

t– ai - l

Page 12: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Segmentation for spelling

Hearing individual phonemes within a word.

E.g. crash has 4 phonemes c – r – a – shIn order to spell a word a child must segment a word into the individual phonemes and choose a letter or letter combination to represent the phonemes.

For example a child may write:

‘The cat was blak. It had a wiet tayl and a pinc noas.’

‘I bulong to Youcalaylee club!’

It is important that children understand that blending and segmenting are reversible.

Page 13: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Activities

Metal Mike – Sound TalkingPhoneme countPhoneme frame and sound buttons

Page 14: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Phase progressionPhase 1 – preparing the ground (phonic awareness – listening, alliteration, oral blending and segmenting, learning letter names, rhythm and rhyme) Taught in Nursery but continued alongside all other phases especially Phase 2 in Reception.

Phase 2 – knowledge of common consonants and vowels, blending and segmenting CVC words. Learning to read some tricky words.

Phase 3 – Knowledge of one grapheme for each of the 44 phonemes, blending and segmenting CVC words. Learning to read and spell tricky words.

Phase 4 – Blending and segmenting longer words with previously learnt graphemes. Revision phase.

Phase 5 – Learning alternative graphemes. Learning to spell and read tricky words.

Phase 6 – Revision, consolidation, building fluency in reading. Focus on spelling (suffixes, past tense, spelling strategies – spelling tests)

Page 15: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

High frequency and tricky words

Alongside the teaching of phonics “tricky” high frequency words are not segmented but taught as whole words, recognised on sight.

E.g. was, you, ISome are ‘tricky’ to start with but will

become decodable once we have learned the harder phonemes.

E.g. out, there.

Page 16: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Reading in School How do we teach reading?

Daily Phonics (15-20mins) Shared reading Guided reading Independent reading Personal reading Focused reading activities Reading across the curriculum Class novels and stories

Page 17: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Phonics Screening check – Year 1

• This is a statutory assessment for all children in Year 1

• It will take place towards the end of the Summer Term.

• It is designed to confirm whether individual children have learned phonic decoding to an appropriate standard.

• The check consists of 40 words that the children read 1-2-1 with the teacher. Some words are real and some are made-up or ‘alien’ words.

“The check will be focused solely on decoding using phonics. The check will confirm individually whether pupils have learned phonic decoding to an appropriate standard by the end of Y1 and identify pupils who need additional support from their school to catch up.” Y1 Phonics Screening Check

Framework for Pilot in 2011 (DfE)

Page 18: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

How you can help? Please read to and with your child as often

as you can. 10 minutes daily is recommended.

When talking about letters please use the letter sounds and refer to video shown previously if you need to.

Practise orally segmenting and blending whenever the opportunity arises, e.g. I spy with my little eye a b_u_s, fetch me your c_o_a_t.

Encourage your child to look for print in the environment.

Page 19: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

How you can help?

Make duplicate sets of the phonemes and play pairs or snap with them.

Practise the words or spellings that come home from school.

Encourage the children to sound talk words when reading and writing.

Model reading (read in front of them) – if children see the significant adults in their life reading they will see why it’s important and enjoyable.

Our popular Wednesday reading mornings will resume after half-term.

Page 20: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Useful websites for Phonicswww.phonicsplay.com

http://www.letters-and-sounds.com

http://www.oxfordowl.co.uk/

http://www.ictgames.co.uk/

http://www.teachyourmonstertoread.com/

And an Apple Store app that has come recommended by the Cambridgeshire literacy adviser is “Cambug”

Page 21: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Other good resources for using at home

- Display an alphabet poster or chart in the kitchen.- Magnetic letters on the fridge. - Sound mats for use when writing.- A set of Flashcards of sounds for using in games. - Good quality story books and Non Fiction books.

Page 22: Welcome to our Reading and Phonics Evening 30 th September 2015

Thank you so much for coming.

Any Questions?