Use module 1 from Teacher only days 2023 - in SchoolDrive folder.
Lesson progression
Check out- The Great NZ Handwriting challengeMake sure tamariki use a spelling hand(sounding out the phonemes) and writing hand.
When making sounds ask - is it a Stop sound or Stretchy sound? Stop sounds cut when nose is blocked.
Cut the fluff, keep the stuff!
Chin your work - when kids hold up whiteboards.
/s/ = sound bar. eg. /k/ is the sound for -ck
When the s is trapped between 2 vowels, it makes a /z/ sound
REVLOC
These are the 6 different syllable types children will learn.
84% of words fit a spelling pattern. Use Etymonline for explanation.
C = Closed syllables
Are the most common.
Closed - is there a consonant to the right of the vowel? YeS? It’s trapped/closed in, so can only make the short sound
O = Open syllables
Open - is there a letter to the right? No? It's free to shout it's own name!
FLOSS (This is a closed rule pattern)
Is it 1 syllable
Is it a short vowel
Does it end in f, l, s, or z
If there's 3 ticks then you double to last sound!
Eg hill
Exceptions to the rule
Function words (if, yes, of, is)
Different language - chef
Slang - gal
Shortened - bus
Dictated sentences
Read, repeat x 2, take away and they write
Zip it when kids are writing - don't create extraneous cognitive load with your voice.
Save the praise for when they're not holding something in their working memory.
If they can't hold it in working memory, then the sentence is too long.
Prompt - go back to the beginning and read what you have written.
Consonant clusters - otherwise called blends'Move it' matts - sound boards.
-ck Longer spelling of /k/
Use the longer spelling right after a short vowel, eg. dock
Not after a consonant, eg. pink
-tch longer spelling of /ch/
Use longer spelling right after a long vowel.
Eg. ditch, lunch
Consonant Digraphs
ch has 3 sounds - don't need to do this with tamariki!
/ch/ - chin
/sh/ - champagne - French
/k/ - Christmas - greek
th
unvoiced - think
voiced - this
Consonant digraphs
c or k?
e = Silent e
The e powers up the vowel so that it gets to say it's long name.
Gentle Cindy
Do the g first, after you've covered it in your scope and sequence.
Gentle /g/
ge = gem
gi = giant
gy = gym
Cindy /s/
ce = cell
ci = city
cy = cycle
LSRASV - Longer spelling right after short vowel
-ge /j/
huge
large
hinge
cage
-dge /j/
fudge
badge
ledge
Eg. hedge The job of the /d/ is to keep the vowel short.
SchwaThe Schwa phonics sound (/ə/) is the name of a vowel sound that is found only in unstressed positions in English. It is a sound that is pronounced when the lips, tongue and jaws are relaxed. The most common vowel sound is the sound /uh/, which is what we call schwa. A schwa is a vowel sound in an unstressed syllable, where a vowel does not make its long or short vowel sound. Eg. sister
v = vowel teams
Paint Day - /ā/
ai - in the middle or beginning of a word
ay - only at the end
Goat in the Snow - /ō/
oa - in the middle or beginning of a word
ow - only at the end
See the sea - /ē/
No rule for this /ē/, only way to learn this is orthographic mapping. Lots of exposure.
Bright Tie - /ī/
igh - trigraph, this one is more common.
ie - tie
No rule for this /ī/, only way to learn this is orthographic mapping. Lots of exposure.
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