Sunday

Teaching Short Vowel Sounds

Show the importance of vowel sounds by showing how one vowel change will make a new word. Write or make the first word with magnetic letters. The adult or teacher will separate the sounds and then blend the sounds together. (h - i - t, hit) Say the vowel sound. (i, i, i) Have the child or student say the vowel sound, separate the sounds, and blend the sounds with you a few times and point to the letters as sounds are made. Keep the first word visible and do the same with the second word. (h - a - t, hat) (a,a,a) Ask the child or student which letter is different in the words hit and hat? Ask the child to point to each vowel and make the sounds. If the child cannot, the adult or teacher should say the sound and have the child or student repeat the sound while pointing to the letter.
(i, a)    hit, hat     sit, sat      lap, lip      him, ham

(a, o)  hat, hot     black, block      sack, sock
(a, e)  man, men    bat, bet

(a, u)  cap, cup     ran, run     fan, fun

(i, o)   hit, hot     ship, shop     lost, list

(i, e)   big, beg     sit, set     spell, spill

(i, u)  dig, dug     hit, hut     stiff, stuff     punch, pinch

(o, e)  net, not     pet, pot     blond, blend     loss, less

(o, u)  hog, hug     rob, rub     lock, luck

(u, e)  duck, deck     hum, hem     nut, net     flush, flesh

Practice one or two groups of words a day and watch short vowel sound knowledge increase.

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Monday

Simply Box Sites / Easy Access

I've organized some free reading websites. Most have activities for children. Once you put the arrow over the site you want to check out, you will see a visit source box. Click on the box and you will go directly to the site.

Letter Learning
http://simplybox.com/public/?id=120141

Books for Beginning Readers
http://simplybox.com/public/?id=123522

Advanced Vocabulary
http://simplybox.com/public/?id127758

Beginning Vocabulary
http://simplybox.com/public/?id=127762

Phonemic Awareness
http://simplybox.com/public/?id=127764
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Tuesday

Teach Phonics Before Sight Words

Many children are taught sight words before they are taught to make the individual sounds in the words. Some children need a little help with phonemic awareness before they are ready for phonics. Many children begin to believe reading is about knowing each word by shape and sight. This may work for many easy books, but if a child has not learned to make individual sounds and blend those sounds together the child is not reading.

Use magnetic letters, a Magna Doodle, a white board, paper, or finger paints on slick side of freezer paper.

Teach Consonant Vowel. The vowel sound will be long.
Voice the separate sounds and blend together. n-o, no, g-o, go, m-e, me, h-e, he, sh-e, she, w-e, we
Look for CV pattern in other words.

Teach Vowel Consonant. The vowel sound will be short.
Voice the separate sounds and blend together. a-t, at, i-n, in, i-t, it, o-n, on,
u-p, up
Look for VC pattern in other words.

Teach Consonant Vowel Consonant. The vowel sound will be short.
Voice the separate sounds and blend together. m-o-m, mom, d-a-d, dad, c-a-t, cat,
d-o-g, dog, b-i-g, big, r-u-n, run
Look for CVC pattern in other words.

Teach the schwa sound. All vowels can make the "uh" sound.
Voice the sound "uh" and have the child copy it. Tell when a letter is quiet and practice separating and blending the sounds for the following list of words together.
th-uh, the, uh-w-ay, away, c-uh-m, come, wh-uh-t, what, b-uh-n-a-n-uh, banana
Look for the schwa sound in other words.

Teach the Silent e rule. The vowel before the silent e is sometimes long.
Voice the separate sounds and blend together. t-a-pe, tape, l-i-ke, like, p-o-ke, poke, t-u-be, tube
Look for the silent e rule in other words.

Teach two vowels together rule. Sometimes when two vowels are together the first one makes a long sound.
Voice the separate sounds and blend together. m-ea-n, mean, r-ai-n, rain, b-oa-t,
p-ie, pie
Look for two vowels in other words. The ea combination makes a short sound sometimes.

Once a child reads a word from beginning to end and is making individual sounds, more complicated rules and combinations can be shown while reading.
Other rules:
Blends should be taught to be read quickly together. bl, cl, fl, pl, sc, sk, str
An a next to an l or w will make a short o sound. all, want, walk, water, watch
The long a in a CV pattern is made with ay. day, say, play, way
The long i in a CV pattern is made with a y. my, try, fly, by, why
The long u in a CV pattern in made with an o or ew. to, do, who, few, chew, grew
Show and say sounds for the following combinations: ou, ow, ir, ur, er, ar, or(makes the er sound after a w, work, worry, worm), aw, au, oo, oi, oy, igh, ew, tion, ould, eigh, ture
The soft c and g happen next to an i, or e. circle, cent, gift, gentle, face, cage

This should be a good start for your beginning reader. Blend Phonics by Hazel Logan Loring and Word Mastery by Florence Akin are available for free on the internet if you want more phonics.

Try to teach rules and letter sound combinations for Fry's Sight Word List. Make flashcards and group by similar rules or sounds as you add and teach new words. Make your own flashcards with paper or notecards.

Happy Reading!
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