Phonological Awareness
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Phonological awareness is the building block to reading and writing. Students should be able to isolate, manipulate and blend sounds they hear before being able to read and write them.
●First Sound Fluency- When given a word, students will say the first sound in the word (not the letter name). Saying the first sound in a word is the first phonological skill we work on. Simply ask your child, “What is the first sound in ______?” While driving in the car you might say, “I see a store what is the first sound in the word “store”? They should respond, “/ssssss/” or “There is a cow! What’s the first sound in cow?”, etc. Later in the year, we will work on isolating middle and ending sounds.
●Sound Segmentation- When given a word, students will tell you all the sounds in a word. If you say the word “sun”, they would respond “/sss/ /u/ /n/”. You could also have them count out the sounds using their fingers. How many sounds are in the word club? /k/ /l/ /u/ /b/, 4 sounds. How many sounds in fish? /f/ /i/ /sh/, 3 sounds.
●Blending Sounds- Blending sounds is the opposite of segmenting. You would say a word slowly (saying each sound), and the child would say the whole word quickly (how we talk). Drag out a word without stopping between the sounds. For example, you would say /mmmmmaaaaaannnnn/ for “man” and /cuuuuuut/ for “cut”. You can do a game to have your child figure out names, food or activities. For example, “After dinner we are having /iiiissscrrrrreeeemmm/. What are we having? Ice Cream!”
●Rhyming- Rhyming words sound like each other on the ending part of a word. Rhyming is a great way to build understanding of word parts and sounds as well as build skills for spelling later on. When reading a story or singing a song with rhyming words, point out the rhymes. For example, “Twinkle, twinkle, little star. How I wonder what you are. Hey, star… are; Those words rhyme! What else rhymes with star?” Find things around the house and say 3 rhyming words for each item.
Phonological Awareness Resources and Information
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Carl's Corner Phonemic Awareness
Information and resources on phonemic awareness (free printables).
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University of Oregon Phonemic Awareness Resources
Teaching strategies and examples for developing phonemic awareness skills such as sound isolation, oral blending, and segmenting.
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Reading Rockets Information on Phonological Awareness
Information and parent resources on Phonological and Phonemic Awareness. Why are these important skills? How can I help my child develop these skills?
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Florida Center for Reading Research
Printable PDF of games practicing phonological awareness such as isolating phonemes (first, last, middle sounds), segmenting, and counting syllables.
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Letters and Sounds Lessons and Resources
This "Letters and Sounds" site has lessons and resources to help children develop pre-reading skills. The phase 1 set of materials targets phonological awareness skills.
Phonological Awareness Online Games
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Education.com Phonological Awareness Games
Games to practice rhyming, blending, segmenting and listening for matching sounds.
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Professor Garfield Fishing with Phonics
Fish for letter cards matching the first or last sound of the given word. Have the child SAY the first/last sound of the word before choosing the matching letter.
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Professor Garfield "Orson's Farm" Games
Choose a farm game to play to practice phonological awareness skills such as rhyming, phoneme manipulation, and blending.
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PBS Kids Sandbox Search
Dig up items in the sand that begin with the target sound. Have your child say the first sound of the item as they dig it up.