There has been a huge shift in the past few year
in how we teach reading in UK schools. This is having a big impact and
helping many children learn to read and spell. Phonics is recommended
as the first strategy that children should be taught in helping them
learn to read English. It is backed up with other teaching methods such
as Guided Reading and Shared Reading to help children develop reading
comprehension skills and hopefully to give them a real love of reading.
What is phonics?
Words are made up from small units
of sound called phonemes. Phonics teaches children to be able to listen
carefully and identify the phonemes that make up each word. This helps
children to learn to read words and to spell words.
In phonics lessons children are
taught three main things.
GPCs
The are taught GPCs. This stands
for grapheme phoneme correspondences. This simply means that they are
taught all the phonemes in the English language and ways of writing
them down. These sounds are taught in a particular order. The first
sounds to be taught are s, a, t, p.
Blending
Children are taught to be able
to blend. This is when children say the sounds that make up a word and
are able to merge the sounds together until they can hear what the word
is. This skill is vital in learning to read.
Segmenting
Children are also taught to segment.
This is the opposite of blending. Children are able to say a word and
then break it up into the phonemes that make it up. This skill is vital
in being able to spell words.
What makes phonics tricky?
In some languages learning
phonics is easy because each phoneme has just one grapheme to represent
it. The English language is a bit more complicated than this. This is
largely because England has been invaded so many times throughout its
history. Each set of invaders brought new words and new sounds with
them. As a result, English only has around 44 phonemes but there are
around 120 graphemes or ways of writing down those 44 phonemes. Obviously
we only have 26 letters in the alphabet so some graphemes are made up
from more than one letter.
sh ch th oo ay (these
are all digraphs - graphemes with two letters)
There are other graphemes
that are trigraphs (made up of 3 letters) and even a few made from 4
letters.
Another slightly sticky
problem is that some graphemes can represent more than one phoneme for
example ch makes very different sounds in these three words:
chips, school, chef
So why bother learning
phonics?
In the past people argued that
because the English language is so tricky, there was no point teaching
children phonics. Now, people acknowledge that these tricky bits mean
that it is even more important that we teach phonics and children learn
it clearly and systematically. A written language is basically a kind
of a code. Teaching phonics is just teaching children to crack that
code. Children learn the simple bits first and then easily progress
to get the hang of the trickier bits.
How is phonics taught?
Some people worry that phonics
is taught to children when they are too young. However, those people
might be surprised if they stepped into a phonics lesson. Phonics is
only taught for 15-20 minutes per day. This session is made up from
games, songs and actions. Children often enjoy this so much that they
beg their teachers to play phonics games with them at other times of
the day.