rwi phonics parent meeting. aims to share how phonics is taught in quwwat-ul islam to teach the...
TRANSCRIPT
RWI Phonics Parent Meeting
Aims
To share how phonics is taught in Quwwat-Ul Islam
To teach the basics of phonics
To develop parents’ confidence in helping their children with phonics and reading
To give parents an opportunity to ask questions
Why Phonics?
A complete literacy programme – targets individual level of each child and ensure they are making speedy progress in reading and writing.
Meets the demands of the new national curriculum, giving your children the best chance of success in the national tests.
Read Write Inc - Biggest changes you will notice.
•Stage not age –Children are grouped based on their reading level.
They will move to the next group once they are secure at their level.
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.
So, what exactly is phonics?
26 letters of alphabet
These letters and combinations of these letters make 44 sounds
Speech sounds- phonemes- the smallest units of sound in words
Letters or groups of letters- graphemes
Phonemes and graphemes
One letter or one group of letters used to write one sound.
e.g.
Grapheme
The sound ‘f’ can be written with the grapheme
f(fun)
ff ( huff)
ph (phone)
Blending
This is when children say the sounds that make up a word and merge the sounds together until they can hear what the word is. This skill is vital in learning to read.
Recognising the letter sounds in a written word, for example:
c-a-t and blending them in the order in which they are written to pronounce the word ‘cat’.
Not cuh-a-tuh
Segmenting
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.
‘Chopping Up’ the word to s p e ll it out!The opposite of blending. For example,
Play --- P l ay Dot dash count: Shop, green, stay
How do phonics help us read?
Say “hello” to Fred.
Fred can only talk in sounds...
He says “c_a_t.” Not cat.
We call this Fred Talk.
You can have fun with Fred Talk.
“What a tidy r-oo-m!”
“Where’s your c-oa-t?”
“Time for b-e-d!”
Now it is your turn to practice…
Sh ph ay ch
On-going assessment of individual children (regular regrouping as necessary)
Opportunities provided for children who need more help(intervention)
Year 1 Phonics screening check- 2016
Assessment
Oxford University Press publish the resources
Blend the sounds by pointing to each letter, then run your finger under the whole word as you say it.
Talk about the meaning if your child does not understand the word they have read.
Work at your child’s pace.
Always be positive and give lots of praise and encouragement.
Helping your child with decoding unfamiliar words
How to help your child at home…
Weekly Spellings Tricky words (Red words) Story Books (Fri- Mon) Homework
Tricky Words
There are many words that cannot be blended or
segmented. They are not written the way they are
sounded out. These words are learnt through practice.
example: said (sed) some
(sum)
And...
By reading your child lots of lovely stories and asking lots of questions!
Use these prompts to help you: What is that
character thinking?
What is the character saying?
What do you
think that character is
feeling now?
What is happening?
What do you think happens next?
Thank you for taking the time to come to this presentation.
Any questions?