Teaching Resources

So, what is real systematic phonics teaching?

Phonics is essential as part of the teaching process to take learners from oral to written language.

<h3>Simply&comma; phonics is the process of teaching how the 26 letters of the English Alphabet are used to represent the 44 spoken sounds of English&period; English is a morphophonemic language which means that it is based on both phonics and meaning&period;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;school-news&period;com&period;au&sol;latest-print-issue&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener"><strong>Read the latest print edition of <em>School News<&sol;em> HERE<&sol;strong><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is important to remember&comma; when learners start school at five years of age&comma; they have an average acquired vocabulary of over five-thousand words &lpar;words which they can speak and understand&rpar;&period; The words a child can speak are made using 44 individual speech sounds&period;  When we teach how to read and spell spoken words&comma; we teach how the letters of the English Alphabet are used to represent the sounds we speak&period; One of the difficulties in learning to read and write in English is that the code is not a transparent code&comma; that is&comma; each letter of the English Alphabet does not represent only one sound and speech sounds can be represented in various ways&period; The way a sound is represented will in many cases be meaning based&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Morphemes are the smallest units of meaning in a word&comma; and morphemes are represented by phonics patterns&period; Teaching phonics helps explain the reason a morpheme is written a certain way&period; Teaching morphemes makes word study fun and helps children quickly understand and make connections between words for meaning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Teaching &OpenCurlyQuote;tw’ is a morpheme ling to meaning two&comma; helps teach connected words such as twin&comma; twine&comma; between&comma; twist&comma; twenty&comma; twilight and so son&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The phonics in words can quickly change with the change in the morpheme&period; When teaching the word &OpenCurlyQuote;sign’ which has three phonemes s-i-gn&comma; the phonics changes when the word changes to signal&comma; s-i-g-n-a-l&comma; the &OpenCurlyQuote;gn’ is no longer representing just one phoneme&sol;speech sound&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Unfortunately&comma; over the decades&comma; people have tried to simplify phonics when setting the foundation to literacy teaching&period; Unfortunately&comma; this simplification has led to the cycle of phonics being valued or demonised&comma; and this cycle has been repeated now for decades&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is exciting that the cycle is now dialled to &OpenCurlyQuote;value phonics’ but this may quickly change once again&comma; if those now championing phonics continue following the rigid path of &OpenCurlyQuote;synthetic phonics’ as the only phonics process to be used in our classrooms&period; Research evidence has always been clear on the value of phonics&comma; sadly the teaching process employed to teach phonics can very quickly determine its value as an essential element in literacy learning&period; In fact&comma; when taught incorrectly&comma; phonics can have disastrous effects on literacy acquisition&period; Understanding what systematic phonics teaching really means is the key to successful and sustainable phonics teaching&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"attachment&lowbar;28422" aria-describedby&equals;"caption-attachment-28422" style&equals;"width&colon; 638px" class&equals;"wp-caption alignnone"><img class&equals;" wp-image-28422" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;school-news&period;com&period;au&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2024&sol;09&sol;SN33-TR-THRASS-2-1024x386&period;png" alt&equals;"phonics" width&equals;"638" height&equals;"241" &sol;><figcaption id&equals;"caption-attachment-28422" class&equals;"wp-caption-text">Image supplied by THRASS<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>Here and now in Australia there is a misguided understanding that &OpenCurlyQuote;systematic phonics teaching’ means a sequential and laborious &OpenCurlyQuote;diet of phonics’ in a particular instructional order&comma; delivered only using a &OpenCurlyQuote;synthetic phonics’ teaching process that is supported with &OpenCurlyQuote;Decodables’ reading books&period; Many learners are left waiting for phonics sequences to catch up to their needs and as such are being held back in the reading and writing&sol;spelling processes&period; What they are being taught is not transferable or sustainable in the world of print around them&period; It gives no agency for implicit learning or the ability to problem-solve at their level of need&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This misguided understanding of &OpenCurlyQuote;systematic phonics teaching’ will once again distort the ABSOLUTE POWER of phonics in literacy teaching&period; The &OpenCurlyQuote;misconceptions’ by some of how phonics should be taught will once again see phonics devalued as it creates a psycholinguistic guessing game of how the English code and orthography works&period;  We need a middle ground in the &OpenCurlyQuote;polarising war’ of teaching reading in which explicit and comprehensive phonics teaching is part of a systematic process that provides for sustainable and transferable learning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Systematic phonics teaching means that phonics is routinely taught as part of our literacy teaching system&comma; not ad hoc&comma; or not at all&comma; and not only&period; Phonics is directed at word-level instruction and is the teaching process of learning to identify the letters and letter combinations we use to represent sounds in words &lpar;graphemes&rpar;&period;  We teach the graphemes &lpar;phonics patterns for sounds&rpar; to build our visual memory and orthographic mapping of words for sight vocabulary&period;  As we build our understanding of these patterns&comma; we build our reading and spelling ability&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is important and indisputable that phonics should be taught in all the recognised &OpenCurlyQuote;teaching’ forms&comma; to build the understanding of the phoneme-to-grapheme and grapheme-to-phoneme relationships in all words&period; Importantly&comma; phonics must be used across the curriculum and grades&period;  Phonics is an essential part of systematic word study teaching and underpins the teaching of morphemes and etymology needed for building oral and written vocabulary&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The process of &OpenCurlyQuote;synthetic phonics’ &lpar;part to the whole blending of graphemes to phonemes&rpar; is best to serve the teaching of blending used in the decoding process&comma; but it is indisputable that learners must also be explicitly taught analytic phonics and phonics in context&period; These phonics strategies build the orthographic mapping of words to develop our sight vocabulary&period; Along with handwriting&comma; this rich mixture of phonics teaching supports the development of reading and writing to supersize literacy outcomes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Time to rethink what is best for all our learners&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>This article was written by Denyse Richie&comma; Teacher&comma; Teacher Trainer and Author&period; Ms Ritchie is Honorary Chair of Literacy and Fellow&comma; Murdoch University&comma; Western Australia&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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