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Phonological and Phonemics Awareness Lesson Plans

Phonological and Phonemics Awareness Lesson Plans

Dorit Sasson | TheApple.com

Phonemic and phonological research has shown the benefits of using phonological and phonemic awareness activities at the very early stages of reading.

Major research studies have shown the benefits of systematic, explicit phonics instruction in early grades (Adams, 1990; Beck & Juel, 1995; Chall, 1996; Chall & Popp, 1996) Every elementary school teacher needs a bank of phonological and phonemic awareness activities to help facilitate with the process of reading instruction by pinpointing the difficulties of acquiring sound-letter correspondences. Consider using the following phonological and phonemic awareness activities either in a one-on-one framework or in whole class instruction.

Assessing Phonological Instruction

Phonological awareness is the understanding of the different ways that spoken language can be broken into smaller components. Segmentation tasks include identifying phonemes in whole words as illustrated in the phonological activities below:

1. Segmentation tasks. Students count syllables and phonemes (tapping tasks, syllable or phonemes)
2. Identifying syllables and phonemes. Example: first part of carpet
3. Students supply the missing syllables and phonemes © at ca(t)

Blending Tasks

1. Students blend syllbles. Example: car-pet.
2. Students blend phonemes. Example: c-a-t

Rhyming Tasks

1. Students rhymes word with pictures
2. Rhyme production. Example: day and say
3. Odd rhyme out. Students identify which rhyme does not belong. Example: mad-cap-sap-tap

Manipulating Tasks

1. Deleting phonemes. Students say “cat” without the “c”
2. Adding phonemes. Students say “mee” and “t” (meet)
3. Substitution. Student put “c” for “p” in “cat”

Phonological and Phonemics Awareness Assessment

Teacher can do any one of the following activities especially for helping dyslexics. By using a test of phonological awareness, the teacher can provide phonemic awareness strategies in a future lesson plan.

1. How many letters are in the alphabet?
2. Say the alphabet in order – note where the sequencing breaks down.
3. Present lower case letters randomly. Ask pupil to name the letters and to name the sounds.
4. Vowels. Ask the students the names and sounds of the vowels. Elicit the vowel sounds and names by describing or showing pictures of words with initial vowel sounds such as astronaut, elephant, igloo, olive, umbrella.
5. Ask students to write the lower case letters.

Ask students to read three letter words (CVC). Present each column at a time
Example:

  • sob
  • cat
  • cut
  • mum
    Target: Students should read these words within 30 seconds.

6. Students should read long vowel words mixed with short vowel words.

  • note
  • tap
  • beg
  • seem
    Again, the target time should be 30 minutes

7. Sentence in increasing length and difficulty.

8. Students find the missing letter in four different alphabet sequences

9. Teacher says sound, student says the name. Teacher says the name, students says the sound.

10. Phonic drill. Drill the reading of various combinations for the pupose of automaticity. Use the same endings and add different beginning sounds. Later combine the different ending sounds. –ad -ag
-am -an -ap -at -ack

11. Spelling – dictation.
Dictate the following words. The students have 30 minutes in which to write them.

  • nod
  • feel
  • wise
  • hug
  • cake
  • zoo
  • yet
  • line
  • have
  • six
  • rope
  • mice
  • job
  • huge
  • quack
    Ongoing phonemic and phonological awareness assessments provide teachers with clear information about students’ reading ability levels and progress and especially, can help teachers identify those students in need of supplemental phonemic and phonological awareness lesson plans.


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  • Photo_user_blank_big

    Labyrinth

    2 months ago

    6 comments

    Teaching initial reading skills is dependent on so many factors. What a great lesson can assess shortcoming in individual students so teacher can differentiate future lessons.
    I think music/rhythm works with many students, but not ALL students. We need to ensure our lessons cover different approaches.
    Worksheets are a way of individual practice to hone skills towards mastery, but definitely not an end all and should not be depended on.

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    abenacquisto

    2 months ago

    2 comments

    I believe we can not teach a child to read without reading to them. Throw away the work sheets and make centers or workshops with games, music, and movement to teach sounds and patterns. In a 10 minute story sharing we as teachers can teach countless strategies and skills to help students read (or learn to). Especially for new readers, I observe that we can not teach them, per say, buthelp them learn through play! Its the most beautiful thing in the world to watch a child learn to read; From the beginning of letter/sound recognition to whole word and sound-out practices and then fluency!

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