Denise
Feb 7, 20193 min
Phonics is taught in schools up until Year 2. For the majority of children this is a very good way of learning how to read, write and spell. But it is not for all children. Formally it starts in Reception but aspects of it start before that, in pre-school and nursery.
Phonics is something you can do at a very early age - you can help them with their phonics journey but singing songs together and sounding out words in a fun way.
Children benefit by exposure to books from an early age. They need to see that books are fun and not just for kids. Not just books - comics, shopping list, cereal boxes, games on the computer, adverts in fact all written text.
Try to provide lots of opportunities for your child to engage with text.
Enjoying and sharing books leads to children seeing them as a source of pleasure and interest and motivates them to value reading.
Now to start with the phonics.
Phase one is where it all starts.
Don't Panic - most of the stuff in phase one you are already doing everyday - this just lets you understand why your doing it and how important it is.
Phase One activities are arranged under the following seven aspects.
■ Aspect 1: General sound discrimination – environmental sounds
■ Aspect 2: General sound discrimination – instrumental sounds
■ Aspect 3: General sound discrimination – body percussion
■ Aspect 4: Rhythm and rhyme
■ Aspect 5: Alliteration ■ Aspect 6: Voice sounds
■ Aspect 7: Oral blending and segmenting
Here on the website you will find a whole page of phase one phonics. Check it out ... https://www.whyplay.co/phonics-phase-one-1
Progression in phonics is taught through phases.
Encourage children to use language for thinking by asking open questions such as What does it feel like?
Children enjoy experimenting with the sounds different objects can make.
Explore with children the sounds different animals make, including imaginary ones such as dragons.
Playing with musical instruments outdoors encourages children to experiment with the sounds they can hear.
Listen to the children as they re-enact familiar stories.
Talk with children as they paint and comment on the movements and shapes they are making.
Children need to build a stock of rhymes through hearing them repeated over and over again.
Enjoying and sharing books leads to children seeing them as a source of pleasure and interest.
Children enjoy listening to rhymes and inventing their own.
For children learning English as an additional language (EAL), songs and rhymes help them to tune into the rhythm and sound of English.
Make sure the book collection includes books with lots of alliterative rhymes and jingles.
As children explore the texture of shaving foam, pasta shapes or foamy water, introduce words that may be new to them such as smooth frothy crunchy.
When children act out familiar stories, encourage them to use sound effects like swish swish through the grass, squelch squelch in the mud, splishy sploshy through the rain.
As children play with the balls, bounce a ball alongside them making the sound ‘b’ b’ b’