How Modern Schools Make Terrible Writers (Deliberately)
Examples of Phonics Components
Letter Sounds (Alphabet): 'a' as in apple, 'b' as in bat, 'c' as in cat.
Digraphs (Two letters, one sound): 'sh', 'ch', 'th', 'ph'.
Long Vowels: 'ai' (paid), 'ee' (bee), 'ie' (sky).
Split Digraphs: 'a_e' (date), 'i_e' (time).
How to Teach Phonics (Systematic & Explicit Approach)
Start with Single Sounds: Teach letter sounds instead of just names.
Blending: Teach children to blend sounds together to read words (e.g., /d/-/o/-/g/ -> dog).
Segmenting: Break words down into individual sounds for spelling (e.g., cat -> /c/-/a/-/t/).
Sequence: Introduce common letters first, often in sets (e.g., s, a, t, i, p, n), to start making words quickly.
Use Multi-sensory Techniques: Combine audio (saying sounds), visual (flashcards), and kinesthetic (actions or writing) techniques. [1, 3, 4, 11, 12]
Types of Phonics
Synthetic Phonics: The most common method, teaching children to convert letters into sounds and blend them together to read.
Analytic Phonics: Analyzing letter-sound relationships in known words rather than blending sounds.
Embedded Phonics: Teaching phonics within the context of authentic reading and writing, rather than isolated lessons. [3, 13, 14, 15, 16]
Phonics Games
Sound Matching: Matching picture cards to their starting sound.
Flashcard Dash: Identifying letter sounds quickly as they are flipped.
Word Building (Magnetic Letters): Physically blending letter tiles to form words.
Nonsense Word Reading: Reading made-up words (e.g., "zot") to practice decoding skills. [4, 11, 17, 18, 19]
Effective phonics instruction is systematic, explicit, and typically introduced in kindergarten or first grade, which aids word recognition, spelling, and reading comprehension. [2]
