Islands is a six level Primary series that engages children in 21st century learning. Children uncover clues and solve mysteries as they learn English. A special Synthetic Phonics programme is presented to teach pronunciation and spelling and help develop pupils’ reading and writing.
3. Letter sounds = alphabetic code
• decode letters in order to read
• encode sounds in order to spell
The rules of the alphabetic code
4. Analytic vs. Synthetic Phonetic approaches
Analytic phonics
uses a whole-to-part approach
– noting that each word begins with the
same sound
eg ‘p’ in : put, pig, pet, play
Synthetic phonics
use a part-to-whole approach
-to pronounce each letter and then blend
e.g. /s/-/t/-/o/-/p/ ‘stop’
5. Developing learner strategies
Analytic phonics
Encourages educated 'guesswork' to decode
words:
Top-down strategies to learning
• read the initial letter and guessing the word
• look at illustrations
• memorize the whole word
Synthetic phonics
Discourages guesswork:
Bottom-up strategies to learning
• equal importance is placed on all letter
sounds
• apply knowledge and principles of the
alphabetic code
6. Developing reading (and spelling) skills
the teacher can assess and address
accurately what a learner does not know
the bottom-up mechanical approach of
synthetic phonics is the process of learning
to read
Which means that…
7. Phonics
Synthetic Phonics
Islands phonics sequence draws on the UK
Department for Education and Skills Letters and Sounds sequence (3) and
the Loring sequence (4) The Letters and Sounds program teaches
grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs) in terms of frequency
and usefulness to beginner learners.
8. a beginner learner of English
learns how to decode
/a/ and /p/ and /s/ and /t/ to
form the word 'sat'
but won't know – and it
wouldn't be appropriate to
teach them – that this is the
past tense of the verb 'to sit'
9. 1st - Learning letter-sounds for
reading (spelling in TB
extension)
2nd - Blending letter sounds for
reading words
3rd - Reading words/sentences
in supported reading (visual
meaning)
10. The initial group of consonants
and vowels, enable children to
read and spell many simple
CVC (consonant-vowel-
consonant) words.
eg, the sequence begins by
teaching
a, p, s, t, i, n
which make up more three-letter
words than any other six letters
of the alphabet.
11. 4th - Reading words in semi-
independent reading (less
visual support)
5th - Spelling through letter
recall (with letter-sounds
review)
6th - Applying reading skills
in independent reading (no
visual support)
12. Phonics
Synthetic Phonics
References
•Rose, J. (2006) Independent Review of the Teaching of Early Reading, Final Report
UK Department for Education and Skills
•Langenberg, D. L. et al. Teaching Children to Read: An Evidence-Based Assessment
of the Scientific Research Literature on reading and Its Implications for Reading Instruction
•U.S. National Reading Panel
•Australian Government Department of Education, Science and Training (2005)
•Teaching Reading, Report and Recommendations. National Inquiry into the
Teaching of Literacy
•UK Department for Education and Skills (2007) Letters and Sounds:
Principles and Practice of High Quality Phonics
•Masterson, J., Stuart, M., Dixon, M. & Lovejoy, S. (2003) Children's
Printed Word Database. Economic and Social Research Council funded Project, R00023406
•Loring, H. (1980) Reading Made Easy with Blend Phonics for First Grade
U.S. Logan Institute for Educational Excellence
www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/phonics/
www.letters-and-sounds.com
www.childrenofthecode.org
www.getreadingright.com