AAA - Training - The English Alphabetic Code
AAA - Training - The English Alphabetic Code
AAA - Training - The English Alphabetic Code
The English language has a fascinating history but this has resulted in a complex alphabetic code for the writing system whereby the 26 letters of the alphabet represent the 44 or so smallest sounds identifiable in English speech in three complicated ways: 1. one sound (phoneme) can be represented by one, two, three or four letters: e.g. /a/ a, /f/ ph, /igh/ igh, /oa/ ough 2. one sound can be represented by multiple spelling alternatives (graphemes): e.g. /oa/: o, oa, ow, oe, o-e, eau, ough 3. one grapheme (letter or letter group) can represent multiple sounds: e.g. ough: /oa/ though, /or/ thought, long /oo/ through, /ou/ plough, /u/ thorough On this Alphabetic Code Chart, the units of sound (phonemes or combined phonemes) are shown in slash marks. Vowel sounds are shown in red and consonant sounds are shown in blue. The vowel sounds provide the main volume and depth in spoken words whereas the consonant sounds are generally much quieter and sometimes very high-pitched such as /s/ and /t/. Teachers need to teach the separate units of sounds carefully, avoiding the added schwa or uh sound: e.g. sss not suh; t not tuh.
units of sound
information
The Synthetic Phonics Teaching Principles
a
apple
e
egg
-ea
head
-ai
said again
Teach the KNOWLEDGE of the alphabetic code; that is, the letter/s-sound correspondences. Teach the THREE CORE SKILLS:
i
insect
-y
cymbals
o
octopus
wa
watch
qua
qualify
alt
salt
1. DECODING: Sound out and blend all-through-the-printed-word for reading unknown words. 2. ENCODING: Orally segment (identify) the sounds all-through-thespoken-word for spelling; then select the correct graphemes AS CODE FOR the identified sounds in that particular word. 3. HANDWRITING: Hold the pencil with the tripod grip and form correctly the 26 upper case and 26 lower case letters on writing lines.
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u
umbrella
o
son
-ou
touch
-ough
thoroughfare
ai
first aid
-ay
tray
a
table
-ae
sundae
a-e
cakes
-ey
prey
-ea
break
eigh
eight
-aigh
straight
/ee/
between and
ee
eel
ea
eat
e
emu
e-e
concrete
-ey
key
-ie
chief
-ine
sardines
-ey
monkey
-ie
movie
Teach a simple code (basic or transparent) first; that is, mainly one spelling for each sound at a rate of two to five letter/s-sound correspondences per week. The simple code is part of the complex code a first step towards teaching the alphabetic code. Keep the simple code revised and begin to introduce spelling and pronunciation alternatives of the complex code (extended, advanced or opaque code) at a rate appropriate to the age, stage and ability of the learners. APPLICATION Provide a cumulative bank of words, sentences and texts at code level: 1. to model blending, segmenting for spelling, and handwriting 2. for each learner to practise his or her growing skills of blending, segmenting and handwriting increasingly independently. Provide cumulative, decodable reading books at code level. Two-pronged teaching approach Teach a systematic, planned synthetic phonics programme alongside incidental teaching of any letter/s-sound correspondences as required for differentiation, wider reading and spelling and for the wider curriculum - for individuals, groups and whole classes.
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-ie
tie
i
behind
-y
fly
i-e
bike
ei
eider duck
/oa/
oa
oak tree
ow
bow dough
o
yo-yo plateau
-oe
oboe
o-e
rope
u
unicorn
u-e
tube
ew
new
eu
pneumatic
/oo/ -oo
book moon
-oul
should
-u
push
long
/oo/ oo oi
ointment
-ue
blue
u-e
flute
-ew
crew
-ui
fruit
-ou
soup
-o
move
-ough
through
/oi/
oy
toy
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2012
ou
ouch !
ow
owl
-ough
plough
ar
artist
a
father
alm
palm
-alf
half
-alves
calves
or
fork
oar
oars
-oor
door
ore
snore
-our
four
Accents Teaching the English alphabetic code is not an exact science and accents need to be taken into account at all times along with the notion of tweaking (modifying) pronunciation when decoding to reach the correct target word or preferred pronunciation.
aw
dawn
au
sauce
-al
chalk
war
wardrobe
quar
quarter
augh
caught
ough
thought
/ur/
or can be /er/ schwa
er
mermaid
ir
birthday
ur
nurse
ear
earth
wor
world
effect (unstressed syllables) whereby, in reality, a sound close to /u/ is the spoken translation of the written code in words such as sofa (sofu), faster (fastu), little (littul), around (uround). This is common. Schwa effect for spelling Be aware of the schwa effect when segmenting spoken words for spelling. The ability to spell accurately relies on a growing awareness of spelling alternatives and knowledge of spelling word banks (words with the same spelling and sound). This knowledge takes much longer to acquire. Emphasise the process for spelling of SOUND-TO-PRINT rather than relying on visual memory and recall of letter order and letter names. Decoding is the reverse process: PRINT-TO-SOUND.
/u/
-er
mixer
-our
hunour
-re
theatre
-ar
collar
-or
sailor
or schwa /er/
air
hair
-are
hare
-ear
bear
-ere
where
eer
deer
ear
ears
-ere
adhere
-ier
cashier
-oor
poor pure
-ure
sure
/y oor/ -ure
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2012
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units of sound
information
The notion of a code Root all the teaching for decoding and encoding in the CODE - that is, the relationship between the sounds of speech and their spelling alternatives (the graphemes). This means avoiding the following ideas: *that letters say sounds - they say nothing, they simply prompt us to generate the sounds either aloud or silently in our heads
b
bat
-bb
rabbit
bu
building
k
kit
c
cat
-ck
duck
ch
chameleon
qu
bouquet
que
plaque
d
dig
-dd
puddle
-ed
rained
f
feathers
-ff
cliff
ph
photograph
-gh
laugh
g
girl
-gg
juggle
gu
guitar
gh
ghost
-gue
catalogue
h
hat
wh
who
j
jug
-ge
cabbage
ge
gerbil
gi
giraffe
gy
gymnast
-dge
fridge
*that there are silent letters as in kn, wr, mb, gn and so on these are simply further graphemes which ARE CODE FOR the sounds this is consistent, for example, with saying that the grapheme igh is code for the /igh/ sound (we dont suggest that gh are silent letters in the grapheme igh) *that the end letter e of split digraphs a-e, e-e, i-e, o-e and u-e make the preceding vowel SAY ITS NAME this is inconsistent with modern synthetic phonics teaching rooted in the alphabetic code. To work out the code, start from a whole spoken word said slowly. Orally segment the word into its sounds and map those onto the graphemes in the written word.
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l
ladder
-ll
shell
-le
kettle
-il
pencil
-al
hospital
-el
camel
/m/
m
map
-mm
hammer
-me
welcome
-mb
thumb
-mn
columns
/n/ /ng/
+
n
net
-nn
bonnet
kn
knot
gn
gnome
-ne
engine
THE SUB-SKILLS OF THE THREE CORE SKILLS DECODING SUB-SKILLS: Without print hear the individual sounds of a word and discern the word (= oral blending): hear /z/ /i/ /p/, say zip; hear /k/ /oa/ /t/, say coat With print see the graphemes and say the sounds to automaticity; see s, say /s/; see oa, say /oa/; see ph, say /f/ Use capital letter resources not just lower case letters. Capital letters ARE THE SAME CODE AS lower case letters. ENCODING SUB-SKILLS: Without print hear the whole spoken word said slowly, train the learner to split the word into its constituent sounds from beginning to end (= oral segmenting): zip /z/ /i/ /p/; coat /k/ /oa/ /t/ (with no print, you can use any sounds) -use the left hand, palm facing to tally the separate sounds onto the thumb and fingers from left to right With print select grapheme tiles or magnetic letters, or write the letters, to spell the sounds identified [Use manipulatives, such as grapheme tiles, at the basic code stage for young learners as they get to grips with handwriting skills then focus on handwriting to spell.]
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-ng
gong ink
-n
jungle
-nc
uncle
p
pan
-pp
puppet
qu
queen
kw
awkward
r
rat
-rr
arrow
wr
write
rh
rhinoceros
s
snake
-ss
glass
-ce
palace
ce
cents
ci
city
cy
bicycle
-se
house
sc
scissors
-stcastle
ps
pseudonym
t
tent
-tt
letter
-ed
skipped
pt
pterodactyl
-bt
debt
v
violin
-ve
dove
w
web
wh
wheel
-u
penguin
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2012
/k s/
+
-x
fox
-ks
books
-cks
ducks
-kes
cakes
-cs
I love picnics.
/g z/
+
-x
exam
-gs
pegs
-ggs
eggs
y
yawn
z
zebra
-zz
jazz
-s
fries
-se
cheese
-ze
breeze +
x
xylophone
ch
chairs
-tch
patch
/ch u/ -ti
station
-ture
picture
sh
sheep
ch
chef
-ci
magician voiced
-ssi
admission
/th/ /zh/
th
thistle
-si
television
-s
treasure
-z
azure (blue)
/th/ g
courgette
th
there
-ge
collage
HANDWRITING SUB-SKILLS: Demonstrate the correct tripod hold for young learners say, Froggy legs with the log under pinch the pencil with thumb and forefinger just above where the cone end slopes, make a fist and place the middle finger beneath the pencil to form the tripod hold, or grip, (small hands struggle to grip fat pencils or marker pens, use regular-sized pencils) Air write, finger-trace and copywrite graphemes whilst saying the sound this is multi-sensory linking sounds to shapes and handwriting the shapes (e.g. say /ch/ for ch not /k/ /h/) Mini whiteboards are suitable for quick-fire show me activities; for handwriting practice use paper and pencil routines sitting with good posture at desks, paper slanted, spare hand holding paper steady BE VIGILANT for learners hooking their wrists around and writing above the words on the page ensure they write below the words.
Please note that this version of an Alphabetic Code Chart is not definitive. Further code may be discovered in both common and unusual words. The word giraffe, for example, is common but the grapheme -ffe is rare AS CODE FOR the sound /f/. Add discovered code to the chart or to the MAIN PHONICS DISPLAY WALL. On this chart, a grey dash indicates that the particular letter/s-sound correspondence is unlikely to begin a word. Hollow letters alert the reader to various possible pronunciations; for example, wa could be the code for /w+a/ as in wag, but is more likely to be /w+o/ as in watch. This is a generic alphabetic code chart highlighting the vowel sounds followed by the consonant sounds. Alphabetic Code Charts can be designed to be programme-specific according to the order that the letter/s-sound correspondences are introduced and with specific mnemonic systems (aids to memory for the sounds and/or spellings). Vowel sounds can be spelled with both vowel letters and consonant letters such as igh, ow, or, ough. Teachers need to make clear when they are referring to vowel or consonant sounds, or vowel or consonant letters. For further information, see synthetic phonics guidance documents at www.phonicsinternational.com
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