Phonics Flashcards B&W - Reduced2

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HOW TO USE THESE CARDS

The nine phonogram categories in this set are


organized for easy reference and to give some
rational order to the irregularities of English
spelling. While the order of the categories is from
the simpler to the more complex, within each
category there may be advanced phonograms that
you will want to postpone for later attention. Also,
the order of the categories is somewhat flexible after
Section I. For instance, you may choose to teach
Sections III and IV before the long vowels in Section
II. Use these cards in the order that matches your
phonics and reading program.
Phonogram cards can be combined and
recombined to help students see the multiple ways
a sound can be spelled and the multiple sounds for
a particular phonogram. For instance, the vowel
team ea has two long sounds and one short sound in
section V. When all phonograms have been covered
individually, group them together to practice the
three sounds of ea.
ORGANIZATION
I. Alphabet
II. Letters With More Than One Sound
III. Consonant Teams A
IV. Initial and Final Consonant Blends
V. Vowel Teams A (long and short vowels)
VI. Consonant Teams B
VII. Vowel Teams B (five more vowel sounds)
VIII. R-Controlled Vowels
IX. Advanced Letter Teams
INTRODUCTION
Phonograms are letters or letter teams that
represent (spell) one of the 44 sounds of the English
language. English spelling is the most complex and
irregular of any of the modern Western languages.
There are nearly 200 phonograms used to spell our
44 English sounds. Many phonograms have more
than one sound, and many sounds are spelled by
more than one phonogram. Phonogram cards help
students recognize the great variety of spelling
patterns in English.
The first "phonograms" students learn are the
26 letters of the alphabet. Consonant letters are
relatively reliable in English; only three consonants,
s, c, g, have more than one sound. (The letter y has
three vowel sounds but only one consonant sound.)
English has 25 consonant sounds, seven of which
are represented by letter teams: /ch/, /sh/, /th/, /th/,
/hw/, /zh/, /ng/.
English has 6 vowel letters, counting y, but 19
vowel sounds. The vowels, a, e, i, o, u each have
long and short sounds. The spelling of each of the
short sounds is very consistent. It is in the spelling of
the long vowel sounds, however, that English is most
irregular. There is an average of eight common ways
to spell each long sound. For instance, common
spellings of long e are: e (me), ee (see), ea (meat), ei
(deceive), ie (field), ey (key), y (baby), and i (ski).
To complicate matters, many of the long vowel
phonograms have other sounds. For instance, the
phonogram ea has three sounds: ē as in meat, ā as in
great, and ĕ as in bread.
In addition, English has 9 more vowel sounds that
are spelled in multiple ways. See Sections VII and
VIII for a survey of these vowel sounds and their
spellings.
English reading and spelling are challenging.
Isolating and focusing on "phonograms" with
flashcards helps students to see the pronunciation
"chunks" in words and to gain fluency in reading and
spelling. The goal for beginning readers is to gain
fluency in recognizing phonograms for decoding in
reading. For more advanced readers, practice with
phonograms is an aid to spelling.
Note: The cards in Section IV, consonant blends,
are not phonograms per se, because they do not spell
one of the 44 English sounds, but rather are blends of
two consonants. Students need practice with these
blends, however, so they are included in this set.
Aa
1
Bb
2
a
)

27
apple
ax am man
an cap hat
at sad bag
e
)

28
egg
bed Ed
net beg
hen web
a
32
cake
ate Jane safe
gaze game tale
save lane late
date tame Kate
e
33
me
be she
even we
he these
c
soft

41
/s/
e, i, y
before
ice
cent city face
rice circus
c
hard

42
/k/
a, o, u
before
cat
coast clock cap
candy coat cute
lt
60
belt
felt melt wilt
mp
61
lamp
bump lump damp
dump pump romp
jump camp limp
gh
122
(usually silent)
thought
high eight light
neighbor
gh
123
/f/
cough
tough laugh
rough enough
gh
124
red
174
orange
175
again
190
against
191

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