Sounds familiar
23 January 1998
Sue Palmer presents a practical
guide to teaching how sounds are represented in written
English.
Words are to do with meaning,
phonemes are to do with sound. For many years, the emphasis in
the teaching of reading has been on meaning and teachers have
been discouraged from explicit attention to the sound-symbol
associations that underlie our writing system.
However, recent research shows
that awareness of language sounds underlies children's ability
to read and, later, to spell. Some pupils seem to develop this
awareness naturally, but many need help. We have to alert them
to the sounds we use to make words and then show them how they
can be written down.
This is why the National
Literacy Project makes such great play of "phonemes"
- teachers will be encouraged to introduce this word to
infants, although fortunately the official term is now
"sound". This is a clear assertion of the importance
of sound in developing literacy skills: awareness of sound
first, leading to symbolic representation second.
There is a direct correspondence
between many English sounds and alphabet letters (especially
as regards the consonant sounds). However, other sounds,
especially vowels, may be represented in a variety of ways.
The grunting uh, for instance, which occurs in many English
words (letter, colour, elephant, upon) has a huge number of
possible spellings - indeed, it's so tricky linguists have
given it a name: the "schwa".
Not all the phonemes need to be
taught. Most teachers would agree that uh and er are
sufficiently similar to be elided together for teaching
purposes, as are voiced and unvoiced th. The sound zh occurs
so infrequently in children's reading and writing that it
could be passed over in the early stages, and the nasal ng is
probably best tackled as part of specific letter-strings like
-ing and -ink.
The teaching of phonemes is best
approached in three stages;
1) During nursery and reception,
ensure that children are able to discriminate the individual
sounds through enjoyable activities like action games,
alliterative rhymes and songs. Once children are sensitised to
sound, you can focus on the simpler symbolic representations,
starting with the alphabet letter sounds, including the short
vowels.
2) Help children recognise the
main ways in which all the other sounds may be represented so
they'll recognise them when reading. A lot of this teaching
will be incidental and will blend in with the teaching of
other reading strategies, including sight words and the use of
context. To cover the phonemic element satisfactorily,
teachers need to be aware of the sounds and the major ways in
which they're represented.
3) Overlapping and consolidating
this incidental coverage is structured attention to the major
sound-symbol correspondences of English. This links reading to
spelling, as children are made aware of the main ways in which
sounds may be represented in writing. Often there will be more
than one spelling pattern to learn - oa may be written as oa
in goat, ow in window, oe in toe, and o in go.
Attention to phonics is an
essential part of literacy, and all primary teachers need a
good working knowledge of the phonemes, and the spelling
patterns and rules through which they are represented. But
this is just one small aspect of the teaching of reading. The
words, the text and the meaning are just as important as they
ever were, and too much attention to phonics at the expense of
these is likely to do children more harm than good.
Helpful books and resources:
Phonics Handbook, by Sue Lloyd, Pounds 19.95. Jolly Learning; Sound Beginnings, by Julie Garnett and Jean
Gross, Pounds 37.60. From LDA, The
Morris-Montessori Word List, by Dr Joyce Morris, Pounds 9.95.
London Montessori Centre, 18 Balderton Street, London W1Y 1TG;
THRASS Sounds Wall Charts, Pounds 15 each or a
Pounds 40 for pack of three. Collins;
Sue Palmer is a former primary
head and a freelance writer and in-service training provider
THE 44 PHONEMES IN THE ENGLISH
LANGUAGE 5 short vowel sounds. a as in cat e as in pen i as in
big o as in dog u as in nut 5 long vowel sounds ay as in day
ee as in sea igh as in night oa as in boat oo as in rule 10
further vowel sounds er as in fern or as in corn ar as in farm
ow as in clown oy as in toy u/oo as in pull/look ear as in
dear air as in chair oor as in poor uh as in letter
18 consonant letter sounds b as
in bag k as in cat d as in dog f as in fun g as in got h as in
hat * as in nut p as in pet r as in run s as in sit t as in
top v as in van j as in jam * as in leg m as in man w as in
wig y as in yes * as in zip 6 further consonant sounds sh as
in ship ch as in chip zh as in television ng as in sing/thank
unvoiced th as in thumb voiced th as in the
Most alphabet letters stand for
a single phoneme, but c could be k (as in cat) or s (as in
cent) and qu and x each represent two phonemes: k-w and k-s.
Many vowel phonemes cannot be
represented by a single letter, and some have a wide variety
of possible representations. Examples: l"sheep" has
3 phonemes: sh-ee-p. l"Next" has 5: n-e-k-s-t.
"Martian" has 5: m-ar-sh-uh-n.
The word "ear" has 1: ear.
The National Literacy Project
The National Literacy Project's teaching framework includes a
list of sounds and main spelling patterns for each term. The
Government plans to send the latest version to all primary
schools in February.
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