Synthetic Phonics
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* Superphonics (Read, Write Inc) - * THRASS

About Synthetic Phonics
Understanding phonological awareness and developing early auditory discrimination
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Pronouncing Letter 'Sounds'Sound Groups - Help with Spelling
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Synthetic Phonics Plus™
DVD
Teaching Young Children
to Read and Spell
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Questions? info@ReadAustralia.com

'How to Teach ALL Children to Read, Write and Spell with Confidence' Instructional DVD
for sale- $147
- Special Introductory Price!
$79
(first 50 orders only)
This DVD is suitable for parents and teachers and includes
footage of
children
aged 5 and 7 who are learning to read and spell.
We explain what 'reading' and 'spelling' really are in the early stages and how to teach the skills and concepts required for ALL children to read and spell with confidence by the end of Year 1.
In this first 'Synthetic Phonics Plus™ DVD we focus on Jolly Phonics.
We are also in the process of creating other 'Synthetic Phonics Plus™ DVDs within which we focus on other quality reading programs
You will learn why it is
so important that children
are taught the code- and specifically 'sounds'
rather than letter names. We will take you back to remember what it is like to be a 'beginning reader'.
Learn which skills children need to learn in order to be confident readers-
and to be good at spelling even nonsense and unfamiliar words.
Children will learn to actually read and spell- not guess or memorise
.
After watching this DVD you will know how to teach any child the following concepts using the initial sound group (s,a,p,i,n and t) and what to do next.
Children will be:
* 'hearing' sounds in words - beginning, middle end
* recognising letter sounds in print - and knowing what (oral) sound they correspond with.
* forming letters correctly (this is arguably less as important as the other concepts, before Prep)
* blending sounds orally into words- and as they sound words on paper (knowing they do this from left to right)
* 'reading' words by decoding from left to right- and blending the sounds into words- also exploring what the word means and how we use it in our language.
* 'spelling words by listening for sounds in order - and (the next step) knowing how to order / blend them on paper (using letters and also by forming the letters themselves - can use a pencil and also keyboard with lower case letters)
* 'reading' the words and then comprehending the meaning of the word and sentence if the words are written within a sentence (and in this case knowing that we read the words from left to right)
* learning some 'tricky' words
For example they will be able to read, write and spell words such as sat, it, at, in, pin, tin, sit, pat, nip, spin, tan etc
They will also be able to read sentences - using decodable readers such as those recently released from SPELD- that are in line with the sounds groups from Jolly Phonics. http://www.speld-sa.org.au/index.php?option=com_flippingbook&book_id=4
If ready they can quickly be moved on to digraphs - learning that 2 or more sounds can make a new sound (s, h and sh- 3 sounds)
We will show you how to use bolded text- to show children where the 'chunks' are in words- or 'pictures of sounds'. So shop would be shop so that early on children understand, for example, that 'shop' has 3 sounds .
After the first sound group children can move on to learn that sounds in our spoken language can be represented in several ways ( f could be ff as in gruff, ph as in phone etc)
And that some sounds on paper can represent more than one sound in our language- ow- as in cow or as in tow.
You will learn to focus very much on auditory discrimination at first- rather than whats on paper- and you will learn how to assess children in order to find their strengths and weaknesses..
We will guide and support you- and show you how to help your young child learn to read (and spell) to at least their expected reading level in as little as 20 minutes of teaching each day. You will also be able to login to use our new
'Synthetic Phonics Plus™ Support forum free of charge.
A percentage of procedes will go into our free services and resources for
parents- including the Parents Aboard program. Thank you for your support.
Special Introductory Price- $79 ! *
* Limited period
Empowering parents and teachers - sharing research and useful information
relating to the teaching of reading worldwide, with a focus on Australia
When is a good time to start teaching children to read?
A child begins learning at birth.
Early experiences with spoken and written language set the stage for a child to
become a successful reader. The more you talk, read and interact with your child,
the better chance he has to become a good reader. A good time to
start teaching your child about letters and sounds is when he begins to talk.
When a child learns about print and books and how they are used, this is called
print awareness. He becomes familiar with the idea that the words he sees in
print are related to the words he speaks. For example, words can be
seen in books or on billboards.
What is alphabetic knowledge?
When a child begins knowing the names and shapes of letters this is called
alphabetic knowledge.
What is phonological awareness?
When a child begins to understand that sentences are made up of words, and words have parts called syllables, he is beginning to develop phonological awareness which is the ability to learn about sounds of spoken language.
What is phonemic awareness?
When a child also understands that spoken words are made up of separate small sounds, he is developing phonemic awareness. These individual sounds in spoken language are called phonemes. For example, there are three phonemes (or sounds) in the word big, /b/, /i/, and /g/. (A letter between slash marks shows the sound that the letter represents, not the name of the letter).
Phonics is when a reader learns to use letter/sound relationships to form
words and is able to recognize words when he sees them.
Blending is when the reader puts together sounds to make words.
When the child takes spoken words apart sound by sound.
Phonics instruction is when the instructor helps the beginning reader see the relationship between sounds of spoken language and letters of written language. Understanding these relationships gives the child a tool that he can use to recognize familiar words and figure out words he hasn't seen before.
At Read Australia we target parents- and especially parents of pre-school aged children- as
YOU (the parent) are the best person to teach them before they start school!
We have found that not all QLD schools are offering
'readers' that are
created using phonics- so the children are guessing
or memorising
rather than de-coding.
If your child is coming home with 'sight words' ie whole words (flash cards) - please
consider this a red flag. Check your child is being taught in ways that are in line with the
officail government report- the
AU Inquiriy intho the Teaching of Literacy (2005)
Instead, children should be learning that the sounds we use within words can be represented
by sound pictures or sound symbols (a, b, c etc - sounds not letter names) and that put together
we can create words. This is a very basic explanation, however the message here is that if they learn
how to de-code words- both real and nonsense-ad how to create words because thy know what sound pictures/ symbols(or combinations) represent these sounds they can de-code- and spell- any word!
There
are very few words that cant be de-coded- so why teach whole words- the
brain can only memorise so many. Keep it simple!
Ph Emma for more info 07 5510 9960
Please also call to book in-service training for Early Years Education providers-and for
private tutoring sessions on the Gold Coast, QLD.


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