Sway requires JavaScript

This web browser is either blocking scripts or does not support JavaScript.

How to turn on JavaScriptBite - size CPD: Teaching phonics in the early years
Microsoft Sway
Sway
Loading... Oops, sorry
Seems we've hit an error - please refresh your page to try getting your list of apps again.

Share your Sway with:

Invite people to
Copied
Your latest changes will appear here when you are back online.

Bite - size CPD: Teaching phonics in the early years

Bite - size CPD: Teaching phonics in the early yea
01
Pause: watch Part 1 Early years curriculum: the im
02
Why teach phonics?
Being literate has a powerful impact on children's
03
What comes before phonics?
In her book, What comes before phonics? (2021) Sal
04
Letters and Sounds Phase One
05
Pause: watch Phonological awareness
06
Letters and Sounds - Aspects 1-3
07
Pause: read aspect 1: general discrimination - env
08
Pause: read aspect 2: general discrimination - ins
09
Pause: read aspect 3: body percussion Letters and
10
Planning weekly activities:
11
Planning aspects 1-3
12
Pause: read aspect 4: rhythm and rhyme p.29- 34 Le
13
Watch: Our favourite rhymes (tuning into sounds)
14
Pause: read aspect 5: alliteration p.35 - 40 Lette
15
Watch: Our sound box / bag (listening and remember
16
Pause: read aspect 6: voice sounds p.41-45 Letters
17
Watch: Sound story time (talking about sounds)
18
Planning aspects 4-6
19
Pause: read aspect 7: oral blending and segmenting
20
Watch: Toy talk
21
Watch: the correct pronunciation of phonemes Artic
22
Planning in the summer term to include aspects 1-
Background
Title Card
Bite - size CPD: Teaching phonics in the early years
Picture1.png
Image Card: Picture1.png


Text Card

Aims:

To explore and understand the importance of Phase One Letters and Sounds phonics as the foundation to early literacy.

To be able to implement the aspects of the Phase One Letters and Sounds phonics through relevant, practical, planned activities.

Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: watch Part 1 Early years curriculum: the importance of communication and language
Background
Heading 1 Card
Why teach phonics?
Text Card

Being literate has a powerful impact on children's learning.

"Children who start school without the literacy, language and communication skills they need to learn and flourish will have their futures cut short before they've even started. As children they won't succeed at school, as young adults they will be locked out of the job market, and as parents they won't be able to support their own child's learning - putting social inclusion, and the chance to live in a fairer society, out of reach for generations of children."

Words matter: the role of literacy in combatting social exclusion (2019)



Text Card

Phonics has been shown to play an important role in becoming literate.

Phonics is a method of teaching reading, which focuses on the sound (phoneme) / symbol (grapheme) correspondence, how these phonemes blend together to make words and how words can be segmented into phonemes. This supports children to decode text and supports spelling.

Text Card

Educational programme for Literacy:

"It is crucial for children to develop a life-long love of reading. Reading consists of two dimensions: language comprehension and word reading. Language comprehension (necessary for both reading and writing) starts from birth. It only develops when adults talk with children about the world around them and the books (stories and non-fiction) they read with them, and enjoy rhymes, poems and songs together. Skilled word reading, taught later, involves both the speedy working out of the pronunciation of unfamiliar printed words (decoding) and the speedy recognition of familiar printed words. Writing involves transcription (spelling and handwriting) and composition (articulating ideas and structuring them in speech, before writing)." EYFS statutory framework (2024)

Text Card

Once young children start Reception, they are introduced to a systematic, synthetic phonics (SSP) teaching programme. Here they are taught explicitly the correspondences between letters (graphemes) and sounds (phonemes). The term 'synthetic' phonics refers to the verb 'synthesise' meaning 'to combine'. The recommended SSP approach include Jolly Phonics, Letterland and Fishing for Phonics. Further examples can be found at: Choosing a phonics teaching programme

Background
Heading 1 Card
What comes before phonics?
Text Card

In her book, What comes before phonics? (2021) Sally Neaum uses the analogy of an iceberg for learning to read.

"The tip of the iceberg peeps out from the water, supported beneath by a huge body of ice... The tip represents the visible skills of reading and writing, which are supported by a huge body of knowledge, understandings, skills and attitudes that underpin it. The robustness and strength of the tip is supported and underpinned by what lies beneath." (2021: p.29)

Text Card

Neaum recognises the skills needed to support phonological awareness, then phonics, then reading and writing, is underpinned by what lies underneath these, the body of the iceberg.

  • Function and forms of print - an understanding of the functions and forms of print.
  • The ability to symbolise - represent or express something through the use of symbols.
  • Physical awareness and integration - physical activity that supports sensory awareness.
  • Meta linguistic awareness - the ability to think and talk.
  • Spoken language - the basis of becoming literate. (2021: p.29)




Background
Letters and sounds.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Letters and Sounds Phase One
Text Card

The activities in Letters and Sounds Phase One Teaching Programme (2007) concentrate on developing children's and listening skills, phonological awareness and oral blending and segmenting. Letters and sounds phase one teaching programme

Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: watch Phonological awareness
Background
Letters and sounds.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Letters and Sounds - Aspects 1-3
Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 1: general discrimination - environmental sounds Letters and sounds phase one
Text Card

An example of an activity: Drum outdoors (p.12)

Strand: Tuning into sounds

Main purpose: To develop children's listening skills and awareness of sounds in the environment

What resources would you need for this activity?

Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 2: general discrimination - instrumental sounds Letters and sounds phase one
Text Card

An example of an activity: Matching sounds (p.19)

Strand: Listening and remembering sounds

Main purpose: To listen to and appreciate the difference between sounds made with instruments

How would you organise this activity?

Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 3: body percussion Letters and sounds phase one
Text Card

An example of an activity: Words about sounds (p.26-27)

Strand: Talking about sounds

Main purpose: To talk about sounds we make with our bodies and what the sounds mean

How could you introduce this activity outside?

Background
Letters and sounds.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Planning weekly activities:
Text Card

Each week, plan to deliver an activity from the aspects from each of the three strands. This will ensure the children will cover activities which promote auditory discrimination (tuning into sounds), auditory memory and sequencing (listening and remembering sounds) and developing vocabulary and language comprehension (talking about sounds).

Each of these activities can be repeated across the week, both indoors and outdoors. Once introduced and depending on the age / stage of the children, during child-initiated the children could continue practicing the activities themselves.



Background
Heading 1 Card
Planning aspects 1-3
Image Card


Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 4: rhythm and rhyme p.29- 34 Letters and sounds phase 1 teaching programme
Background
Heading 1 Card
Watch: Our favourite rhymes (tuning into sounds)
Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 5: alliteration p.35 - 40 Letters and sounds phase 1 teaching programme
Background
Heading 1 Card
Watch: Our sound box / bag (listening and remembering sounds)
Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 6: voice sounds p.41-45 Letters and sounds phase 1 teaching programme
Background
Heading 1 Card
Watch: Sound story time (talking about sounds)
Background
Heading 1 Card
Planning aspects 4-6
Image Card


Text Card

Aspect 7: oral blending and segmenting

At the start of the summer term the children moving into their Reception Class in September, will be ready to undertake the activities in aspect 7. Having experienced the range of activities from aspects 1-6, they will now be ready for the oral blending and segmenting activities in aspect 7.

Background
water.jpg


Heading 1 Card
Pause: read aspect 7: oral blending and segmenting pages 47 - 51 Letters and sounds phase 1 teaching programme
Background
Heading 1 Card
Watch: Toy talk
Background
Heading 1 Card
Watch: the correct pronunciation of phonemes Articulation of phonemes
Background
Heading 1 Card
Planning in the summer term to include aspects 1- 7
Image Card


Text Card

Tips on delivering letters and sounds activities:

  • At the end of the week, plan which 3 activities you will be delivering the following week.
  • Collect all the resources together and store in 3 labelled boxes e.g. tuning into sounds, listening and remembering sounds and talking about sounds.
  • Repeat the activities throughout the week, both indoors and outdoors.
  • If they are able to, let the children practice the activity during child-initiated play.
  • Make the activity multi-sensory and fun!
Text Card

Further resources and information:

Communication and language

Literacy

Pre-phonics is the key to early reading

Speech and language

Rhymes and finger rhymes


Collated by Beverley Jones (Early Years Consultant)

beverley.jones@shropshire.gov.uk



Picture1.png
Image Card: Picture1.png


Suggested
OneDrive
Flickr
Bing Images
Pickit
YouTube
My device
Search for content
You are responsible for respecting others' rights, including copyright.
Styles
Describe your design with words!
    Vertical
    Horizontal
    Slides
Selected style: 4, Header font: Rockwell Nova, Body text font: Tahoma, Text size: Normal
Customise your Sway with custom colours, typography and textures.
Focus Points
Tap on what's important so that Sway can position your image. Tap again to remove.

The entire image is important
Sway picks the best layout depending on your device and style.

This removes all Focus Points from this image.

Reposition the Focus Point with the arrow keys. Create a new one with the Space Bar or Enter key. Remove it with the DELETE key.

Group Type
Accessibility Checker
The Accessibility Checker helps you make your Sway accessible to all users. As soon as you've added content to your Sway, you'll be able to review images, hyperlinks and other content for common issues.
Tips for making your Sway accessible
Settings for this Sway
Language
Show text direction buttons
Use right-to-left layout
View settings
Viewers and co-authors can duplicate this Sway
Viewers can print this Sway
Viewers can export this Sway
Viewers can change the layout of this Sway
Show Sway informational footer
Autoplay
Off
5
3 s5 s10 s15 s20 s25 s30 s35 s40 s45 s50 s55 s60 s
Loop continuously