Teach 300 ways to spell the 44 sounds of the English language with anchor charts, flash and flip cards, sound walls, bunting and assessment grids. Colourful pictures and relevant words make learning to spell easy and memorable. Reference charts ensure no gaps and enable differentiation to cater for learning levels. 2 versions are included to accommodate differences between US and UK pronunciation of some sounds. This set of resources aligns with any spelling methodology, the Science of Reading, Orton Gillingham, Jolly Phonics etc.
Contents
- 298/301 Anchor Charts: display, desk charts, student reference
- 298/301 Sound Walls: make sound and word walls, booklets or as an activity sheet
- 298/301 Flash Cards: teach and practice, match and sort 2 versions
- 298/301 Flip Cards: assessment, sorting 2 versions
- 298/298/301 Bunting: visual display, digital flash cards
3 Phonics Assessment Records:
3 levels most common, common, uncommon - Phonics Reference Charts
- Sounds Chart: most common vowels and consonants on one page
- Sounds on One Page: all 44 sounds 298/301 ways to spell
- Phonemes: how many ways to spell each sound
- Graphemes: how many sounds each grapheme can represent
Note: slightly different number of resources is due to differences in US and UK pronunciation, eg ‘a’ as in bath is included in UK ‘ar’ group but not in US,298/ as the ‘a’ letter is pronounced as a short a sound
Teach 44 Sounds of the English Language - 10 short and long vowel sounds: a, e, i, o, u, ai, ee, igh, oa, you
- 10 other vowels: ar, er, ir, air, ear, oo (as in moon), oo (as in book), oi, ow, schwa
- 24 consonants b, c, d, f, g, h, j, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, v, w, y, z, ch, ng, sh, th (soft), th (hard), zh
Notes on Phonemes - single examples of a word are included if a common word eg women, friend,
- many uncommon examples have been included but there are still more!
- x can represent 2 sounds eg c and s as in exercise and fox, g and z as in exam, c and sh as in luxury
- gn can represent 2 sounds eg, n and y as in lasagne
- q is pronounced as c and w and thus has no separate entry
- the word ‘one’ has no letters representing the ‘w’ sound
- oo and you are separated in this resource
Pronunciation
Many words are pronounced differently whether UK or US pronunciation however the process of spelling is the same: hear sounds in words and choose the correct letters to represent the sounds. The following words appear in different charts: - ball, walk, astronaut, caught: US ‘ar’, UK ‘or’
- draw, awe: US ‘ar’, UK ‘or’
- bath: US short a, UK ‘ar’
- laugh: US short a, UK ‘ar’
Add words to the Sound Wall sheets to build your own collection of words to suit local pronunciation.
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