This set of 51 posters includes visual explanations of every major English spelling rule, convention, and pattern.
Teach your students how spelling really works! With a focus on meaning, word structure, and graphemes/phonemes - etymology, morphology, and phonology - it is more than just phonics.
Explanations include:
- How spelling works: 3 questions to help you spell:
*What does the word mean? (what are the related words?)
*How is it built? (prefixes, bases, suffixes - and the joins in between)
*What letters can you use to show how it sounds? (What are the rules for the use of each letter?) - The spelling of the base stays the same even when pronunciation changes.
- Where a word comes from will affect its spelling (etymology).
- The history of a word and how it has changed over time will affect its spelling.
- Silent letters - using related words that are connected in meaning.
- Homophones - words with different meanings will have different spellings.
- How words are built (prefixes, bases, suffixes).
- Changes that can happen when you add a suffix.
- Vowels
- Consonants
- Prefixes
- Adding consonant suffixes
- Consonant suffix examples
- Adding vowel suffixes
- When vowel suffixes cause doubling
- When vowel suffixes take away the <e>
- Vowel suffix examples
- When to use the plural -s or -es suffix.
- The -ed suffix and its 3 sounds: /t/, /id/ and /d/.
- Compound words
- <C> or <K> to represent /k/ at the beginning of a word.
- When <C> represents /k/ and when it represents /s/
- Words that start with <K> not followed by <e>, <i> or <y>.
- Writing the /k/ sound at the end of a word.
- When to use <K> or <CK> at the end of a word.
- When to use <CH> or <TCH> at the end of a word.
- When to use <GE> or <DGE> at the end of a word.
- When to double the <L> at the end of a word.
- When to double the <Z> at the end of a word.
- When to double the <F> at the end of a word.
- When to double the <S> at the end of a word.
- You can’t end a word with <V>.
- Why you can’t write <UU>, <VV> or <UV>.
- You can’t end an English word with <J>.
- Why some words do end with <U>, <V>, <I> or <J>.
- The only word that ends with <U> is <YOU>!
- The only complete English word that ends with <I> is <I>!
- Using <Y> or <IE> at the end of a word, instead of <I>.
- Why and how <I> and <Y> share their job.
- When to replace a <Y> with an <I>.
- Reasons to keep a <Y> in the middle of a word.
- Why we don’t write <ii>.
- Changing <Y> to an <I> when adding a suffix.
- <Q> is always followed by <U> to make <QU>.
- Don’t write the same letter three times in a row.
- Why <VV> and <UU> = <W>
- Why <W> does not double.
- Why <X> does not double.
- The many jobs of the single, silent <e> at the end of a word.
- Digraphs and Trigraphs.
- The Trigraph <igh>.
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£7.00