Synthetic Phonics

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Synthetic phonics are taught to children from the age of about 5 by showing them the sounds of the letters (not the letter names) and how these sounds can be blended to run together to make short words.

For example, when the children have been taught the sounds 'a', 'b', 'c' and 't', they can be shown how to run the sounds together to make these words:


bat
cat
cab

 

Teachers usually use a wall chart with all the letters of the alphabet on, along with a picture showing a word which each letters starts with, e.g. 'a' - 'apple', 'b' - 'ball', 'c' - 'cake', etc.

 


Charts like this can be purchased from bookshops and from educational suppliers such as Sunshine Media, Succeed to Read, or in local bookshops.

As the children learn to blend three-letter words together, such as:


m-o-m
h-o-t
h-i-m
t-o-p
d-a-d
g-e-t

 

they can begin to read simple children's books written with a limited range of words. This will get them strted on simple reading skills, and they will enjoy reading sentences such as:

 


Tom can get a dog


Len can run and run.

Meg, let him dig.

As you can see, there are limits to the sort of story lines that a child can read at this stage. This is one criticism of the beginning stage of synthetic phonics teaching, but it does give the children the feeling that they are beginning to read.

Synthetic Phonics Combined with Whole Words

At this stage, it is helpful to introduce some words which a child cannot yer work our though his or her knowledge of letter sounds. Children are well motivated to read such words as:


ice-cream
mommy
daddy
dinosaur
ghost
etc.

 

These exciting words are remembered from their whole shape, and are learned by the Whole Word method. This allows a child to read sentences and short stories with much more interesting content, such as:


Mommy and daddy can get a dog.

Let the dog run, mommy!

Daddy can run and the dog can run.

 

Children learns to read a mixture of words they can blend or 'sound out' from the single letter sounds,and combine these with a small number of 'sight words' - whole words which can be remembered from their shape and from their high level of interst to the child. The next step is to learn pairs of letters which can run together.

Letter pairs

Letter pairs are two letter sounds which can run together, such as 'cl', 'tr', 'br', 'fr', 'gr', etc. Learning how to blend or run these sounds together allows a child to start to read sentences with far greater interst, such as:


Len, drink a cup of milk.

Dad is at his desk.

Tom and Meg can go to camp.

 

Following a clear progression of sounds

From this initial start, children can gradually learn sounds which get harder and harder in a clear progression (such as 'ee', 'oa', 'sh', 'ch', 'th', etc.). There are many series of phonics books which help a child to progress through the stages of synthetic phonics. You will find some phonics series listed on our page Synthetic Phonics Books.