Phonics and the Alphabetic Principle Flashcards

1
Q

direct instruction
find the letters
letter tracing
cut and paste

A

strategies to teach letter recognition

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2
Q

write the letter ‘B’ on a card, and state that this is the uppercase letter ‘B’ and the lowercase letter ‘b’. The name “Ben”, written out for children to see, starts with the uppercase letter ‘B.’ The word “box”, written, begins with a lowercase ‘b’.

A

direct instruction

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3
Q

have upper and lowercase letters (of only one letter, like f, F) hidden around the classroom. have students go and find all of the hidden letters in the classroom

A

find the letters

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4
Q

when working on a letter, teach students both the upper-and lowercase letter, and have letters for students to trace. this can be done with sand, beads, etc.

A

letter tracing

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5
Q

after explicitly teaching the letter, have students cut out the lower- and uppercase letter out of a magazine and glue it to a paper labeled with the letter

A

cut and paste

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6
Q

states that there is a predictable correspondence between a letter and a sound

A

alphabetic principle

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7
Q

when two or more consonants appear together and each consonant can be heard in a sequence, there is a consonant blend. where there are three consonants together, it is called a consonant cluster (bl-ow, str-eam, bu-st)

A

consonant blend

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8
Q

two letters that represent one sound (‘ph’ in phase makes the /f/ sound)

A

digraph

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9
Q

two vowels that, when spoken together, make a glided sound (‘oi’ in oil, ‘ou’ in ouch)

A

diphthong

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10
Q

written text that represents one phoneme (‘b’, ‘oa’, and ‘t’ are three graphemes in the word boat)

A

grapheme

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11
Q

the smallest unit of sound that contains meaning (pg. 22 for examples)

A

morpheme

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12
Q

the initial consonant of a syllable (‘b’ in big)

A

onset

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13
Q

the smallest unit of sound (/b/ or /o/)

A

phoneme

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14
Q

a rule that governs letter sounds under specific conditions

A

phonics generalizations

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15
Q

the part of the syllable that comes after the initial consonant and begins with a vowel (the ‘ig’ in big)

A

rime

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16
Q

teaching phonics in a systematic manner from part to whole, letter sound to word

A

systematic phonics

17
Q

a group of words with the same spelling pattern; tug, bug, rug, chug, shrug.

A

word family

18
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when a single vowel comes between two consonants, that vowel is usually short; mud, bat, stuck

A

CVC

19
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when “e” is the final vowel in a word, the preceding vowel is usually long and the “e” is silent; home, make, like

A

CVCe

20
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when a single vowel is at the beginning of a word, it is usually short; am, is, up

A

closed syllable- VC

21
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when a syllable ends with a vowel, the vowel sound is usually long; ba/by, ta/ble

A

open syllable- CV

22
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when two vowels are together, usually the first vowel says its name and the second vowel is silent; goat, pail, beat
-when two vowels do the walking, the first one does the talking-

A

CVVC

23
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when ‘y’ is acting as a vowel at the end of a one-syllable word, it usually has the sound of a long “i”; fly, try

when ‘y’ is acting as a vowel at the end of a two-syllable word, it usually have the sound of a long “e”; candy, silly, happy

A

“y” as a vowel

24
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when ‘r’ follows a vowel, it controls and changes the sound of the vowel; car, fir, murky

A

“r”-controlled

25
Q

what general phonics rule is this?

when ‘g’ is followed by an a, o, or u or is the last letter of a word, it has the hard sound. when ‘c’ is followed by an a, o, or u, or is the last letter of a word, it also has the hard sound; hard- garage, gate, good, cat, cape, coat

when ‘g’ is followed by and e, i, or y, it has a soft /j/ sound. when ‘c’ is followed by an e, i, or y, it has a soft /s/ sound; soft- general, angel, giraffe, cell, space, citrus.

A

hard and soft “g” and “c”

26
Q

the ability to recognize words quickly, effortlessly, and automatically

A

automatic word recognition

27
Q

words that are frequently used in reading and writing (a, the, she, he, they, as, and it)

A

high-frequency words

28
Q

words that readers recognize automatically, and therefore can be read immediately with no decoding necessary; sight words cannot be easily decoded

A

sight words

29
Q

a board or wall that features isolated words students are learning, usually in alphabetical order

A

word wall