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Daily sound practice
Phonics

Daily sound practice

A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound. A phoneme is the sound associated with a letter or group of letters (grapheme). Each different sound in a word is a phoneme. For example, the letter t makes the sound /t/ as in tap. Phonemes are often represented by more than one letter or combination of letters. For example, in ship, sh makes a single sound that corresponds to two letters (grapheme).

How to help your child with their daily phonemes practice


Once your child is introduced to phonics at school, you can help them revise the phonemes (sounds) they are learning at home. To do this, download our phonemes-graphemes correspondences sheets below which include a QR code with the correct pronunciation of each sound.

How to use are phonemes sheets


- Find the phoneme (sound) that you want to focus on, based on what your child has been covering at school
- Scan the QR code with your device and listen to the phoneme (sound)
- Repeat the phoneme (sound) several times with your child
- Be careful to repeat it as you hear it in the audio clip. A common mistake that people who are not trained in phonics make is that they add a vowel sound at the end of each consonant sound, so that instead of saying ‘b-b’ or ‘g-g’ they say ‘bah’ or ‘gah’. Do your best to pronounce the consonant alone, as this is the individual phoneme (sound) that you need to focus on.
- Then focus on one of the graphemes (letters) that correspond to the phoneme (sound), depending on what your child has been covering at school. Repeat the phoneme while looking at the grapheme (letter or group of letters)
- Look at each example word and help your child notice where the phoneme is placed within the word
- Try to come up with other words with the same sound (phoneme) and the same spelling (grapheme)

ACTIVITIES

daily-sound-practice-activity

Deep Dive

Read our report on the Science of Reading. Research-based reading instruction must incorporate the 5 pillars of reading: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension. This report provides an easy to understand overview of each of these pillars and explains the important connection between how the brain learns to read (the Neuroscience of Reading) and how we teach children to read (The Science of Reading Instruction). It also explains why helping children build connections between letters and sounds, through phonics and phonemic awareness, is so crucial for the developing reading mind. This report is perfect for sharing with colleagues and friends!