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Ep. 189: Kindergartners Can Read CVC Words by November: Find Out How!

Author
Supported by Great Minds
Published
Fri 05 Apr 2024
Episode Link
None

Julie VanLier and Dr. Svetlana Cvetkovic discuss their experiences and successes teaching phonics.  They both highlight the importance of a speech-to-print approach and the impact it has had on their students' reading and spelling abilities. The conversation also delves into the principles of speech to print and the scope and sequence of instruction.  They emphasize the importance of interleaving, where concepts are revisited over time. The integration of phonics into all aspects of reading and writing is key, as well as the use of authentic text. Overall, their approach focuses on engagement, flexibility, and integration to ensure student success in literacy.

Takeaways

  • Teaching phonics using a speech-to-print approach can lead to significant improvements in students' reading and spelling abilities.
  • The principles of speech to print include the understanding that one, two, three, or four letters can spell a sound.
  • A sound can be spelled in many different ways, and the same spelling can represent different sounds.
  • The scope and sequence of instruction in a speech-to-print approach involves teaching students the different sound-spelling patterns and helping them understand the logic and patterns of the English language.

Key Tenets of Speech to Print 

  1. Sounds can be represented by 1, 2, 3, or 4 letters. 
  2. Sounds can be spelled different ways.
  3. Spellings can be pronounced in different ways.


Resources


We answer your questions about teaching reading in The Literacy 50-A Q&A Handbook for Teachers: Real-World Answers to Questions About Reading That Keep You Up at Night.

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