During a word game recently, one of my teammates misspelled as *. Are we misguiding students by directing them to spell a word by starting with its pronunciation, in isolation? ![]() Are we preventing students from fully understanding and being able to use phoneme-grapheme relationships when we teach those relationships in isolation (as phonics does)?Ģ. ![]() ![]() So /k/ refers to the phoneme that is the first segment of the spoken word cat, and /kæt / refers to the pronunciation of the whole word cat, using IPA symbols.īut to help each and every student learn to read and spell, we need to consider two questions: 1ġ. Slash brackets // indicate phonemes or pronunciation. So refers to a written form-the letters C A T, not the meaning or pronunciation of that word. Angle brackets indicate a reference to the written letters inside the brackets. ![]() These important phoneme-grapheme relationships are the focus of the instructional approach called “phonics.” Note that words in italics ( cat) refer to a word, including its meaning. From the very beginning, literacy instruction must incorporate orthographic phonology, including the ways that the distinctive segments of spoken words ( phonemes) are represented in written words by letters and combinations of letters ( graphemes).
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