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OK, bought the Finger Phonics books off ebay. What do I do with them?

8 replies

franch · 04/02/2007 17:33

Bit confused as I'm used to just doing initial letter sounds with DD1 (3y) so far - 'buh for boat' etc. Also the pictures are so busy, often with stuff that seems to have no relation to the sounds in question, and I'm sure there must be a reason for this.

Looked on the jolly phonics website, most of the resources seem to be for teachers - I just need a basic introduction to the principles - ? I've no idea about phonics at all really.

I got the video, too - DD1 not deeply impressed - can't say I was either to be honest.

OP posts:
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LIZS · 04/02/2007 17:46

You can buy a Parent's /Teaching guide on Amazon et aland download some basics here .

franch · 04/02/2007 18:48

Thanks LizS, hope I can make sense of it

OP posts:
frances5 · 05/02/2007 14:39

Talk about the pictures and enoy them. It improves language skills. Don't worry too much about teaching formal reading.

When your child is older they might look for object that start with a particular letter sound in a picture. The pages for "b" has a bicyle, a bat, a ball, a baby, a boat, a band, a bee, birds, bubbles, boys, bushes, bottles, a bunny rabbit, a box, a bridge, the girl is wearing a bow in her hair, the tree has branches the old woman is carrying a bag.

Jolly phonics also encourages children to listen to sounds in words as well as at the begining. For example the word "crab" has the "b" sound at the end and the "a" sound in the middle.

Your little girl is still very young and learns best through play. There are loads of phonic games I can suggest if you are interested.

franch · 05/02/2007 21:58

Thanks frances - DD1 is really getting into the books and the whole phonics idea so yes I would be interested to hear about phonics games

OP posts:
frances5 · 05/02/2007 22:52

Have a look on this website

\link{http://www.aowm73.dsl.pipex.com/dyslexics/resources_and_further.htm \resources}

Or this one for phonic games

\link{http://www.aowm73.dsl.pipex.com/dyslexics/resources_and_further_5.htm \phonics games}

My son enjoyed playing games like me saying "find the b-o-x" or "touch your f-ee-t"

Phonic eye spy is good fun. ie. using the letter sound instead of the letter name. You can do word that end in a particular sound or have a particular sound in the middle when your child gets good.

frances5 · 05/02/2007 22:54

I cant get the links to work so I am copying text from www.dyslexics.org.uk/

  1. Phonic Games

Simple games to play, devised by Jenny Chew:

  1. With the few children I have taught who had already developed habits of guessing or learning logographically, I have also made use of non-words to steer them into decoding habits - obviously the non-words were not already in the child's oral vocabulary, but we pretended that they were real words in a foreign language (which they might easily have been). I devised a game where we had cards with either real words or non-words matching the child's decoding level (e.g. just 'basic code' at first and then digraphs etc. later). The child would pick the cards up one by one, sound out and blend, decide whether the word was a real one or not, and put the non-words into a home-made mailbox as if they were to be sent to an imaginary character who would understand them because he spoke the relevant language.
  1. One thing I used to do which my very weak pupil really enjoyed was to have cards with cvc words at one side of the room and the objects for those words at the other side (e.g. pin, peg, tin, cup, mug, pen, pan, bun, bag, mop, net, box etc. He would pick up a card, work out what it said, run across the room (I pretended to time him) and try and put it on the right object. This meant that he was physically active, and I think he also enjoyed the very
concrete reading-for-meaning angle. For longer basic-code words I used things such as plug, clip, lamp, plant, carrot, magnet, sandal, twig, cotton, pasta. When we got on to digraphs, I would use spoon, fork, brush, tea bag, cloth, dish, card, cord, soap, glue, book, toy car, nail, Mars bar etc. Then I used to give him sentences: e.g. 'Put the soap on the dish', 'Make a cross with the spoon and fork', 'Switch on the lamp', 'Clip the card to the cloth', 'Put the tea bag in the mug', 'Pick up the pin with the magnet' ... culminating, perhaps, in 'Eat the Mars bar'!
  1. Make up lists of questions matched to the child's decoding level, some of which conjure up corny images and some of which don't. For example, at the stage when the child knows only single letters and their sounds (no digraphs) and is reading only 3-letter words, one might have the questions 'Has a pig six legs?' 'Can a dog run?', 'Is a cat a pet?', 'Can a fox fit in a tin can?' If the child can manage slightly longer words, one might have 'Did Miss Muffet sit on a rabbit?', 'Can frogs swim in ponds?'. If the child has learned 'ar', 'ee', 'oo' and 'sh', one can have 'Will a shark jump up a tree?', 'Can men get wool from sheep?', 'Must a car stop if it has a crash?' I used to get the children to read the questions and write 'yes' or 'no' after them.

4.Teaching segmenting. A formula that I found worked with my grandson, after he had been blending for a few months, was for me to say 'CAT is /c/ - /a/ - /t/. DOG is /d/ - /o/ - ???'. After a few of these, I would say only the first sound, and then I would just say 'PEN is ???'. He caught on in about 20 minutes, spread over 2 days. What was very interesting at this point was that he could instantly segment with untaught sounds as well as with taught ones - e.g. he hadn't learnt any digraphs for reading (he was only 2+) but could segment 'sheep' and 'goat' as easily as 'cat' and 'dog'.??

Giving your child the best start - Bonnie Macmillan
Article from "The Daily Telegraph" - 20th April 2000

Games to play with young children Download article (.zip 952kb) Get Winzip (free)

Phonic Dice for games and activities: Make your own dice using this template www.senteacher.org/wk/dice1.php
Add the following graphemes (based on Jolly Phonics letter introduction order) to the faces, highlighting the vowels and vowel digraphs.
Dice 1. s a t i p n
Dice 2. c k ck e h r
Dice 3. m d g o u l
Dice 4. f b ai j oa ie
Dice 5. ee or z w ng nk
Dice 6. v oo y x ch sh
Dice 7. th qu ou oi ue er
Dice 8. ar y ce ge se ve

Ready-made sets of phonic dice (home or classroom editions) can be ordered from www.candocubes.com/synthetic-phonics-products.php

www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/primary/publications/literacy/948809/ DfES 'Playing with Sounds' activities to download.

www.tes.co.uk/resources/Resource.aspx?resourceId=325 Happyday's CVC dominoes to print out

www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/primary/publications/literacy/948809/nls_phonics028004games.pdf Phonic games from the DfES

www.dorbooks.com/tips.html Dolores Hiskes suggests some reading games.

www.dyslexiacentre.co.uk/nessy/guests/guests.htm Free online resources and games.

www.geocities.com/sen_resources/resources.html Phonic board games to print out plus 'blank' boards to customise

www.montessorimaterials.org/Language/advancedcodecards[1].doc Advanced code cards to print out (N.B. a few of the cards have American-English pronunciation spelling)

www.senteacher.org/wk/certificates.php Easily customised certificate.

www.kented.org.uk/ngfl/games/ Several 'phoneme' games to download here, including 'Sound Buttons': select the vowel phoneme pattern then select other phonemes to create a word. Finally press the sound buttons to listen and blend.

www.cleverspellgames.co.uk Pack of phonic games which follow the Sound Reading System programme structure, suitable for one-to-one or group teaching.

gingernutlover · 15/02/2007 21:09

franch

do not buy a parent guide for jolly phonics! they are free from jolly phonics when you order anything else, I am a teacher and have a pile of them, if you want one then email me youraddress and i'll pop one in the post

beckycorden at hotmail.com

mummyhill · 15/02/2007 21:22

Hi Franch

We got the CD from ELC dd loves it. You can also pick up a parents/teachers guide from ELC. They are usually in a leaflet display thingy by all the books, games etc that Jolly phonics do.

Apparently you can also buy jolly phonics stuff at
Tesco, wh smith, waterstones, ottakars and borders.

Missing you on the post natal. How are the girls?

Take care.

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