The main problem with phonics is that in many of the most common words phonics does not work (any, many, one, other, only).
It works well with regular spellings, like 'a fat cat sat on a mat'.
The final aim of reading instruction remains to learn to recognise all common words by sight instantly. Phonics is just a stage towards it.
The first stage of learning to read is learning the main sounds for the main English spellings, as in:
A, a-e, ay (cat; plate, play) air/are (hair, care) ar (car); au, -aw, -all (all, sauce, saw, all);
b (bed);
C, ck, k (c/at/ot/ut, comic, crab/ clap; pick, pocket; kept/ kite, seek, risk)
Ch, -tch (chat, catch); d (dog);
E (end); ea/ ee, --y (eat, eel, funny), er/ir/ur (her, bird, turned),
F, G, H (fish, garden, house);
I, i-e, -ie, -igh, -y (ink, bite, tie, high, try);
J, -dge, -ge (jug, bridge, oblige); L, M, N, ng (lips, man, nose, ring) 38
O, wa, qua, (pot, want, quarrel), O-e, -o, ol (bone, so; old),
Oi, -oy (coin, toy), Oo (food, good),
Or, -ore, war, quar (order, more, wart, quarter),
Ou, -ow (out, now); P, Qu, R (pin, quick, run),
S, -ce, -cy (sun, face, emergency);
Sh, -ti-, -ci- (shop, station, cautious, facial, musician),
T, -te (tap, delicate), Th (this thing),
U, u-e, -ue, -ew (up, cube, cue, new)
V, -ve, -v- (van, have, river ? no doubling),
W, -x, Y- (window, fix, yes);
Z, -se (zip, wise),
-si-, -su- (vision, treasure)
This looks better with the graphemes (single letters or combinations of them used for a sound), but I can't do that on here.
Masha Bell