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Reading books that follow the phonics

9 replies

rrbrigi · 08/04/2013 11:25

Hi,

I just wonder if there are any group of books that teach phonics to children. E.g.: first group of books teach the sound of the letter, next group of books teach the diagraphs (ae, ie, th, ng, oo, ee, kn, wr, etc?), next group of books teach the sound with split diagraphs or 3 or 4 letters (a_e, igh, que, tch, etc?). Or something like this.

I am looking for a series of books that go through all of the phonics and my son can practice this phonics by reading the books. I know Jolly phonics for the sound of the letters, but I would like books that follow a story and when he reads the story he practice the phonics without noticing it. And he knows the sound of the abc, he needs more practice on the diagraph, 3 or 4 letter sounds and split diagraph. And I am looking for books that built on each other. E.g: when he reads the 2nd book, there are sound in it from the first book and a couple of new sounds as well.
If there is any, please could you tell me which one would you recommend?

Thanks.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Feenie · 08/04/2013 11:43

Phonics Bug

rrbrigi · 08/04/2013 11:53

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Scattercat · 08/04/2013 12:34

www.focusonphonics.co.uk/acatalog/Phonic_Books__Dandelion_.html Launchers have one line of text to a page and are for readers who need lots of practice at the first stages of reading. Readers introduce sounds in the same sequence but have more text to a page as they progress.

rrbrigi · 08/04/2013 13:19

Thanks for the sites.

OP posts:
Malaleuca · 08/04/2013 13:33

www.piperbooks.co.uk
These books go from 5 letter/sound correspondences in the fist few books (BRI1) and continue until the full complexity of the alphabetic code is covered by ARI - an extensively researched series of books.

rrbrigi · 08/04/2013 14:35

I like the piperbooks and Dandelion. I will buy one of them and if he needs more practice I can buy some phonics bug books through amazon.

But I still not sure which one to buy. Dandelion is colourful (piperbooks are not), but Piperbooks has long books as well as shorter.

OP posts:
maizieD · 08/04/2013 16:31

Don't be seduced by 'colourful'! Sometimes too much 'busyness in' the illustrations can distract from the main task; which is reading the words. I, personally, think that the illustrations of the Dandelion readers which I have seen are too big, bright and distracting.

Malaleuca · 08/04/2013 22:30

In my experience the Piper books provide ample practice and you would not need to buy anything else. In 'words per dollar', they are top value, although that is not their only attribute of course.

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