What are the Phase 1 sounds?
Phase 1
- Environmental sounds.
- Instrumental sounds.
- Body percussion (e.g. clapping and stamping)
- Rhythm and rhyme.
- Alliteration.
- Voice sounds.
- Oral blending and segmenting (e.g. hearing that d-o-g makes ‘dog’)
What are the 7 Aspects of Phase 1 phonics?
Seven aspects of sound: environmental, instrumental, body sounds, rhythm and rhyme, alliteration, voice sounds and oral blending and segmenting.
Is there a phase 1 phonics?
Phase 1 phonics is the first stage of the phonics teaching programme. At this stage, the focus is primarily on developing speaking and listening skills. Speaking and listening are an important set of literacy skills that will create the foundation to a lot of your children’s further learning.
What are the aspects of Phase 1 phonics?
Phase 1 is divided into seven aspects:
- Aspect 1 – General sound discrimination – environmental.
- Aspect 2 – General sound discrimination – instrumental sounds.
- Aspect 3 – General sound discrimination – body percussion.
- Aspect 4 – Rhythm and rhyme.
- Aspect 5 – Alliteration.
- Aspect 6 – Voice sounds.
What are the 3 strands of Phase 1 phonics?
Phase 1 is divided into seven aspects. Each aspect contains three strands: Tuning in to sounds (auditory discrimination), Listening and remembering sounds (auditory memory and sequencing) and Talking about sounds (developing vocabulary and language comprehension).
What phonics should be taught in Year 1?
By the end of Year 1, children should be able to: Say the sound for any grapheme they are shown. Write the common graphemes for any given sound (e.g. ‘e,’ ‘ee,’ ‘ie,’ ‘ea’) Use their phonics knowledge to read and spell unfamiliar words of up to three syllables.
What are the Phase 4 sounds?
Phase 4 phonics letter examples
- Sk, lt, lp, if, and pt.
- Scr, shr, thr, nch and str.
- Fr, nl, fl, gl and pl.
- Cl, sl, sp, st and tw.
- Sm, pr, sc, sk and sn.
How many levels are there in phonics?
Phonics Hero’s resources include three stages of phonics curriculum: the Basic, Advanced Code and Complete the Code. These three parts span 26 levels of systematic reading and spelling learning and practice.
What age should you teach phonics?
between three and four years
Research shows that children are ready to start phonics programmes when they have learned to identify all the letters of the alphabet – which is usually somewhere between three and four years of age.
What phonics phase should Year 2 be on?
Phase 6 phonics
Phase 6 phonics takes place throughout Year 2, with the aim of children becoming fluent readers and accurate spellers. By Phase 6, children should be able to read hundreds of words using one of three strategies: Reading them automatically. Decoding them quickly and silently.
What age is phase 4 phonics?
split into 6 phases: • Phase 1 is introduced in the Nursery • Phases 2 and 3 are introduced in Reception • Phases 4 and 5 are introduced in Year 1 • Phase 6 is introduced in Year 2.
Is phonics taught in Year 3?
In English, your child will continue to work on the spelling patterns they have begun in previous years, but this year there is less of a focus on phonics and more emphasis on understanding and learning the spelling rules, as well as attention to prefixes and suffixes.