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| [senco-forum] Y1 phonological awareness | |
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dolfrog
dolfrog at tiscali.co.uk
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| Article: [senco-forum] Y1 phonological awareness | |
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Hi Sharon No I am not I am looking at the visual difference. And hope that I have guessed correctly in context etc. All that other stuff, phonemes, graphemes and blending etc, is a waste of time for me, I can not process it. So it is my own version of whole word for me. You need to find out how the child in front of you learners, and understand the possible information processing deficits and skills combinations. And if you have listening problems, Auditory Processing Disorder, you need an alternative to a sound based teaching program. But too many professionals are unable to understand this concept, may be they have own information processing disorder, as a condition of entry to their respective professions. Best wishes Graeme dolfrog dolfrog at apduk.org http://www.apduk.org dolfrog at dolfrog.com http://www.dolfrog.com http://www.ldlinks.org.uk -----Original Message----- From: senco-forum-bounces at lists.becta.org.uk [mailto:senco-forum-bounces at lists.becta.org.uk] On Behalf Of Sharon Fawcitt Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 4:29 PM To: Olanys at aol.com; senco-forum at lists.becta.org.uk Subject: RE: [senco-forum] Y1 phonological awareness When you "manipulate" phonemes though, aren't you in fact taking them apart often and reblending them? E.g. take the 'l' out of slow and what word does it now make? Ans = sow (as in to sow seeds, not sow as in female pig!) Sharon -----Original Message----- From: senco-forum-bounces at lists.becta.org.uk [mailto:senco-forum-bounces at lists.becta.org.uk] On Behalf Of Olanys at aol.com Sent: 02 October 2006 13:45 To: senco-forum at lists.becta.org.uk Subject: Re: [senco-forum] Y1 phonological awareness Hi Maizie, You said: "You can't implement phonics skills without phonological awareness. " Exactly but you can HAVE good phonics skills without good phnological awareness. see http://www.nifl.gov/partnershipforreading/publications/reading_first1.html Phonics Phonics is the understanding that there is a predictable relationship between phonemes (the sounds of spoken language) and graphemes (the letters and spellings that represent those sounds in written language). Phonemic Awareness Phonemic awareness is the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate the individual sounds--phonemes--in spoken words. Phonological Awareness Phonological awareness is a broad term that includes phonemic awareness. In addition to phonemes, phonological awareness activities can involve work with rhymes, words, syllables, and onsets and rimes. It IS possible to have good phonemic awareness and poor phonologocal skills; just knowing the individual sounds does not mean you can then blend them to make words or recognise the written form of these words although you might be able to recognise the sounds as individual wriotten forms... phonological awareness is a complex set of skills of which phonemic awareness is only one and for the development of these skills, phonics teaching alone isn't enough. Best wishes, Aly Chair Auditory Processing Disorder in the UK/APDUK www.lacewingmultimedia.com/APD.htm www.apduk.org Best wishes, Aly Chair Auditory Processing Disorder in the UK/APDUK www.lacewingmultimedia.com/APD.htm www.apduk.org |
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