PHONICS GUIDELINE
PHONICS GUIDELINE
You can use this Phonics Primer to begin teaching a child or adult to read
today. This primer lists the 44 sounds in the English language and then gives
steps for teaching those 44 sounds and their most common spelling patterns. In
addition to learning sounds and spellings, each day the student must read lists
of phonetically related words and spell these words from dictation. Phonics
instruction must be reinforced by having the student read decodable text.
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Steps for Teaching Phonics
Step 1. Gather the materials listed below and store them together in a box.
* Note: Make sure your phonics flashcards give the proper sound or sounds for each letter or
letter combination – many widely available flashcards are incorrect or incomplete. For example,
the common sound of x is /ks/ as in fox, not /z/ as in xylophone or /eks/ as in x-ray. Also, the
short-vowel sound of i is /ĭ/ as in igloo, not /ī/ as in ice cream.
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Step 2. Teach the 5 short-vowel sounds and consonant sounds. Drill until
memorized.
During the first week, use the flashcards to drill the short-vowel sounds. Add several consonant
sounds each day until you are drilling all short-vowel sounds and consonant sounds with your
student daily. Do not rush this step. Keep drilling until all sounds are memorized, which usually
takes 2-4 weeks.
Tip: Work on phonics for at least 15 minutes a day, 5 days a week with your student. Frequency
and consistency are more important than the length of time spent on each lesson.
Short-Vowel Sounds
Consonant Sounds
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Step 3. Practice two-letter blends. Drill until blending is automatic.
After your student knows the short-vowel sounds and consonant sounds, next teach him how to
orally blend two letters (b-a, ba) and read two-letter blends such as: ba, be, bi, bo, bu.
Two-Letter Blends
b + a = ba s + a = sa j + a = ja
b + e = be s + e = se j + e = je
b + i = bi s + i = si j + i = ji
b + o = bo s + o = so j + o = jo
b + u = bu s + u = su j + u = ju
Golden Rule of Phonics: Never allow your student to skip, guess, or substitute words.
Accuracy is more important than speed.
Three-Letter Blends
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Step 5. Teach the twin-consonant endings, plurals, and two-consonant
blends. Drill until blending is automatic.
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Step 6. Teach the digraphs (ch, sh, th, wh, ng, nk). A digraph consists of
two consonants that form a new sound when combined. Also teach three-
consonant blends.
Digraphs Three-Consonant
Blends
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Step 7. Introduce a few high-frequency words necessary to read most
sentences.
After your student can read three-letter and four-letter words easily, it’s time to add a few high-
frequency words that are necessary to read most sentences. Some high-frequency words are
phonetically regular (such as “or”), but are introduced out of sequence because of their
importance. Other words are truly irregular, because they contain one or more letters that don’t
follow the rules of phonics (such as “once” and “who”).
The Basic High-Frequency Words table lists the most important words. Write each word on an
index card. Introduce three or four new words a week. Drill your student on these words
everyday, encouraging him to sound out as much of the word as possible (usually the
vowel sound is the only irregular part). As your student masters each word, file the card in the
card file under “Words I Know.” When your student comes across a new “wacky” word (such as
“sugar” in which the “s” is pronounced /sh/), make up a new index card and file it under “Words
To Learn.”
Tip: What distinguishes this high-frequency word list from the typical “sight word” list? Many
words in the list below cannot be completely sounded out, either because they contain one or
more letters that don’t “follow the rules” or the rule is learned later. In contrast, the typical “sight
word” list contains mostly phonetically regular words (such as “and” and “when”) that the student
is forced to memorize simply because he has never been taught to sound them out.
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Step 8. Teach the long-vowel sounds and their spellings. Note that there
are five common spellings for each long-vowel sound. Also teach the
“Silent-e Rule”: When a one-syllable word ends in “e” and has the pattern
vce (vowel-consonant-e), the first vowel says its name and the “e” is silent.
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Step 10. Teach the diphthongs /oi/ and /ow/ and their spellings. A
diphthong consists of two vowels that form a new sound when combined.
Also teach other special sounds.
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Note: This Phonics Primer does not contain all English spelling patterns.
Important: All sounds and spellings in Steps 2 - 12 should be introduced within the first 4
months of phonics instruction.
After 3 to 4 months of reading lists of words and sentences, your student should be ready to read
decodable stories. The student should read all stories aloud, carefully and accurately. Help him
sound out difficult words, as needed. Explain the meaning of all new words. Encourage him to
read each story several times to gain fluency, but don’t let him memorize the story (reciting a
story from memory is not reading). Model fluent reading by reading a sentence aloud with
expression, then asking him to repeat what you read with the same tone of voice. Explain and
demonstrate the meaning of basic punctuation (period = stop, comma = pause, exclamation point
= speak with excitement, question mark = raise the pitch of your voice on the last word to ask a
question.)
Continue teaching the lessons in the phonics program – don’t stop just because your student can
read. Most children need 1 to 2 years of reinforcement before their phonics knowledge becomes
permanent.
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