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How to Teach Phonics

Chapter 8: FOURTH YEAR
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About This Book

A practical teacher’s guide that lays out a sequential, classroom-ready program for phonics in the primary grades, treating phonics as an essential component of reading instruction. It advocates beginning with meaningful language units, then analyzing familiar words into their elementary sounds and teaching blending to form new words. Short, regular ear-training and action-based drills are prescribed to build phonetic awareness, followed by instruction in single consonant sounds, phonograms, and graded exercises. The text pairs pedagogical rationale with concrete activities, word lists, and lesson structure to help teachers develop pupils’ pronunciation, listening skills, and independence in decoding.

a=ŏa=ȏau=aw=ou
whatnotcallnorhaulought
wasoddrawforfaultbought
watchcotwantcorncausesought
waspgotwalkcordpausecaw
washhopsaltshortcaughtsaw
dropdoghallstormnaughtpaw
spotfogdrawhorsenaughtydraw
talkmornthoughtthaw
ou=owew̅=ū
ourhowdewdue
outnowfewhue
hourcowmewblue
flourbownewJune
troutplowJewtune
shoutowlpewplume
mouthgrowlhuepure
soundbrownglueflute
mousecrowd
groundflower
housedrown
ew=oo̅=o=o=oo=
grewdopoorrudewolfwool
chewyousoonrulecouldfoot
crewtonoontoolwouldgood
brewshoewhomschoolshouldhood
drewprovefoodspoolwomanwood
threwbroadwhoseroofshookstood
screwmoontombbroomcrookpull
strewgoosestooproosthookbush
shrewdtookfull
brookput
bookpuss
look

o=ŭoy=oi
comefunboyoil
nonegunjoysoil
sonrunRoyvoice
dovesuptoyspoil
lovecuptroyjoint
somesunjoinpoint
tonhumcoinchoice
wondrumnoisenoise
doesplumtoilmoist
touchnut
gloveshut
monthmuch
nonemust

FOURTH YEAR

I. Review and continue to apply the principles of pronunciation, with a more complete mastery of the vowel and consonant sounds as found in Webster's dictionary.

II. Teach the diacritical marks found in the dictionary to be used. The marks needed will be found at the foot of each page of the dictionary.

III. Teach the use of the dictionary.

(1) See that every child owns, if possible, one of the new dictionaries, in which unphonetic words are respelled phonetically.

(2) See that all know the alphabet in order.

(3) Pupils practice finding names in the telephone directory, catalogs, reference books, etc.

(4) Practice arranging lists of words in alphabetical order, as in the following dictation exercise.

Rewrite these words in the order in which they would occur in the dictionary.

chancevalue
alarmhurdle
greenevergreen
windowfeather
indeedleave
sapwoodmonkey
bruisekernel
doublejelly

Also lists like these:—a step more difficult.

arborangry
alarmafter
artistage
affordapron
appleappear
athleticapprove
assistanswer
alwaysanchor

After teaching the alphabetical order, with dictionary in hand, have the pupil trace the word to its letter, then to its page.

Having found his way to the word, he must now learn to read what the dictionary has to tell him about it. His attention is called to syllabification as well as to diacritical marks. (Those found at the foot of the page will furnish the key to pronunciation.)

He finds that his dictionary is a means of learning not only the pronunciation of words, but their meaning and spelling. Later, as soon as the parts of speech are known, he should learn the various uses of words—their grammatical uses, derivation, etc., and come to regard the dictionary as one of his commonest tools, as necessary as other books of reference.

But here the teacher's task is not done. Provided with the key to the mastery of symbols, her pupils may still fail to use this key to unlock the vast literary treasures in store for them. They must be taught what to read, as well as how to read. They must be introduced to the school library and if possible to the public library. Dr. Elliot has said: "The uplifting of the democratic masses depends upon the implanting at school of the taste for good reading."

Moreover that teacher does her pupils the most important and lasting service who develops in them not only an appreciation of good literature, but the habit of reading it.