Puzzle Words: Difference between revisions

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===a, I===
===a, I===
# "These are two very short words that come up a lot in reading."  
# "These are two very short words that come up a lot in reading."  
# "When we see them alone in a sentence, we say their letter name."
# "When we see them alone in a sentence, not part of a bigger word, we say their letter names instead of their regular sounds."
# "I." "A."
# Read an example of them in a sentence:<br/ >"I had a cat."
# Point to the 'a.'<br/ >"Sometimes we say this more like /uh/ than /ai/, but we always spell it the same way."


===he, she, me, we, be, the===
===he, she, me, we, be, the===
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== Variations and Extensions ==
== Variations and Extensions ==
 
*Matching voiced and unvoiced consonants
==Why the Dolch List is Bad==
*:print out cards with these letters and have the child match the pairs:
''Please'', do not use Dolch Sight Words, Fry's 100 Instant Words, or any of the other standard collections of "sight words" to be memorized.  The great majority of these "sight-words" are spelled completely phonetically.<br>
*:b, p; g, k; d, t; v, f; j, ch; z, s; th, th (only one spelling for these two sounds)
Doing this is no different than using the long discredited "whole-word" method of teaching reading.  Even those words that are a little trickier do have phonetic rules that they follow, or at least most of the word can be sounded out.  Teaching sight words before children have a solid phonetic foundation gives them the idea that some or all words just have to be memorized.  This will cause them more problems in the long run.
*:(There is also the pair zh, and sh, but leave these out as there isn't a spelling that zh has all of its own.)
 
===Dolch Words That Are Easy to Sound Out===
am, at, an, ask, and, can, cat, ran, man, had, fast, grass, hand<br>
egg, let, get, tell, yes, ten, leg, men, red, bed, bell, well, help, best, nest, went<br>
in, if, it, its, him, did, sit, big, six, hill, pig, will, milk, wind<br>
on, off, top, not, got, box, hot, doll, dog, stop<br>
us, up, cut, but, must, sun, run, just, jump<br>
rabbit, seven, robin, upon<br>
 
===Dolch Words With Standard Digraphs===
'''sh''' - wish, fish, shall<br>
'''th''' - this, them, then, with, that<br>
'''ch''' - much, children<br>
'''er''' - her, under, never, sister, after, better, letter, flower<br>
'''ai''' - rain, chair<br>
'''ee''' - see, green, keep, sleep, sheep, street, three, feet, tree, seed<br>
'''oa''' - coat, boat<br>
'''ue''' - blue<br>
'''oo''' - look, wood, good<br>
'''ou''' - out, ground, our, found, round<br>
'''oy''' - toy, boy<br>
 
===Dolch Words With Silent e===
make, came, take, name, ate, cake, gave, game, made<br>
here, these<br>
nine, five, white*, like, ride, time<br>
home, those<br>
use<br>
 
 
==Material==
==Material==
The material consists of sets of word cards grouped in little folders. Each set has a consistent pattern that all the words in it follow.
The material consists of sets of word cards grouped in little folders. Each set has a consistent pattern that all the words in it follow.
Line 101: Line 74:


==Further Reading==
==Further Reading==
*[[Why You Should Avoid the Dolch Sight Word Lists]]
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Revision as of 20:47, 16 June 2020

Puzzle Words
Language - Reading
LevelPrimary
PrerequisitesWord Lists
Digraph Word Lists
Materialscards with high frequency words with tricky spellings

In this activity the child reads cards with high frequency words that have tricky spellings. These words are sounded out as much as possible, and the unusual bit of the spelling is pointed out for the child to notice.

Presentations

Carry the folder of word cards to a mat or table. Place the it in the upper right corner.
Take out the stack of cards and place them in the center of the workspace.

a, I

  1. "These are two very short words that come up a lot in reading."
  2. "When we see them alone in a sentence, not part of a bigger word, we say their letter names instead of their regular sounds."
  3. "I." "A."
  4. Read an example of them in a sentence:
    "I had a cat."
  5. Point to the 'a.'
    "Sometimes we say this more like /uh/ than /ai/, but we always spell it the same way."

he, she, me, we, be, the

  1. "Today we're going to read six words that all follow the same rule."
  2. Point to the letter 'e' in one of the words.
    "They all use this letter to spell the sound /ee/. Let's sound them out."
  3. "/h/ /ee/, he."
  4. "/sh/ /ee/, she."
  5. "/m/ /ee/, me."
  6. "/w/ /ee/, we."
  7. "/b/ /ee/, be. This is the way we spell 'be' when we mean 'I'll be home soon.' If we mean bee like the insect that makes honey, we spell it with two Es."
  8. "/th/ /ee/, the. With this word, we sometimes say thee and sometimes we say thuh but we always spell it the same way."

is, as, his, has

  1. "Today we're going to read four words that all follow the same rule."
  2. Point to the letter 's' in one of the words.
    "They all use this letter to spell the sound /z/. Let's sound them out."
  3. "/i/ /z/, is."
  4. "/a/ /z/, as."
  5. "/h/ /i/ /z/, his."
  6. "/h/ /a/ /z/, has."
  7. "The /s/ sound and the /z/ sound are very similar, so there are lots of words where these letters get switched like this. The same thing is happening with our lips and teeth and tongue when we say the sounds. The only difference is that with the /z/ sound, our vocal cords are vibrating."
  8. Place your fingertips lightly on the front of your throat. Direct the child to do the same.
  9. Switch back and forth between saying /z/ and /s/. Ask the child if they can feel their throat vibrating with one but not the other.

from, other, nothing, mother, brother, son, month, front, of

This lesson could be divided into two parts if you think nine words is too many at once for the child.

  1. Be sure to set aside the word 'of' for last.
  2. "Today we're going to read nine words that all follow the same rule."
  3. Point to the letter 'o' in one of the words.
    "They all use this letter to spell the sound /u/. Let's sound them out."
  4. "/f/ /r/ /u/ /m/, from."
  5. Sound out the rest of the words in the same way, saving 'of' for last.
  6. Point to 'of' and say, "This word has an extra bit that is funny. Do remember how the sounds /z/ and /s/ get mixed up because they are almost so similar? The same thing happens with the sounds /v/ and /f/."
  7. Place your fingertips lightly on your throat. Direct the child to do the same.
  8. Switch back and forth between saying /v/ and /f/. Ask the child if they can feel their throat vibrating with one but not the other.
  9. "This is the only word that uses the letter 'f' for the /v/ sound. Let's sound it out."
  10. "/u/ /v/, of."

give, live, have, twelve, love

The odd thing about these is the "e" at the end. It's there because "v" doesn't occur at the end of words in English. Just tell the child that the child that "v" doesn't ever like to be at the end of words (maybe compare it to not liking to be at the end of the line), but the "e" doesn't mind so it's there to keep the "v" company.
The word 'love' has the /u/ sound spelled with the letter 'o' as in the previous lesson.

Points of Interest

Control of Error

Variations and Extensions

  • Matching voiced and unvoiced consonants
    print out cards with these letters and have the child match the pairs:
    b, p; g, k; d, t; v, f; j, ch; z, s; th, th (only one spelling for these two sounds)
    (There is also the pair zh, and sh, but leave these out as there isn't a spelling that zh has all of its own.)

Material

The material consists of sets of word cards grouped in little folders. Each set has a consistent pattern that all the words in it follow.

Make Your Own

Where to Buy

Further Reading