Sound–Letter Mapping
Say a sound; students write or choose the correct letter or letter group. e.g., /ʃ/ → sh.
Phonics teaches the systematic relationship between speech sounds and written letters or letter groups, enabling learners to decode unfamiliar words and build accurate spelling.
Definition. Phonics is the instructional approach that connects phonemes (sounds) to graphemes (letters or letter combinations) in systematic, explicit ways. It teaches learners how letters represent sounds and how to use that knowledge to read and spell.
Relationship to phonemic awareness. Phonics builds on phonemic awareness by pairing sounds with written symbols. While phonemic awareness is oral and auditory, phonics introduces print and teaches decoding strategies.
| Component | What it Teaches | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Letter–Sound Correspondence | Associates individual letters and common letter groups with their sounds. | m → /m/ ; sh → /ʃ/ |
| Decoding | Applying letter–sound knowledge to read words. | blend letters b-r-i-d → brid (practice with real examples) |
| Encoding (Spelling) | Translating spoken sounds to correct letter patterns. | /k/ /æ/ /t/ → cat |
| Orthographic Patterns | Recognising common letter patterns and syllable structures. | VC, CVC, CVVC, consonant blends, digraphs |
| Irregular Words | Teaching high-frequency words that don’t follow regular patterns. | was, said, have |
Effective phonics is systematic, explicit, and cumulative. Instruction follows a planned scope and sequence, moving from simple to complex patterns and providing frequent practice in controlled text contexts.
Say a sound; students write or choose the correct letter or letter group. e.g., /ʃ/ → sh.
Use short texts that contain only the taught letter–sound patterns so learners successfully apply decoding in context.
Provide letter tiles for students to build words, change initial/final blends, and explore patterns (e.g., cat → chat).
Teacher says a short phrase; students write it using taught patterns. Emphasize phoneme–grapheme choices.
Track phonics development through brief, regular checks that measure letter–sound knowledge, decoding accuracy, and application in connected text.
Some learners need more explicit, repeated practice and smaller steps. Key strategies include intensive, structured tutoring; multisensory support; and frequent review of mastered patterns.
Begin phonics after learners have basic sound awareness—often alongside phonemic awareness instruction in preschool or early primary grades. Start with simple letter–sound correspondences and keep activities short and systematic.
Decodable texts are highly valuable when new patterns are being taught because they allow learners to apply phonics knowledge with high success rates, building confidence and fluency.
Most high-frequency words can be decoded using phonics patterns; some common words are irregular and require direct teaching. Teach irregular words explicitly while continuing to emphasise phonics for most words.
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