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Transcript
Hiltingbury Infant School
Thursday 14th January 2016
Learning to spell. Why is it so
confusing?
•You may feel that English spelling is illogical or strange.It's true that there
are some strange irregular spellings. This is because it includes words from
many languages and some very old words.
•The English spelling system has developed over the centuries and the
irregularities came about because of various invaders and writers trying to
fit their alphabet and sounds to English.
•English developed from the Romans, Anglo-Saxons & Vikings,the French
scribes, (1066) caused the most problems with spelling,in the 1400s, the printers
with their new fangled printing presses changed words and spelt them how they
wanted, and then the 16th Century English academics decided to make spelling
more like its Latin roots and added all sorts of silent letters in words.
•Then in 1828, American Noah Webster decided to simplify American spellings
and brought out his American English dictionary. This lot changed and brought
'strange' ways of spelling words
( For more information about the origins of spelling look at the book ‘Spell it out’ by David Crystal)
Spelling Expectations
Common Exception words for spelling
Year 1
•Year 1
•the, a, do, to, today, of, said, says, are, were, was, is, his, has, I, you, your, they, be,
he, me, she, we, no, go, so, by, my, here, there, where, love, come, some, one, once, ask,
friend, school, put, push, pull, full, house, our
Year 2
•door, floor, poor, because, find, kind, mind, behind, child, children*, wild, climb, most,
only, both, old, cold, gold, hold, told, every, everybody, even, great, break, steak,
pretty, beautiful, after, fast, last, past, father, class, grass, pass, plant, path, bath,
hour, move, prove, improve, sure, sugar, eye, could, should, would, who, whole, any,
many, clothes, busy, people, water, again, half, money, Mr, Mrs, parents, Christmas
Please look at the full National Curriculum expectations on the link below.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/335186/PRIMARY_nation
al_curriculum_-_English_220714.pdf
How children learn to spell in
school.
Environment –
•word walls
•colour coded grammar walls
•topic words
•Mnemonics- a rhyme or
chant that helps the
children remember the
spellings.
How children learn to spell in
school.
Resources –
•word mats,
•alphabet mats,
•year group words
•It is essential for children to be an
independent learner, like Frankie Fox and
use the visual aids independently when writing.
When do we teach them? - through guided reading
spelling games, phonics, computer games,
– exposed across curriculum and at reading level to get
a visual image.
Spelling Games.
Battleship
For this game, each child is given
a blank spelling board. They then
have to fill in ten words with the
pattern they have been learning.
Alternatively, if you have children
who may find it difficult to
complete the grid by writing in the
word themselves, I may hand out
boards which already have ten
words written in to different
squares.
Rules of Battle
•1. Child A goes first and calls out a number.
•2. If Child B has a word in that number, they call it
out and Child A must attempt to spell the word.
•3. If the child spells the word correctly, they receive
an explosion!
•4. The winner is the child who receives the most
explosions in two minutes of play.
Dominoes
Dominoes
Take your phonic focus of the week and create spelling dominoes. For example: approximately
twenty dominoes which require the ‘ay’ sound spelt either: ay, ai or a-e. Explain to the children that
all of the dominoes have some letters missing. Their job is to decide which graphemes are needed
to complete the word.
Set the timer to two minutes and off they go! The winning pair are the first team to complete their
domino sequence with the correct graphemes.
Treasure Hunt
1
3
2
4
Treasure Hunt
This one is great fun! I have tried it with Year One and Two and they absolutely loved it!
Find ten to twelve pictures with your phonic pattern of the week. Print these out on A4 and make sure
that each picture is clearly numbered. Then, use talk tins to record the word in full (do NOT sound out).
Hide the pictures with the talk tins around the playground. Then, give children a sheet on which to
record the words. They have five minutes to find all the hidden treasure! The one who finds all the words
and spells them correctly is the winner! Depending on the ability of children in your group, you may wish
to provide a recording sheet with the corresponding number of boxes for each word.
1.
Spelling Tennis
This is a great game for pairs.
Decide who will be A and who will
be B teams.
Call out a word. The teams take it in
turns to call out the letters and bat it
across to the opposition. Once the
final letter has been called, both
team say the whole word.
Mnemonics ( rhyme for each
letter)
Mnemonics like ‘When’ “ Witches Hen’. ‘What’ “ Witches Hat”.
Said= Silly ants in dirt.
Could, would and should = “ Oh, you, lucky duck!”
Because = “ Big elephants can always use small elephants”
When spelling having a rhyme or a picture helps to remind children of the spelling.
•
Other ways to support your child at
home
It is essential that phonemes are correctly pronounced in order for children to blend
words successfully. Please ask class teachers if you are unsure how to pronounce the
phonemes given.
•
Free spelling app on IPad- ‘spelling free’. Children can record their own
voice saying the word and they can practise spelling the words.
•
•
•
•
Play Bingo – either with their tricky words or with words containing their weekly
phonemes.
Play Hangman
Play pairs – matching the same words with the focus phoneme.
Ask your child to find you 3 things around the house with the focus phoneme in. Give
them a time allowance e.g. 1 minute. Or they could play with a brother or sister to see
who can get the most words.
•
Practise writing the words in different colour felt pens.
•
Put words containing their phonemes or tricky words into a sentence. They can write
the sentence down themselves or tell it to you to write down for them.
How many alien words can they say or spell in 1 minute with the focus phoneme?
Use magnetic letters to write different words containing the focus phoneme. Could
they change the word by changing 1 letter e.g. change paid to maid or hat to bat etc.
•
•
Learning to Spell
This is the correspondence between letters (graphemes) and sounds (phonemes).
•Phonemic Principles tends to include:
•· Phonics—knowledge about letter and sound correspondence, difference between long and short
vowels, identification, segmentation and blending of phonemes in speech and how these influence
spelling. Within the Phonics workshop
•· Spelling Patterns and Conventions—e.g. How the consonant doubles after a short vowel, words with
common letter strings but different pronunciation
•· Homophones—Words which sound the same but are spelt differently and mean something different
•· Phonological Knowledge—Syllables, rhymes
•Morphological Knowledge
•This is the spelling of grammatical units within words or the building blocks needed to become a speller.
It includes knowledge about:
•· Root words—contain one morpheme and cannot be broken down into smaller grammatical units (e.g.
elephant, table, girl, day) and are sometimes referred to as the stem or base form;
•· Compound words—two root words combined to make a word (playground, football);
•· Etymology (word derivations) words in the English language come from a range of sources;
understanding the origin of words helps pupils’ spelling (audi relates to hearing—audible, audience,
audition).
•Support for Spelling—National Strategies