1st Edition

Sound Practice Phonological Awareness in the Classroom

By Lyn Layton, Karen Deeny Copyright 2002
    96 Pages
    by David Fulton Publishers

    96 Pages
    by David Fulton Publishers

    The second edition of Sound Practice looks afresh at how young children can be helped to discover basic facts about an alphabetic spelling system, within the context of their developing spoken language. It examines why children might fail to understand letter-sound links; the origins of severe and persistent difficulties with achieving functional literacy skills; and developmental processes underpinning the areas of learning identified in national initiatives for promoting children's learning. The book also discusses the need for differentiation strategies to respond to individual children's learning needs within national initiatives, and techniques and approaches that can be effectively applied to fulfil curriculum objectives.

    Phonological awareness is the key to independent literacy and must be explicitly tackled in the classroom in order to promote early reading and writing and to address written language difficulties in older children. This book is a suitable resource for initial and in-service training for teachers and teaching assistants and includes photocopiable worksheets.

    Chapter 1 Segmenting Words: The Rhyme and the Reason; Chapter 2 Rhyme Awareness: A Pre-reading Skill; Chapter 3 Poor Rhyming Skills in Young Children; Chapter 4 Sound Patterns and Spelling Patterns; Chapter 5 Early Reading and Spelling Problems: The Phonological Aspects; Chapter 6 Persistent Problems and Useful Strategies; Glossary of Terms; Bibliography; Index;

    Biography

    Lyn Layton, Karen Deeny

    From a review of the 1st edition

    "If you want a clear rationale for the approach and ideas on how to make children more phonologically aware, Sound Practice: Phonological Awareness in the Classroom is the manual for you." -- Times Educational Supplement