Monday, March 16, 2020
How to Help Kids Learn Digraphs in Spelling and Sounds
How to Help Kids Learn Digraphs in Spelling and Sounds          Digraphs are two letters that make a third letter sound, when combined, such as ch or sh. Many sight vocabulary words use digraphs, which may provide a springboard for exploring these letter pairs when helping students learn to read new and unfamiliar vocabulary.Ã           When considering a spelling program and how to best help children learn the sounds of the English language, you will need to choose words that help them understand all of the 44 sounds. Part of those 44 sounds include the digraphs. It is also important to distinguish letter digraphs from letter blends, which are letters commonly paired whose individual sounds are created in concert, such as sl, pl, pr, sr, etc.Ã  Often, children with disabilities have difficulty hearing and distinguishing letter blends, but consonant digraphs are easier because even the voiced and unvoiced digraphs (th) are made in the same way, with tongue placement in the same place.         Often, students who have problems with identifying and/or hearing digraphs are also struggling with hearing (hard of hearing) or articulating (apraxia) the letter sound.Ã  Students with these difficulties should be referred to audiologists or speech-language pathologists for assessment and/or services.         The consonant digraphs are: ch, sh, th, ng (final sound) ph, and wh.          Strategies for Teaching Common Words With Digraphs      Introducing the Sound         Use decodable books with consonant digraphs to introduce the sounds.Ã  Use picture cards (chew, chop, chin, etc.)Ã  to introduce the sounds.Use a double ch letter card with other letter cards to build words.Ã  Have students build the same words with an individual pocket chart.         Practicing the Sound         Word Sorts:Ã  Put lots of words with paired initial sounds in squares.Ã  Have them cut out the words and paste them under the consonant digraph, i.e. chs include chip and ship, shop and chop.Ã            Sounds      Sound: ch as in chew         Initial ch sound:Ã  chew, chop, chips, choice, chance, chain, champ, chase, cheer, cheek, cheat, chase, chalk, choose         Final ch sound: touch, each, reach, coach, ditch, ouch, beach, teach, ditch, lunch         Sound: sh like in shy or rush         Initial sh:Ã  shadow, shade, shine, shop, shell, shout, shrub, shut, share, shower         Final sh:Ã   push, rush, fresh, wish, wash, fish, dish, trash, ash, rash         Sound: the unvoiced th as in this         the, then, they, there, their, this, them, these, that, though         Sound: the voiced th as in thin         thin, think, thick, thank, theft, thumb, tooth, truth, with, width         Sound: wh as in why         why, where, what, when, while, wheel, white, which, wheat, whistle         Final Sound ng as in ring         sing, sang, wing, bang, clang, bong, dung, sung, mung, clung, cling         Sound:Ã  ph as in phone         Phillip, phantom, phonics, phase, phlox    
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