牛津自然拼读规则表(教学顺序指导)
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1. Debbie Hepplewhite’s simple to complex Alphabetic Code overview
Slash marks /ai/ denote units of sound (phonemes or combined phonemes). Letters and letter groups (graphemes) appear in single apostrophes ‘ay’.
References to short vowel sounds relate to the sounds as in ‘apple, egg, insect, octopus, umbrella’ denoted as: /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/ - said in a ‘staccato’
manner - as opposed to references to the long vowel sounds commonly denoted as: /ai/, /ee/, /igh/, /oa/, /yoo/ as in ‘aid, eel, night, oak, statue’.
Key to the 12 units of Debbie’s online synthetic phonics programme, Phonics International:
units1-5 simple code with some spelling alternatives
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
6-12 /air/, /eer/, /zh/, split digraphs, complex code 6th
7th
8th
9th
simple code
complex code
graphemes: spelling variations which ARE CODE FOR the 44+ phonemes and combined phonemes such as /k+s/ and /y+oo/
and
key words
/s/ s
/a/ a
/t/ t
/i/
-ss -ce -se ce ci cy sc
palace house
cents certain
city
circle
bicycle lacy
scissors
scythe
ascent
-st-
castle
ps
pseudonym
tent
i
letter
-ed
skipped
-y -y
*
insect sunny
12th
Debbie’s programme introduces a simple code of at least one letter/s-sound correspondence
for each of the 44+ sounds of speech of the English language. It then expands to teach
further spellings and their pronunciation variations.
* Short words ending with the /s/ sound with short medial
vowel sounds usually end with double letters ‘ss’ - as in ‘glass’.
*Sound out double consonant letters ‘ss’ as one sound only.
*Double consonant letters alert the reader to sound out the
preceding vowel with its short sound (see ‘a’ below re ‘glass’)
*Letters e, i or y alert the reader that the preceding ‘c’ will
represent the /s/ sound. (This is often described as ‘soft c’.)
*For ‘a’, teach, “Try the short vowel sound /a/ first, if that
does not sound right then try the long vowel /ai/ sound”.
*Some people pronounce the ‘a’ in some words as if it were
/ar/: e.g. path p- ar -th; glass g-l- ar -s
*Double consonant letters ‘tt’ alert the reader to sound out the
preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Past tense of verbs leads to ‘ed’ graphemes for /t/, /d/, /e+d/.
apple
-tt
11th
teaching points
units of sound
(phonemes and
combined
phonemes)
snake glass
5th
10th
*
*Letters ‘i’ and ‘y’ and the sounds they represent have very
close links. Here the letter ‘y’ acts as a vowel-letter and vowel-
sound.
* End graphemes ‘y’, ‘ey’ and ‘ie’ sound between /i/ and /ee/.
-ey * -ie
cymbals monkey
movie
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
2. /p/
/n/
/k/
p
pan
n
net
k
kit
*Double consonant letters ‘pp’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
-pp
puppet
-nn kn gn -ine
bonnet knot
c
cat
gnome engine
-ck ch
duck
chameleon
qu que
bouquet
/e/ e -ea -ai
/h/ h hat wh
who
/r/ r -rr
/m/ m -mm -mb -mn -me
egg
rat
head
said
*When letter names are taught, point out that the name for
the letter ‘h’ is pronounced “aitch” – not “haitch”.
*Some people would refer to ‘silent w’ or ‘silent h’; others
prefer to say that ‘wr’ and ‘rh’ are code for the /r/ sound
(phoneme).
wr rh
arrow write
rhino
map hammer
/d/ d -dd -ed
/g/ g -gg gu gh -gue
dig
girl
plaque
*Double consonant letters ‘nn’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Some people would refer to ‘silent k’ or ‘silent g’; others
prefer to say that ‘kn’ and ‘gn’ are code for the /n/ sound.
*Letter ‘c’ represents a /k/ sound when preceding the letters
‘a’, ‘o’ and ‘u’.
*Short words with short vowels usually end with ‘ck’ and this
grapheme never begins words.
*When reading short unknown words with single letter ‘e’,
teach, “Try the short vowel /e/ sound first, if that does not
sound right then try the long vowel /ee/ sound”.
thumb
column
*Double consonant letters ‘mm’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Some people would refer to ‘silent b’ or silent ‘n’; others
prefer to say that ‘mb’ and ‘mn’ are code for /m/.
*Double consonant letters ‘dd’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Past tense of verbs leads to ‘ed’ graphemes for /t/, /d/, /u+d/.
welcome
puddle rained
juggle guitar ghost
*Double consonant letters ‘gg’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Letter ‘u’ in ‘gu’ acts as a block between the letters ‘g’ and
‘e’, ‘i’ or ‘y’ indicating the ‘g’ is code for /g/ and not /j/.
catalogue
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
3. /o/
/u/
/l/
o wa qua alt
octopus watch qualify salt
u o
umbrella son
l -ll
ladder
schwa
kettle
touch thorough
-il -al -el
pencil
/f/ f -ff
/b/ b -bb bu
/j/
/y/
feather cliff
bat
j
jug
ough
shell
-le
/ul/
-ou
*For ‘o’, teach, “Try the short vowel /o/ sound first, if that
does not sound right then try the long vowel /oa/ sound”.
*Alert the reader that the graphemes ‘w’ or ‘qu’ preceding a
single letter ‘a’ can indicate that ‘a’ is code for the /o/ sound.
*For ‘u’, teach, “Try the short vowel /u/ sound first, if that
does not sound right then try the long vowel /yoo/ sound”.
*The letter ‘u’ is sometimes code for a long /oo/ sound: e.g.
flu, judo, truth, Ruth, Pluto.
*To make the /l/ sound, roll up the tongue and say “ul”.
*Short words with short vowels usually end with ‘ll’ as in bell.
*Double consonant letters ‘ll’ alert the reader to sound out the
preceding vowel with its short sound except ‘-all’ (/or+l/).
*Teach the ‘schwa’ effect involving /l/ through words such as:
little, table, pupil, cymbal, label (pronounced close to “ul”).
Teach that literal sounding out when reading, however,
helps with spelling: e.g. h-o-s-p-i-t-a-l.
*Double consonant letters ‘ff’ alert the reader to sound out the
preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Short words with short vowel sounds usually end with ‘ff’ as
in off and cliff.
*Double consonant letters ‘bb’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
rabbit
hospital
camel
ph -gh
photo laugh
building
*Letters e, i or y alert the reader that the preceding letter ‘g’
might represent the /j/ sound. (This is often referred to as
‘soft g’.)
*Words ending with the /j/ sound are spelt with ‘ge’ or ‘dge’
(‘dge’ follows single letter, short vowel sounds like ‘fridge’).
*Teach early on that letter ‘y’ represents 4 sounds as in ‘yes,
my mummy’ and ‘cymbal’.
It is often interchangeable with the the letter ‘i’ and the
sounds /i/, between /i and ee/, and /igh/.
-ge ge gi gy -dge
cabbage gerbil
giraffe
gymnast
fridge
y
yawn
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
4. /ai/
ai
aid
-ay a
tray
table
w
/oa/ oa ow o
oak
sundae
bow
yo-yo
-oe o-e ough
oboe rope dough plateau
i-e ei
-y
/ee/ e *
or
/aw/
night tie
ee ea
or
fork
dependent on
regional and
national accents
/z/
/ng/
z
zebra
-n
gong
eight
break
wheel
i
/or/
prey
wh
/igh/ -igh -ie
eel
cakes
eat
behind shy
emu
bike
*The ‘i-i’ as in ‘liking’ alerts the reader to pronounce /igh/.
eider
-y e-e -ey -ie
sunny
concrete
*The ‘o-i’ as in ‘poking’ alerts the reader to pronounce /oa/.
eau
key
chief
*monkey *movie
-ine
sardines
aw au -al oar -oor ore -our
war quar augh ough
warm quarter caught
-zz -s -se -ze x
dawn
jazz
-n
jungle
*The ‘a-i’ as in ‘baking’ alerts the reader to pronounce /ai/.
*Grapheme ‘ea’ as code for the /ai/ sound is rare. Note the
three common root words: break, steak, great.
*Letter ‘w’ preceding vowel graphemes should alert the reader
to different possible pronunciations’; (w)a - wasp, wag;
(w)ar - warm, wary; (w)or - work. Note: ‘what’
/w/
web
-ae a-e -ey eigh -ea
sauce
fries
chalk oars
snore
four
thought
cheese breeze
/ngk/
door
xylophone
-nk -nc
ink
uncle
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
*The ‘e-i’ as in ‘competing’ alerts the reader to pronounce
/ee/.
*The ‘y’ in ‘sunny’ is between the sound /i/ and /ee/. Similarly,
so is ‘ey’ in ‘monkey’ and ‘ie’ in ‘movie’. [Also in /i/ row.]
*Letter ‘w’ preceding grapheme ‘ar’ alerts the reader to say
the sound /or/: (w)ar - war, warn, wart, warder.
*Sound /w/ as in ‘qu’ [/k/+/w/] also alerts reader to pronounce
‘ar’ as /or/: (qu)ar - quart, quarter, quartz, quartile.
*Double consonant letters ‘zz’ alert the reader to sound out
the preceding vowel with its short sound.
*Short words with short vowel sounds end with ‘zz’ - jazz.
*The grapheme ‘ng’ can be pronounced differently according
to regional accent and dependent upon the particular word.
*In some words, the ‘n’ and ‘g’ are pronounced separately
*Teach ‘nk’ as if it was one sound unit for reading and
spelling purposes even though it is really two; that is:
/ng/+/k/. This combined ‘sound’ may be denoted as /nk/.
5. /v/
short
v
violin
dove
/oo/ oo -oul -u
book
long
*Teach that words ending with the /v/ sound end with the
grapheme ‘ve’.
-ve
should
push
/oo/ oo -ue u-e -ew -ui -ou -o
moon blue
flute
crew
fruit
soup
move
ough
through
/k s/ -x -ks -cks -kes /gz/ -x -ggs
/ch/ ch -tch /chu/ -ture
+
/sh/
unvoiced
/th/
voiced
/th/
fox
books ducks
cakes
exam
chairs patch
sh
ch
sheep chef
schwa
eggs
picture
-ti -ci -ssi
station magician
mission
th
thistle
th
there
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
*Teach the two sounds represented by the grapheme ‘oo’ at
the same time; short /oo/, long /oo/.
*Progress to linking the /oo/ as in ‘moon’ with the spelling
and pronunciation variations of ‘ew’, ‘ue’ and ‘u-e’ - all of
which can represent both the long /oo/ sound and the /yoo/
sound.
*Teach the letter ‘x’ as if it was one sound unit /ks/ whereas
it is really two sounds /k/+/s/.
Provide word lists of ‘-x’ words, ‘-ks’, ‘cks’ and ‘-kes’ words
to compare: e.g. fox, boxes, looks, beaks, ducks, likes.
*Grapheme ‘tch’ indicates a preceding short vowel sound; e.g.
ditch, fetch, thatch, notch, hutch, watch.
*Grapheme ‘ch’ follows long vowel sounds (bleach, pooch,
reaches); but also some common words with short vowels
which need to be noted: rich, which, such, much, touch.
*Grapheme ‘ch’ follows consonants; e.g. mulch, wrench, pinch.
*Draw attention to ‘ti’, ‘ci’, ‘ssi’ graphemes in long words.
*Provide words in groups with the same ‘chunk’ endings: -tion,
-cian, -cial, -ssion, -cious.
**Progress to the phoneme /zh/ as in ‘television’.
*Teach unvoiced /th/ and voiced /th/ together.
*Compare the sounds /f/ and /v/ and study mouth movements
of these sounds carefully. Pronouncing /th/, /f/ and /v/
frequently causes confusion because of their similarities and
the influence of regional accents.
6. *In English, the letter ‘q’ is always followed by the letter ‘u’
and together they are code for two sounds /k/+/w/. Treat as
one sound unit /kw/ for both reading and spelling purposes
when teaching in the early stages. [‘qu’ can be code for /k/]
*The grapheme ‘ou’ as code for the sound /ou/ is never found
at the end of a word.
*‘ough’ is a rare grapheme as an /ou/ sound: bough, plough.
/k w/ qu
+
queen
/ou/
/oi/
ou ow
ouch owl
oi oy
ointment
ough
plough
*The grapheme ‘oi’ is never at the end of a word except in ‘coi
carp’.
toy
/y oo/ -ue u
+
statue unicorn tube new
er ir ur ear wor
mermaid birthday /ar/ ar al m al f al v -a
/air/ air -are -ear -ere
/er/
artist
hair
palm
hare
*Point out that the graphemes ‘ue’, ‘ew’ and ‘u-e’ are also
spellings for the long /oo/ sound.
*The ‘u-i’ as in ‘amusing’ alerts the reader to pronounce /yoo/.
u-e ew eu
nurse
half
bear
deuce
/er/
/u/
schwa
or
earth world mixer
-our -re
humour theatre
*Mention early on that some people pronounce some words
with the ‘a’ grapheme as the /ar/ sound rather than the /a/
sound: path p- ar -th, glass g-l- ar -s.
calves father
*Teach /air/ along with phoneme /eer/ (below) as there are so
many similar or identical graphemes representing /air/ and
/eer/ phonemes.
Teach the word ‘their’ as ‘their things’.
where
See /air/ above.
/eer/ eer ear -ere -ier
deer
/zh/
-si
television vision
ears
-s
treasure
adhere
-z
azure
*Letter ‘w’ preceding ‘or’ alerts the reader to say “wer…” as in:
worm, work, worth.
*‘er’, ‘our’, ‘re’ may sound like /er/ or
schwa /u/ dependent on accent: sister, colour, centre.
cashier
g -ge
courgette collage
note:
*-y, *-ey, *-ie are pronounced between /i/ and
/ee/ when these graphemes are word-endings
so they appear in both /i/ and /ee/ rows.
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008
**Progress to this sound from lessons in the /sh/ sound and its
spelling variations. There are no words with the grapheme ‘zh’
and the letters zh are used to denote the phoneme only.
7. The complexities of the English Alphabetic Code include:
1. one sound (phoneme) can be represented by one, two, three or four letters: e.g. k, sh, igh, eigh
2. one sound can be represented by different spellings (graphemes): e.g. /oa/ is represented by: o, oa, ow, oe, o-e, eau, ough
3. one spelling can represent multiple sounds: e.g. ‘ough’: /oa/ though, /or/ thought, /oo/ through, /ou/ plough, /u/ thorough
These complexities are taught explicitly and the Alphabetic Code is taught systematically with Debbie’s online Phonics International programme:
General advice for teaching the Alphabetic Code:
Choose an order of introduction of letter/s-sound correspondences to create a version of a simple code. (See left-hand column for Debbie’s version).
Teach around 2 - 5 correspondences per week. Provide a cumulative word bank (for the simple code) for modelling blending all-through-the-word for
reading, and segmenting all-through-the-spoken-word for spelling. The ‘simple code’, in effect, is part of the complex English code but it is just a ‘first step’
of introducing the complexities of the English writing system for reading and spelling based on the 44+ phonemes (smallest identifiable sounds of speech).
Keep the simple code revised and begin to introduce spelling and pronunciation variations of the complex code at a rate appropriate to the age and
stage of the learner. With effective direct teaching, the rate of learning can be surprisingly fast-paced but use professional judgement as to the pace.
The Alphabetic Code is not an ‘exact science’ and accents need to be taken into account at all times along with the notion of ‘tweaking pronunciations’
when decoding to reach the regional or preferred pronunciation of the target word. Simply explain the concept of ‘accents’ to the learners.
Tweaking, or modifying, pronunciations also helps to raise awareness of the ‘schwa effect’ (unstressed syllables) whereby in reality a sound close to /u/
is the spoken translation of the written code in words such as ‘sofa’ (sofu), ‘faster’ (fastu), ‘little’ (littul), ‘around’ (uround). The reverse of this is the need to
be aware of the spelling possibilities when segmenting spoken words for writing - particularly with regard to the schwa effect. The ability to spell accurately
relies on a growing knowledge of word associations (that is, spelling word banks - noting words with the same spelling and sound variations) and this
knowledge takes much longer to acquire than learning to decode well for reading. Always emphasise the relationship between sounds and graphemes
when teaching spelling rather than relying on visual memory of letter order. Letter names are used only to relay an accurate spelling from one person to
another and this is not the actual spelling skill of most literate adults. Even adults spell with a sound-to-print process (identifying the sounds all-through-the-
spoken-word) followed by choosing correct graphemes from beginning to end for the specific word. Tell learners explicitly that phonics for reading and for
spelling are adult skills, especially for new and difficult words. Phonics is for adults and not just for teaching beginners or infants.
Copyright Debbie Hepplewhite 2008