原帖由 kiiiiiller 於 08-11-26 11:32 發表
I have my daughter memorize the magic figures 108775. It is the key to say her the long vowel sounds as follows :
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Phonics Rule #1 Short Vowels |
| When a vowel is followed by a consonant, the vowel is short and is marked with a breve or we call it a smile. The vowel is usually short when there is one vowel. (cat, dog, hot) |
Phonics Rule #2 Long Vowels |
| When there are two vowels in a word the first one is long and the second one is silent. The first one talks and the second one is silent. The first vowel is marked with a long line and second one is crossed out. (coat, ride, read) |
Phonics Rule #3 Double Consonants |
| Double consonants make one sound and the final consonant is crossed out. (cross, bless, class) |
Phonics Rule #4 c or k rule |
| C comes before a,o and u. (cat, cot, cut) K comes before the other two-i and e. (kite, key) |
Phonics Rule #5 ow/ou |
| The ow and ou make the sound as if you were being pinched and said “ow”. Ow and ou can also say just “o” when it is on the end of a word. These vowel combinations can have both of these two sounds. (count, wow, mow) |
Phonics Rule #6 er, ir and ur sounds |
These three combinations make the same sound of “er”. |
Phonics Rule #7 or sound |
| Or makes the “or” sound and is marked with a long line above the vowel. In order to remember the sound that “or” makes we say, ”At Christian Center School, the children have a choice for a snack. “You may have an apple OR an orange.” (horn,born) |
Phonics Rule #8 w before or |
| When w is before “or”, the “or” says “er”. (work, word) |
Phonics Rule #9 oo sound |
| There is a long and short sound to “oo”. The long sound is marked with a long line above both “oo’s” as in the word tooth. The short sound is marked with a smile above both “oo’s” as in the word book. (booth, took) |
Phonics Rule #10 oi and oy sound |
| Oi and oy make the sound of a pig that says, “Oink”. “Oi” comes in the front and middle of a word and “oy” comes on the end of a word. (oil, boil, boy,toy) |
Phonics Rule #11 qu sound |
| Qu are always together and we say they are married. (queen) |
Phonics Rule #12 4-H club |
| Sh makes the sound of asking someone to be quiet and putting your finger by your mouth and saying, “Sh.” Ch is the sound of a train trying to make it up the hill and chugging away. Th makes the sound of putting your tongue between your front teeth and blowing. Wh has a hard sound and a soft sound. The hard sound is said louder as in whale and the soft sound is like blowing out a candle as in who. (show, church, wheel, why, think) |
Phonics Rule #13 all and alk |
| There was a teacher named Mrs. Hayes. She loved the boys and girls in her room so much, she felt like they were her own children. She said each day, “I love to talk about all my children in first grade.” (ball, chalk) |
Phonics Rule #14 prefix and suffix |
| A prefix comes on the front of a word and is pre, which means before. A suffix comes on the end of a word and suffers such as ed, ing, en, s, es, and ly. (encamp, going, looked,churches) |
Phonics Rule #15 compound words |
| A compound word is made up of two words that come together to make a whole word. (doghouse, butterfly) |
Phonics Rule #16 syllables |
| Syllables are word parts. We can identify how many syllables are in a word by clapping it while saying it. (com-put-er) |
Phonics Rule #17 contractions |
| Two words can be put together to make the word shorter by leaving out certain letters. Children have to learn which letters to leave out. (wasn’t, I’m, isn’t) |
Phonics Rule #18 abbreviations |
| Words can be made shorter by leaving off some of the letters. A period is put in place of these letters. Children need to learn which words can be abbreviated. (Sept., Mrs.) |
Phonics Rule #19 quotation marks |
| Quotation marks are place around what someone said. We call them little huggies or little nines on the front and little sixes on the end. (Mother said, “Please come in.”) |
原帖由 carollpc 於 08-11-26 12:00 發表 [url=http://forum.edu-kingdom.com/redirect.php?goto=findpost&pid=26464883&ptid=1684859]
Can anybody tell me the difference between the sounds "s" & "ss", "f" & "ff", "l" & "ll".
I addition, I want to teach my daughter phonics at home. Any teaching material recommend??
A thousand thank ...
原帖由 kiiiiiller 於 08-11-26 23:34 發表
Being read the word DRESS's IPA Symbol in a ADL dictionary, I couldn't find any sound difference between a word ending with a consonant or double consonants.
It just shows a phoneme "s" at the end ...
原帖由 pangpuiyee 於 08-12-12 00:16 發表
thank you very much!!!
and how about this word: the
'th' sound 'f'. Then, why 'f' +'e' = the?
thx
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