**Phonemic Awareness **
These skills are an important part of reading success. Teaching them can be a lot of fun. Kindergarten and first grade students will enjoy rhyming, blending, syllable activities, and working with phonemes.
1. WHAT IS PHONEMIC AWARENESS AND WHY IT IS IMPORTANT?
Phonemic awareness is all about being able to hear, identify, and manipulate phonemes. These are the individual elements of sounds in any language.
For example, in the word “map,” the phonemes are the “m,” “short a,” and the “t” sounds. A Kinder with well developed phonemic awareness can both
* Segment these sounds
* Blend the isolated sounds back together to form a recognisable word.
There are 44 phonemes in the English language. To further complicate things, some letters have more than one sound.
For example, the letter ‘o’ represents one sound in the word other and a completely different sound in the word book. And as if that isn’t hard enough, some letters form a completely different sound when they are arranged side by side in a word. Examples of this are ‘th’ found in the word this or ‘ch’ in the word chair.
The Reading Well website https://www.dyslexia-reading-well.com/44-phonemes-in... has a complete list of phonemes if you are interested.
The ability to hear and understand the sounds in words in one of those foundational literacy skills. In fact, studies from Sage Journals https://journals.sagepub.com/.../002221949502800807indicate that a well developed phonological awareness in kindergarten is a strong predictor of later reading success
2. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PHONEMIC AWARENESS AND PHONICS
In a nutshell, phonemic awareness is about the sounds of a word and manipulating those sounds. While phonics is concerned with the relationship between the sounds and the letters.
- Phonemic Awareness is concerned with the sounds.
- Phonics involves the printed words.
The two skills are intertwined, but they are not the same. The phonemic awareness is the precursor to phonics instruction. It will be very hard for your students to succeed in phonics if they do not have a well-developed phonemic awareness.
TWO OF THE BEST ACTIVITIES TO DEVELOP PHONEMIC AWARENESS IN KINDERGARTEN
1. Rhyming Activities
Most kids enjoy rhymes and grasp the idea very quickly. Rhyming word play draws a child’s attention to the sounds and patterns of language, so it is a good place to start.
The very best way to introduce rhyming is to read lots and lots of rhyming books. Most of these books appeal to a child’s sense of humour, so have fun with them. Draw children’s attention to the rhymes in the book.
2. Listening
Bring their attention to noises early in the morning. After lunch, come back to the same place and listen quietly. It’s a great time to unwind, which is important for young children. As you sit there, listen for sounds and become “sound spotters” by using your ears. There are always sounds and weird noises you can hear around you. To finish up, talk about the sounds that you hear and try to imitate them, repeat them and associate them to word sounds.