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"The Phive Phones"
by Sebastian
Wren from:
Psychology and education are
well-springs from which buzzwords
and jargon rise, and when
psycho-babble meets ed-speak,
obfuscation is born. In other words,
who can understand all the jargon
that's being tossed around in
education these days? Why is there a
word for everything, and why do they
have to be so confusing? Consider
all the similar terms that have to
do with the sounds of spoken words
-- phonics, phonetic spelling,
phoneme awareness, phonological
awareness, and phonology - all of
them share the same "phon"
root, so they are easy to confuse,
but they are definitely different,
and each, in its way, is very
important in reading education. It
is worthwhile to spend some time
discussing these different "phon"
terms, and clarify differences among
these different concepts.
Phonics - Thanks to the
popular "Hooked on Phonics"
television commercials everybody has
heard of phonics, but not everybody
knows what it is. Phonics is a
method of teaching that emphasizes
letter-sound relationships. Children
are taught, for example, that the
letter N represents the sound /n/,
and that it is the first letter in
words such as NOSE, NICE and NEW. In
addition, and this is something that
most people don't think about when
they think of phonics, children are
explicitly taught the English
spelling-sound "rules." Children are
taught things like "when two vowels
go walkin' the first does the talkin'"
and "when a word ends in a silent-e,
the first vowel sound is long."
Since no letter in English, except
for the letter V consistently
corresponds to a single sound, these
rules are quite complex. Nose,
nice and new all start
with the letter N, but gnu,
knife, and pneumonia
certainly do not. There are spelling
and pronunciation rules, and then
there are exceptions to the rules,
and teachers who use the phonics
approach try to formally and
explicitly teach both.
For the purpose of discussion
here, there are two important things
to remember about phonics. First and
foremost, phonics is an
instructional strategy - a method of
teaching children to read. Second,
phonics has to do with teaching the
relationships between the sounds in
speech and the letters of the
alphabet (both written and spoken).
Typically, when somebody is talking
about teaching children the
"spelling-sound" relationships (or
to use some of that psycho-babble ed-speak,
the "grapho-phonemic"
relationships), they are talking
about teaching some form of phonics.
Phonetic spelling or reading
- This is a concept which is related
to phonics, but unlike phonics,
which is a method of teaching
reading, phonetic spelling or
phonetic reading is a behavior that
young readers exhibit when they are
trying to write or read. When
children spell words the way they
sound, they are said to be
phonetically spelling -- for
example, the word lion could
be phonetically spelled L-Y-N, or
the word move could be
phonetically spelled M-U-V.
Likewise, a child can phonetically
read words -- A child phonetically
reading the word two may say
"twah", or the child may
phonetically read the word laugh
in such a way that it sounds like
lag or log.
Phonology - Unlike phonics
or phonetic reading and writing,
phonology has nothing to do with the
letters in our alphabet or the
letter names (spoken or written) -
phonology has to do with the ability
to distinguish and categorize sounds
in speech. Some words in English (in
all languages actually) sound very
similar, and are easily confused if
you are not very sensitive to the
distinctions. For some children with
phonology deficits, pairs of words
like mauve and moth or
rate and late sound
identical. They can not hear the
difference between certain similar
phonemes (speech sounds), and as a
consequence, they can not hear the
difference between certain words.
Phonological awareness -
Like phonology, phonological
awareness has nothing to do with the
letters in our alphabet - it has to
do with the sounds in spoken words.
And while phonology refers to the
ability to hear the difference
between sounds in spoken words,
phonological awareness refers to the
child's understanding that spoken
words are made up of sounds. This
fact is obvious to adults, but
children do not usually realize
that, within a word, there may be
other words (in the case of compound
words), or that words are made up of
syllables and that syllables are
made up of phonemes. Children
without phonological awareness do
not understand what it means for
words to rhyme, they do not
appreciate alliteration (words that
start with the same sound), and they
do not understand that some words
are longer than other words (the
spoken form, that is, not
necessarily the written form - the
word area in its spoken form
is longer than the word though,
but in its written form, area
is the shorter word).
Phoneme awareness - The
phoneme is the basic building block
for spoken words. In English, for
example, there are an infinite
number of possible words, but there
are only about 45 phonemes. To make
new words, we just delete or
rearrange the phonemes - mat
becomes man when the phoneme
/t/ is replaced with the phoneme
/n/, and deleting the phoneme /m/
from man leaves you with the
word an.
While phonological awareness is a
general term describing a child's
awareness that spoken words are made
up of sounds, phoneme awareness is a
specific term that falls under the
umbrella of phonological awareness.
Phoneme awareness refers to the
specific understanding that spoken
words are made up of individual
phonemes - not just sounds in
general (which would include
syllables, onsets, rimes, etc.).
Children with phoneme awareness know
that the spoken word bend
contains four phonemes, and that the
words pill and map
both contain the phoneme /p/; they
know that phonemes can be rearranged
and substituted to make different
words.
Phonological awareness is a step
in the right direction, but phoneme
awareness is what is necessary for
the child to understand that the
letters in written words represent
the phonemes in spoken words (what
we call the "alphabetic principle").
We spend a lot of time teaching
children that the letter M stands
for the sound /m/, but we rarely
make sure that children understand
that words like milk, ham and
family all contain the
phoneme /m/, or that the difference
between man and an is
the deletion of the phoneme /m/.
Phoneme awareness can be
demonstrated in a variety of ways.
The easiest phoneme awareness task
is called blending - an adult
pronounces a word with a pause
between each phoneme (e.g. /b/ /a/
/l/), and the child blends the
phonemes together to make the word
("ball"). A more challenging
assessment for children is the
reverse, called phoneme segmentation
- the adult says the whole word, and
the child says the word with pauses
between the phonemes (adult says
"ball," child says /b/ /a/ /l/).
Even more challenging is phoneme
manipulation - the adult tells the
child to say a word without a
particular phoneme (say "boat"
without the /t/), or the adult tells
the child to add a phoneme to a word
to make a new word (What word would
you have if you added the phoneme
/o/ to the beginning of "pen?"). If
the child can reliably do any of
these tasks, the child has
demonstrated true phoneme awareness,
but a relevant point to make here is
that the child doesn't need to do
much more than these tasks to
demonstrate phoneme awareness.
It is possible, in fact it is
easy, to create phoneme awareness
tasks that are exceptionally tricky,
but these should be avoided rather
than exploited. English contains
many confusing phonemes - there are
diphthongs and glides that can
confuse anybody, even mature,
experienced readers (How many
phonemes do you hear in pay?),
and there are odd phonemes that are
not universally defined (How many
phonemes are in the word ring
or fur?), and there are
clusters of phonemes that are harder
to segment than other phonemes (a
cluster is a group of consonants
that are perceived as a unit,
sometimes until the child begins
spelling - for example, the /pr/ in
pray, the /gl/ in glow,
and the /sk/ in school). It
is important for the teacher to
remember that the child doesn't need
to be an Olympic champion at phoneme
manipulation - the child just needs
to demonstrate knowledge of the fact
that spoken words are made up of
phonemes. It is also important that
the teacher understands that phoneme
awareness is not a magic bullet; it
is important, and it is necessary
for reading success, but it is only
one skill of many that support
literacy.
So to recap, phonics is an
instructional approach that
emphasizes the letter-sound
relationships (which letters
represent which sounds). Phonetic
reading and writing is a behavior
the child exhibits that involves
"sounding out" words the way they
are written or writing words the way
they sound (again, relating to the
way letters represent speech
sounds). Phonology has to do with
the ability to hear the difference
between different speech sounds (and
has nothing to do with letters of
the alphabet). Phonological
awareness is a term used to describe
the child's generic understanding
that spoken words are made up of
sounds, and phoneme awareness
specifically refers to a child's
knowledge that the basic building
blocks of spoken words are the
phonemes.
-- by
Sebastian Wren
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