Teaching Letter Names and Sounds
So, you want to teach your child
to read, but before a child can learn to read, he or she must first learn at
least some of the letters in the alphabet, their names, and the sounds that
they represent. To be able to read, a child must be able to recognize the
letters, know the sound of the letters, and be able to recognize the letters
quickly and say the sound without hesitation. There is plenty of discussion and
disagreement on whether it's better to teach children using whole language
programs or using methods which incorporate phonics and phonemic awareness
instructions. I think the debate on this is settled when the National Reading
Panel stated from their findings of reviewing over 1,900 studies that phonics
and phonemic awareness produces superior reading results than whole language
programs.
There is also some debate on
whether to teach your child only letter names, or only the sounds which the
letters represent. However, studies have also settled this debate by finding
that teaching a child alphabet names and sounds together produces the best
results. In fact, studies have found that there is little value in teaching
preschoolers letter forms or letter sounds separately. This was indicated by an
Australian study involving 76 preschool children. The children received 6 weeks
of training in either letter awareness, phonemic awareness, or control tasks,
and then received another 6 weeks of training in either letter-sound
correspondence or control tasks. The study found that training in either
phoneme or letter awareness assisted with learning of letter-sound
correspondences, and that the phonemically trained children group had an
advantage on recognition tasks. The study found that there is little value in
training in letter form or letter sounds separately. [1]
As you can see, there is
basically no point in only teaching either the names of the alphabet letters,
or the sounds the letters make. A child must learn the name and the sound of
the alphabet letter. When teaching your child the alphabet, instead of simply
teaching them the name of the alphabet such as "this is the letter
A", teach them like so:
"This is the letter A, and
the letter A makes the /A/ sound." (note: the /A/ denote the sound
"A" makes, and not its name). Similarly, you can teach your child the
other alphabet letters in this way including both name and sound of the letter.
This is the way I teach my children the alphabet letters. Other studies have
also determined that teaching the letter names and sounds together helped
children learn.
58 preschool children were
randomly assigned to receive instructions in letter names and sounds, letter
sound only, or numbers (control group). The results of this study are
consistent with past research results in that it found children receiving
letter name and sound instruction were most likely to learn the sounds of
letters whose names included cues to their sounds. [2]
To be able to effectively teach
your children the sounds of letters, you must first master the proper
pronunciation of the letters yourself. It is critical for you as a parent to be
able to first say the sounds of the letters correctly before teaching your children,
and this is much tougher than it may seem.
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