Running Head: PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM 1
Phonics Instruction in the Primary Classroom
Maggie J. Young
CADRE—Capstone
University of Nebraska-Omaha
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
For decades researchers have recognized the importance of
strong reading skills and the primary grades as a critical time to
develop the skills necessary to read fluently. Everyone agrees on the
importance of teaching reading but there is no universally agreed upon
method for teaching this critical skill. In the late 1990’s, the National
Reading Panel (NRP) recognized five areas of an effective reading
program: phonemic awareness, phonics, reading fluency, vocabulary,
and reading comprehension (Rightmyer, McIntyre, & Petrosko, 2006;
Zugel, 2012). This provides educators with the “ingredients” they need
to teach reading but there is no designated best practice “recipe” for
how to effectively teach these five areas of reading instruction.
While there is not one best instructional practice for teaching
reading, most researchers lean one of two ways, code-based or
meaning-based approach to reading. The code-based approach
includes explicit phonics instruction with a focus on the alphabetic
code to identify words when reading and uses decodable texts. The
meaning-based approach focuses on reading for meaning and uses
whole-text/leveled texts (Murray, Munger & Hiebert, 2014). There are
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
many different code-based programs and meaning-based programs
available. This study takes a look at a few specific programs but
focuses mainly on the differences and benefits of code-based and
meaning-based instruction, the instructional strategies that support
these programs, and the effects these programs have on students.
Importance of Phonics Instruction
While research agrees that all five areas of the NRP five areas of
an effective reading program (phonemic awareness, phonics, reading
fluency, vocabulary, and reading comprehension) are equally
important, phonemic awareness and phonics are the first steps to
become a fluent reader and are often the skills missing in struggling
readers. As stated by Knoepke, Rickter, Isberner, Naumann, and Neeb,
“to become skillful readers, children have to acquire the ability to
translate printed words letter by letter into phonemic representations
and the ability to recognize the written word forms holistically” (2014.)
Decoding does not come naturally to most children, it takes careful
instruction from teachers and dedicated effort from students to be
able to decode independently (O’Connor, 2014). The English language is
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
made up of symbols (letters) representing speech sounds (phonemes)
so reading it requires students to “break the code” of letters to
pronounce words (Mesmer et al., 2014). Breaking the code is an
integral part of reading so phonics and decoding instruction is critical
for students learning to read.
In order to decode words, students need to be able to generate a
sound for each letter in the word, blend speech sounds together, and
segment the pronunciation they generate back to check their
decoding. Older struggling readers often attend to the first letter of
the word and guess the word based on what makes sense in the story.
This is a hard habit to break so it is important to build a strong
foundational knowledge of letter sounds and how to blend them early
on so that students rely on their decoding skills and attend to every
letter in the word. This results in increases accuracy and fluency when
reading (Rightmyer et al. 2006). Phonemic awareness is an important
prerequisite to decoding skills so this is where most phonics programs
begin their instruction.
Phonics Models
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
Direct code instruction includes “explicit, isolated phonics
instruction taught separately from reading practice” (Rightmyer et al.,
2006). According to a research study done by Rightmyer et al.,
“children in the direct code classroom made better gains in word
recognition measures while those in the whole language classroom
had more positive attitudes towards reading” (2006). In an interview
with Mary Fripp, Bellevue Public Schools reading specialist of 9 years
and Nebraska Dyslexia Association board member, Fripp revealed great
successes she has had with Reading Horizons, a code-based program
for reading instruction (personal communication, December 18, 2017).
Reading Horizons teaches Five Phonetic Skills to help students
recognize short and long vowel patterns in words and syllables and
uses these five skills as a base for all coding instruction. Research
done by John Mendes found that students who received Reading
Horizons instruction scored significantly higher on all standardized
tests than students who did not receive Reading Horizons instruction.
He also found that teachers and students showed positive attitudes
about Reading Horizons use (2014).
Research done by Rightmyer et al. examined 6 different models of
supplemental reading curriculum. The study found no significant
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
differences between the 6 different models, however, they did find that
students using one of the models of systematic phonics instruction
showed significantly higher growth than those students given no
systematic phonics instruction (2006). Meaning it does not matter
which model of phonics instruction educators choose to use, just that
they use some form of supplemental direct phonics instruction. While
an explicit, direct phonics instruction method has proven essential, it
is also important to have a balanced model that includes phonics,
fluency, and comprehension.
Meaning-based programs often led to higher levels of
comprehension in subsequent grades due to the reading focus being
on meaning and words that make sense and less on the individual
phonemes that make up the words. Because both code-based and
meaning-based programs have benefits, research often suggests using
a combination of both methods for instruction. Murray et al. suggests
“if leveled texts are used during classroom instruction and students
continue to struggle, it may help to add decodable texts matched to
phonics lessons” (2014). This is exactly what reading specialist Fripp
does with Reading Horizons. Fripp uses Reading Horizons to
supplement Fountas and Pinnell curriculum, a meaning-based, leveled
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
text reading program (personal communication, December 18, 2017).
Fripp’s experience with these two programs supports research by
Murry et al. and Mesmer, Mesmer, and Jones, that a combination of
code-based and meaning-based programs can be the most beneficial
instructional route for struggling readers (2014; 2014).
Strategies for Teaching Phonics
There are many instructional strategies that are used in and out
of the aforementioned programs to help students practice phonics
skills. One task that proves extra difficult for struggling readings is
blending sounds together. Many students can say all of the sounds in a
word but have trouble holding all of the word’s sounds in their memory
long enough to blend them together. One strategy for practicing this
skill is called “Stretching Sounds Together without Pausing between
Sounds.” As the title says, you show children how to hold a sound then
guide them to the say the sounds in a word without stopping between
the sounds. This automatically makes the sounds blend together and is
easier for students to hear the word the sounds make together
(O’Connor, 2014). Another strategy for blending is “Take Off the
Ending.” In this strategy students are asked to cover the final
consonant, say the first two sounds, blend the sounds together twice,
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
and then add the ending. The last strategy for blending is “Start with
the Vowel.” For some students, it feels more natural to start with their
mouth open in a vowel sound and then closing down to make the
consonant sound. It’s as if you can’t help but blend the sounds
together if you do it this way. The student covers the initial consonant,
says the vowel and the consonant sounds, blends them twice, and then
adds the beginning sound. While all of these blending strategies have
been proven to be effective, it is important that you choose one and
consistently use it. Students need to know exactly what to do when
they come to an unknown word and if they are taught multiple blending
strategies it can be confusing and unclear what to when they get to an
unknown word.
Another strategy to support decoding skills in struggling readers
is called “Examining Minimal Pairs.” In this strategy students make a
word and then are asked to change just one letter in the word to make
a new word (with the word pet students could be asked to change the
e to an o, then they are asked which new word they made). O’Connor
found that Minimal Pairs can help students understand that changing
just one sound changes the meaning of the word and the pronunciation
of the word (2014). This helps students to attend to all letters in the
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
word and decreases guessing on unknown words. Another strategy
Mesmer et al. suggests using to practice this skill of word building is
“Vowel Stars.” In this activity students get a word frame with only the
vowel left out, for example, p__t, and then they replace the blank in the
center with different vowel sounds, pronounce the word, and then
write it. In this case students are only changing the vowel sound to
make the new word. This places the focus on the vowel which is often
where students get tripped up (2014.)
Closure
Research on best practice in reading instruction agrees with the
National Reading Panel’s (NRP) five areas of an effective reading
program: phonemic awareness, phonics, reading fluency, vocabulary,
and reading comprehension. Basal reading programs are based around
these five areas and the basal instruction is enough for most students.
But for struggling readers, additional instruction is required. This
usually starts in the form of phonemic awareness and phonics
instruction as these are the first steps to becoming a fluent reader and
they serve as building blocks for the other three NRP areas (fluency,
vocabulary, and comprehension). Supplemental phonics instruction is
usually either code-based instruction or meaning-based instruction but
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
research has found that a combination of the two is most effective.
Within these phonics programs are many instructional strategies for
teaching key phonemic awareness and phonics skills. These skills
include: producing letter sounds, blending letter sounds, and word
building. A combination of basal instruction, phonics programs, and
instructional strategies for teaching phonics can help catch struggling
readers up in the primary grades while keeping attitudes about reading
positive and student effort substantial.
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM
Mesmer, H., Mesmer, E., & Jones, J. (2014). Reading intervention in the
primary grades : A common-sense guide to rTI(The essential library of
preK-2 literacy). New York: Guilford Press.
Murray, M., Munger, K., & Hiebert, E. (2014). An analysis of two reading
intervention programs: How do the words, texts, and programs
compare? Elementary School Journal, 114(4), 479-500.
O'Connor, R. (2014). Teaching word recognition : Effective strategies
for students with learning difficulties(2nd ed. ed., What works for
special-Needs learners). New York: Guilford Publications.
Rightmyer, E., McIntyre, E., & Petrosko, J. (2006). Instruction,
development, and achievement of struggling primary grade
readers. Reading Research and Instruction, 45(3), 209-241.
Slavin, R., Lake, C., Chambers, B., Cheung, A., & Davis, S. (2009).
Effective reading programs for the elementary grades: A best-Evidence
synthesis. Review of Educational Research, 79(4), 1391-1466.
Walpole, S., & McKenna, M. (2007). Differentiated reading instruction :
Strategies for the primary grades. New York: Guilford Press.
Zugel, K. (2012). Success for students with diverse reading abilities
through the use of supplemental reading curriculum. Tesol Quarterly: A
Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of
Standard English As a Second Dialect,46(1), 199-209.
PHONICS INSTRUCTION IN THE PRIMARY CLASSROOM