Rationale: One important step to becoming a good, strong reader is being able to learn that letters stand for phonemes and spellings map out the phonemes in spoken words. However, before children can match letters to phonemes, they have to be able to recognize the phonemes. In this lesson children will be identifying i=/i/. They will learn to recognize /i/ in spoken words and practice finding /i/ in written words.
Materials: Primary paper and pencil; poster with ãI itch and itch six days a week, a doctor I will meet!ä; drawing paper and crayons; book: Liz is Six; teacher has a list of words he or she will use during the lesson: Liz, cat, miss, stop, pig, dog, mitt, mat, did, dad, six, her.
Procedures:
1. Introduce the lesson by explaining how
our written language is in a secret code and that we are going to try to
understand some of that code today. It is important that we learn
what letters stand for, the sounds they make, and which mouth moves make
those particular sounds. Today, we are going to work on the mouth
move /i/. It may be hard, at first, to hear the /i/ in words, but
as you practice /i/, you will be able to find it in many words.
2. Ask students: ãHave you
ever had your head itch?ä Well, the beginning sound of itch
is /i/. Letâs all scratch our heads and say, ã/i/, /i/,
/i/ä as we scratch our heads back and forth.
3. We are now going to try a rime on this
poster. The rime is ãI itch and itch six days a week, a doctor
I will meet!ä Now, I want us all to say it together three times.
Now, say it again and this time really stretch out the /i/ sound.
ãI iiiitch and iiiitch siiiix days a week, a doctor I wiiiill meet!ä
4. (Have students take out their primary
paper and pencil.) We are now going to write the letter /i/.
I will show you on the board how to make the letter i. First, we start
at the fence, go down to the sidewalk making a straight line, and then
we put a dot in between the fence and the sky (the teacher models each
instruction). I want each of you to practice writing i. I am
going to come around and look at your iâs. I want you to make
five of them across your paper.
5. Ask students the following questions.
Call on different students and allow them time to explain how they got
their answer. Do you hear /i/ in Liz or cat? Do you hear /i/
in miss or stop? Do you hear /i/ in pig or dog? Do you hear
/i/ in mat or mitt? Do you hear /i/ in did or dog? Do you hear
/i/ in six or her? Now, I want you to listen to some words I am going
to say. If you hear /i/, I want you to say /i/. If you do not
hear /i/, I want you to say no. (Give words one by one) I, itch,
and, itch, six, days, a, week, a, doctor, I, will, have, to, meet.
6. I will now read a story about a little
girl who turns six. I want you to listen very carefully for the /i/
sound. When you hear /i/, I want you to scratch your head.
List the words the students choose on the board. Book: Liz
is Six.
7. For assessment, have the students draw
a picture of Liz playing with a pig (in the book) and have them write a
message about their picture using invented spelling. The children
should put at least one word in their spelling that has the /i/ sound.
When they are finished with their invented spelling, have each child come
to you one at a time and explain to you what their picture is and what
their story says. Ask the child if he or she has a word in the story
he or she has written that has the /i/ sound.
Reference: Eldredge, Lloyd J. Developing Phonemic Awareness. Teaching Decoding in Holistic Classrooms. Prentice Hall, 1995 (pages 54-57).
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