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Notes Graphic Notes for Learning About Phonemes
  1. Good phonological awareness leads to better reading and spelling.


  2. Phonological awareness is the ability to recognize and manipulate different sizes of sound units.


  3. A phoneme is the smallest speech sound that makes a difference in the meaning of a word.


  4. Phoneme awareness is the insight that every spoken word is composed of individual phonemes in a particular sequence.


  5. At least 25% of middle class first-graders, and larger numbers of diverse students, have difficulty grasping the concept of phonemic awareness without explicit, systematic instruction.


  6. By understanding that spoken words are made up of speech sounds, beginning readers can understand that letters represent these speech sounds.


  7. There are 24 consonant phonemes and 15 vowel phonemes in the English language.


  8. Practicing saying phonemes develops fluency in identifying and saying them.


  9. Learning the vowel phonemes takes practice.


  10. Consonants can be continuous sounds or stop-like sounds.


  11. Continuous sounds are easier to blend than stop-like sounds.


  12. Nasal sounds are produced when the nose vibrates as air is forced out of the nose rather than the mouth.


  13. Fricatives, or hisser sounds, force air through a small opening.


  14. Liquid sounds, such as the sounds of |l| and |r|, "flow" like a liquid.


  15. Affricates are scratching sounds, produced when air is forced between the teeth.


  16. Glide sounds require the tongue, lips, and teeth to glide into position to make the sounds.


  17. Consonants are either voiced (vocal folds vibrate) or unvoiced (vocal folds do not vibrate).


  18. Vowels are the "nucleus" of a syllable or word and are all continuous and voiced.


  19. Because vowel phonemes have few contrasting features to distinguish one from another, they are difficult for children.


  20. The vowel circle chart can be used to help readers with vowel phonemes.


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