Phonic Instruction should be in all grades through grade 6.. and when done 
effectively will impact students reading when continued through grade 8...  
Spelling skills are increased -- word recognition and retention, as well as 
meaning are impacted. Look through the research. You will find that phonics is 
most effective when taught with direct explicit instruction - and then taken 
right into the text. Lesson on the spelling and formation of the mouth and 
sound plus as students are older and you add affixes they directly change the 
meanings. Phonics instruction at upper grades also allows the student to look 
at language origins. But, again -- each time there is instruction in phonics 
you must locate it in the book or passage you are reading and discuss it in 
context. That's where students make the connection between reading is writing 
-- writing is for reading and spelling it appropriately makes it readable!

________________________________

From: [email protected] on behalf of 
Jeanne Garringer
Sent: Wed 7/22/2009 7:42 AM
To: mosaic listserve
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] phonics question- 2nd grade teacher




     I have taught for 18 years in either grades K or 1, and I am a real 
proponent of systematic phonics instruction as providing a solid base of 
letter/sound representation in terms of decoding strategies for beginning 
readers.  Please check out the National Reading Panel's findings in the area of 
phonics.  The information is very comprehensive and serves as a good rationale 
in terms of a research base for using phonics instruction in your classroom. 

    Now in terms of "do all children need phonics?", not all children learn in 
the same fashion, so I would advocate a more "balanced" approach that would 
include whole language instruction as well as the phonics.  Afterall, our goal 
is for every word to eventually become a sight word.  I have found that phonics 
instruction is most helpful for my students that struggle; however, my stronger 
readers use phonics skills to help them decode more difficult words and when 
they are writing to help them spell words. 

     The bottom line is "gaining meaning" from text.  Children can decode words 
all day, but if they aren't gaining meaning from what they are reading, then 
technically they are not "reading".  So yes, teach phonics along side other 
word recognition strategies in order to catch all readers.  Make sure that 
these skills are taught and applied in context of real text.  Decodeable 
phoncis texts tend to be boring and have very little plot.  The children don't 
like them either. 

     You say that you teach 2nd grade so if your K and 1st grade teachers have 
provided your children with a solid reading base (including phonics), you can 
focus more fully on teaching the comprehension strategies such as those 
outlined in Mosaic of Thought.  I hope this helps.

Jeanne Garringer





> Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 02:06:36 +0000
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [MOSAIC] phonics question- 2nd grade teacher
>
>
>
> Hello All,
>
>
>
> I'm a second grade school teacher.  Throughout my time in school the great 
> phonics controversy has popped up more than once.  I would like your take on 
> the topic.  Do all children need to be taught phonics?  Why or why not?
>
>
>
>
> Thank you,
>
> 2nd grade School Teacher
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>
> Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.
>

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