Phonemic Awareness Fun
Phonics Foundations
Phonological Awareness
Syllable Sleuth
Sound It Out!
100

What is a phoneme?

The smallest part of spoken language that makes a difference in the meaning of words.

100

What is the alphabetic principle?

The alphabetic principle is the understanding that there is a predictable relationship between phonemes and graphemes.

100

What is phonological awareness?

A term to describe skills such as identifying and manipulating larger parts of spoken language, such as words, syllables, and onsets and rimes—as well as phonemes. It also encompasses awareness of other aspects of sound, such as rhyming, alliteration, and intonation. 

100

These types of syllables end with a consonant and often include a short vowel sound, like "cat."

 

What is a closed syllable?

100

This many phonemes are in the word "though."

There are two (/th/ and /o/)

200

What is the number of phonemes in English?

44

200

What must every syllable in a word include?

A vowel sound

200

Clapping your hands for each beat in a word helps develop awareness of these parts of a word.

What are syllables?

200

What kind of syllable with a long vowel sound that ends in a vowel, such as "go," is called this type of syllable.

An open syllable ends with a long vowel sound.

200

This term describes two vowels that work together to make a single sound, as in "team" or "boat."

vowel digraph

300

Changing the /m/ in "man" to /r/ to make "ran" is an example of this skill.

What is phoneme substitution?

300

Homophones and Homonyms are the same thing.

No, homophones and homonyms are not the same thing. While both involve words that sound alike, they differ in spelling and definition.

300

This type of phonological skill involves recognizing the smallest unit of sound in a word.

What is phonemic awareness?

300

Is the word "boiling" a vowel digraph or vowel diphthong?

It is a diphthong because the "oi" make a unique sound from /o/ or /i/.

300

The /str/ in "street" is an example of this type of consonant combination.

Consonant Blend

400

Removing the /s/ from "star" to create "tar" demonstrates this advanced phonemic awareness skill.

What is phoneme deletion?

400

What is synthetic phonics?

An approach to phonics instruction where children learn how to convert letters or letter combinations into sounds, and then how to blend the sounds together to form recognizable words.

400

Blending phonemes to make words, segmenting words into phonemes, deleting phonemes from words, adding phonemes to words, or substituting one phoneme for another to make a new word

What is phoneme manipulation?

400

The syllable type in the word 'table' is an example of this type.
 

What is consonant-le (or final stable syllable)?

400

What is the name of understanding root words and word parts?

Morphological knowledge

500

Identifying the sound /d/ in the word "dog" demonstrates this phonemic awareness skill.
 

What is initial sound isolation?

500

In what order do we teach phonics skills on the phonics continuum?

consonants, vowels, cvc words, consonant digraphs/consonant blends, silent e and vowel digraphs, complex vowels (irregular), trigraphs and multisyllabic words.

500

In the word "night," these two sounds make up the onset and the rime.

What are /n/ (onset) and /ight/ (rime)?

500

What are the 6 types of syllables?

Closed, Open, Silent-E (Vowel-Consonant-e), Vowel Team (Vowel Digraph/Diphthong), R-Controlled Syllable and Consonant-le (Final Stable Syllable)

500

What are the 5 steps to decode a multisyllabic word?

Find affix/suffix

find vowels

divide syllables

decode/segment the syllables 

try blending the word