PHONICS
Phonics
Phonics instruction teaches children the relationships between the letters (graphemes) of written language and the individual sounds (phonemes) of spoken language.
Assessment
In LCNA interventions, individual assessments reveal
- upper and lower case letters the child can identify by naming the letter, giving the letter sound, or naming a word beginning with the letter or sound.
- phonemes the child can connect to letters.
- specific phonemes the child can represent with letters in writing.
- the degree to which children use letter-sound knowledge and word patterns to read and write words.
- the degree to which the child can locate words in a text after hearing them.
- the child’s ability to use letter-sound knowledge while reading continuous text.
Examples of Instructional Procedures
- Using magnetic letters, children learn quick and flexible recognition of letters; they also learn how to take words apart using phonological and orthographic knowledge.
- When reading continuous text, children learn to take words apart ‘on the run.’
- In writing, children learn to hear the sounds in words and represent them with letters or letter clusters.
- Children work with letters and related sounds (e.g., making personalized alphabet books to link sounds and letters).
- Reassembling a cut-up sentence requires children to think about sounds in words as they place the words in order; the teacher segments words to focus on what a child needs to learn next.
- During oral reading of texts, children learn to use phonological and orthographic information to monitor their reading and to decode unfamiliar words; they learn to ‘take words apart’ on the run while reading texts.
Clay, M. M. (2002). An observation survey of early literacy achievement. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

“Recent research has made it clear that we must pay attention to four aspects of how the sounds of English are represented in print:
- Children have to learn to hear the sounds buried within words, and this is not an easy task.
- Children have to learn to visually discriminate the symbols we use in print, and this is a large set of symbols.
- Children have to learn to link single symbols and clusters of symbols with the sounds they represent.
- Children have to learn that there are many alternatives and exceptions in our system of putting sounds into print.”
— Clay, 2002, p. 112