Vowels

Let's Talk About the Sequence of Phonics Skills - this might be surprising :)

“I like that I have a sequence (of phonics skills).
I don’t have to wonder about it anymore.”

This came in response to my last post which shared the importance of ensuring that we don’t have any phonics “floaters” in our “sea of floating isolated facts”. (If you missed that post, here it is.)

As I began writing Phonetic Reading with Silent Elephant “e”™, it brought into play my experience teaching in the classroom. During those many years, I had the opportunity to teach with many reading programs.

Here’s an interesting fact: they didn’t all have the exact same sequence of phonics skills. 😊

Yes, of course, they all began with the simplest concepts, probably short vowels, but after that they would shift around somewhat. Often, they would mix in concepts that were not yet taught. As you can imagine, throwing in words with concepts not yet learned is confusing to ALL kids, but to those young ones, or multi-lingual ones, or dyslexic ones or ones with other learning differences, it wasn’t just confusing, it was a BIG problem. In their confusion, they would begin to have phonics “floaters” moving into their “sea of floating isolated facts”. As I shared in the last email, we can’t have phonics “floaters” -  it's a BIG problem.

Therefore, it was important to me as I began writing Silent Elephant “e”™, to know how our brains learn most effectively, to know my learners, and to know how those with learning differences process learning.

It was important to me to have a sequence for learning phonics skills for ALL children:

  •  a sequence that was all inclusive

  •  a sequence that was easy for every learner to understand and process

  • a sequence that was systematic, progressive, and logical for every learner.

Understanding how children, ALL children, learn helped me develop Silent Elephant “e”™’s phonics sequence which is a little different.

Of course, it must begin with simple, short vowels, but immediately it takes a turn. No, the turn isn’t to include something they haven’t learned yet, but instead to teach the vowels in a different order than every other reading program.

When you explore Silent Elephant “e”™,  you will immediately notice that the short vowels are presented differently. They’re not in our old a, e, i, o, u order.
 
Instead, they’re in an order that is the most effective order for ALL children to learn to read, write and spell short vowel words. It’s an order that produces the least amount of possible confusion, even for children who are new to learning English or have learning differences.

This order has proven very successful. Every child who has experienced beginning reading, writing and spelling with Silent Elephant “e”™ has started with this solid foundation that set their journey on stable footing and they never looked back whether they were new to English, had learning differences or not!

Now, add to this that Silent Elephant “e”™ teaches them the way they love to learn and learn best with complete engagement in every step of learning. No wonder every single Silent Elephant “e”™ child has been successful. And some of these kiddos, as I have shared, were never supposed to ever learn to read!

Speaking of celebrating! Two more of my students, both high school students, are no longer in special education. They are confident, happy and eager for school every day. OH, yes, they’re both profoundly dyslexic.

Like us on Facebook, Silent Elephant “e”, LLC Group. Let’s get our Facebook group up and active and answering questions you may have about teaching reading, writing and spelling and Phonetic Reading with Silent Elephant “e”™.

Contact us at silentelephante@gmail.com or nina.silentelephante@gmail.com

Once Learned Through Experience, It's Theirs Forever

When Learning is Fun, It’s Easy and It Stays!


The eyes of the young boy hunched over his last worksheet in Part 14 moved effortlessly word to word. His hand stretched into the colored pencils spread in front of him with a smooth motion as he chose the next color he needed to mark the decoding in the next word.
 
Shaun quickly and confidently used different colors and different symbols to mark prefixes, suffixes, root words, consonant digraphs, consonant blends, consonant twins, the sounds of “c’s” and “g’s”, vowel diacritical markings, syllable division and accent marks.
 
He did all of this from memory.
 
By repetitively using colors to mark prefixes, suffixes, root words, consonant digraphs, consonant blends, consonant twins, the sounds of “c’s” and “g’s”, vowel diacritical markings, syllable division and accent marks, Shaun easily put the “puzzle pieces” in a word together to find meaning.
 

 

Example of a Level 3 worksheet with phonetic markings for decoding.


The Silent Elephant “e”™ colors and phonetic markings Shaun chose to indicate how to decode words are not random markings taught in isolation.
 
Instead, the phonetic markings and the colors used to mark them are the logical outcome of the fun, multi-sensory activities that Shaun experienced as he learned each phonetic concept. More importantly, he had fun learning the concept and the markings.
 
These activities included acting, puppetry, cooking, games, singing and many other multi-sensory activities that set the phonetic concepts firmly in multiple parts of Shaun's brain.
 
In Silent Elephant “e”™, every phonetic concept is introduced with a multi-sensory activity.
 
As he finished his worksheet, he began to glow with pride and as he raised his head, his bright smile beamed at me. He was proud.
 
Shaun was so calm, so in control, so meticulous and so very pleased with himself as he flew through that worksheet marking word after word, reading each sentence effortlessly with expression and comprehending completely.
 
He knew that he knew how to decode and read every word on that page, and he knew that he comprehended everything he read.
 
He also knew that just two years before, he wasn’t even able to read at a first-grade level and now here he was reading at a 9th grade level, 4 years ahead of his grade level.
 
He knew school was easier now and getting easier all the time.
 
He also knew that he is profoundly dyslexic and that learning to be calm and focused had been hard. He knew that learning to read, write and spell through the fun activities in Silent Elephant “e”™ had not only helped him find calm in learning to read, but helped him understand what he hadn’t been able to understand before. 
 
Looking up from his worksheet, his bright smile told me the truth of all of this.
 

 

Example of a Level 2 works showing phonetic markings for decoding.
Each marking takes their mind back to the activity they experienced to learn that concept.


Let’s ask those questions that come to mind, WHY was Shaun able to make such fast progress with Silent Elephant “e”™? WHY was this profoundly dyslexic young boy able to move from primer to 9th grade in two years?
 
It’s because Silent Elephant “e”™ is experiential, it’s multi-sensory, it’s fun.

It teaches the whole child through fun activities that activates all parts of their brain through their senses, thus “wiring” their brain with memories of these fun activities and with the knowledge learned during them to decode unfamiliar words. It teaches them the way they learn best – through fun experiences.

Long after he completes Silent Elephant “e”™, Shaun’s brain will retrieve memories of the fun activity he experienced while learning the phonetic markings associated with each learned phonetic concept. His brain will retrieve this knowledge when he needs to decode any unfamiliar word.

Shaun’s anxiety is gone; he will always feel confident that he has the skills to support him as he moves into high school, college and adulthood.
 
When children learn to read, write and spell experientially through fun, meaningful, multi-sensory activities, learning WILL be FUN AND FAST and it WILL STAY with them.

Contact us here or call us at:

Linda Katherine Smith-Jones   208-859-4406       or Nina Henson   208-860-3125

“Old McDonald” Teaches the Short Vowels

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“Old McDonald” Teaches the Short Vowels 

How fast can you name the five main vowels? 1 or 2 seconds? Terrific! 

How fast can you say the short vowel sounds? 1 or 2 seconds? Fabulous!

 Oh? What are you saying? You and your students cannot say the short vowel sounds that fast? Can you say them that fast backwards? In a mixed-up order?

 Do you have some practicing to do?

 Readers need instant sight/sound recognition of short vowel sounds!

 Sylvia Griffin, a reading specialist that I taught with years ago, taught my class her version of “Old McDonald”. Instead of singing “e, i, e, i, o”, we sang the short vowel sounds /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/. The animals at the farm occur in this order: cat, hen, pig, dog, and duck to use for singing the verses “with an /a/, /a/ here and an /a/, /a/ there, here an /a/, there an /a/, everywhere an /a/, /a/” for the cat; /e/, /e/ for the hen; /i/, /i/ for the pig; /o/, /o/ for the dog, and /u/, /u/ for the duck. It was an instant hit.

 Singing the vowel sounds takes this learning into different parts of the brain and makes it easier to retrieve as their reading skills progress. Plus, it makes learning them fun.

Old McDonald had a farm, /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/.
And on this farm he had a cat, /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/.
With an /a/, /a/ here and an /a/, /a/ there,
Here an /a/, there an /a/, everywhere an /a/, /a/.

Old McDonald had a farm, /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/.

The Kindergartners to high school children I teach have all enjoyed singing “Old McDonald” except one.  She did not know 4 of the short vowel sounds when she began tutoring with me and she really didn’t want to sing “Old McDonald” more than one tutoring session. She said, “I’ll know all of my short vowels by the next time I come back.” 

Her incentive to not have to sing “Old McDonald” with me at 15 years old helped her learn the short vowels by her next tutoring lesson! I have always wondered if she sang it to herself at home to learn them because she did know them by her next session. 😊

ALL my other children and teens have had FUN SINGING with me. There are LOT of SMILES and giggles as we sing and draw animals to go along with our song.

 It’s fun. It works!

If you have further questions about short vowels or why singing and drawing them works for students with learning differences, feel free to contact us.

Linda Katherine Smith-Jones                            Nina Henson