Over the past decade, the phonics policy in England has reshaped how reading is taught in primary schools. Systematic synthetic phonics is now the central approach used in early literacy instruction, and the Year 1 Phonics Screening Check has become a familiar feature of the education landscape. At the same time, discussion about phonics policy … Continue reading A New Resource: Understanding the Phonics Policy in England
orthographic mapping
Why Some Children Get Stuck After Phonics – Understanding Orthographic Mapping and the Self-Teaching Phase
Thousands of children can sound out words but still can’t read fluently. They can decode the letters on a page yet struggle to recognise words automatically or understand them easily. This article explores what happens after phonics – the stage where real reading begins – and why understanding orthographic mapping and the self-teaching phase is … Continue reading Why Some Children Get Stuck After Phonics – Understanding Orthographic Mapping and the Self-Teaching Phase
From Sound to Story: How Children Really Learn to Read – and Why So Many Phonics Programmes Misfire
Children learn to read by linking the sounds they already know to the symbols on a page. Yet most phonics programmes start from the wrong end – from print instead of speech – forcing children to memorise the alphabetic code backwards. Here’s what really happens inside the reading brain, and how to teach in a … Continue reading From Sound to Story: How Children Really Learn to Read – and Why So Many Phonics Programmes Misfire
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