Auditory Discrimination and Sound Errors.

Jj is for Jottings 155.  Auditory Discrimination and Sound Errors.

When children make speech sound errors, we need to consider auditory discrimination and speech sound errors.  A child needs to be able to discriminate the difference between the correct sound and what they are saying instead.  Otherwise they don’t have much chance of replacing the error sound with the correct (target) sound. Continue reading

Hard and Soft ‘C’ and ‘G’.

Jj is for Jottings 128.  Hard and Soft ‘C’ and ‘G’.

The great thing about spelling rules – such as the bossy ‘e’ rule – is that, once you learn a particular rule, you can read (and hopefully spell) many different words.  In other words, rules give you lots of bang for your buck.  When dealing with hard and soft ‘c’ and ‘g’, we teach the hard sound first as part of basic sound-letter links, and introduce the soft sounds a little later. Continue reading

Sequencing is Important.

 

Jj is for Jottings 127.  Sequencing is Important.

We probably don’t think about it very much, but sequencing is important in many aspects of our lives.  A definition of “sequence” is: a set of related events, movements, or items that follow each other in a particular order.  (This is the definition for the noun.  It is also a verb, as in “I’m going to sequence the tracks on my playlist.”)

Photos of alpacas in a paddock, with the caption: Sequencing is important - but is it important in this picture?

Sequencing is important – but is it important in this picture?

Many times, if things are not in sequence, they don’t make any sense.  Although the playlist referred to above has a sequence, the sequence isn’t vital; it’s just a preference.  But if you put on your shoes first and then your socks… Continue reading

The Bossy ‘E’.

Jj is for Jottings 126.  The Bossy ‘E’.

The bossy ‘e’ (sometimes called the magic ‘e’) appears so often in written language that it is worth revisiting in its own right.  It is a classic case of “Give a man a fish and you will feed him for a day.  Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.” Once you know the rule, you can unlock thousands of words. Continue reading

Nonsense Words.

Jj is for Jottings 125.  Nonsense Words.

Nonsense words are letter sequences which follow regular phonetic rules and are pronounceable, but which have no meaning.  Examples are ‘bof’, ‘zim’, ‘chog’.  They can also be called nonwords or pseudowords.  There are stages in children’s development where nonsense words may play a part.  These are: babbling, early reading, rhyming, and if they require assistance for speech sound development (speech therapy).   All children babble, but children may not encounter nonsense words when learning to read or to rhyme.  And many will not need speech therapy, or have access to it if they do.

Photo of dog with a fan behind him, with the caption: Atticus is a FAN of nonsense words.

Atticus is a FAN of nonsense words.

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