I just purchased this slides. There is no PPT with 200+ Words in it. All i see a 2 PDF in each folder(7 Folders) with each word saying how to read for $16. Can you pls include the CVC Blending slides 200+ Words that you have shown in this video 11:23 duration ua-cam.com/video/j3kTqDuORAg/v-deo.html
In my 9 years of teaching, I’ve yet to use anything from our so-called “professional development” trainings, which by the way go on for hours, but I hop on here and watch a 13 minute video with great takeaways that I can actually use with my class! Thank you so much!
I'm a first-year reading specialist and I am finding your videos incredibly helpful. Grad school didn't teach me everything I needed to know to do literacy intervention so I'm happy that I can watch your videos during my prep as personal PD. :)
Have you ever thought of having a student teacher? teaching college classes? doing a program at a teacher conference etc.? If not, you really should. You have enthusiasm, energy, excitement, positivity, etc.
Great information! My 6 year old is non-speaking but does a lot of different sounds and we are doing myofuntional therapy to help him connect his sounds together! Can't wait to try this with my kiddo 🙂
I do enjoy your videos. They are great refreshers. You are excellent. One challenge, what strategies can be used to move them into saying the word . Some have a difficult time moving on to saying the word. I hope you understand what I’m saying.
as a school administrator I also find most of teachers they lose of patience when the kids unable to do the blending, they start to have some temper and kids are so sensitive. End-up we got the compliant frm mum that their kid refuse to come and learn phonics again. I strongly recommend teacher to learn the skill frm this video before teaching. You never know who will be your student.
Thanks for this great video, I like how you recap the tips at the end. I teach first grade in a trilingual classroom with Russian and French being taught on alternate days so I'm looking for ways to help facilitate blending in English in easy and interesting ways. Just checked out your blending slides as well!
Also a great way to help,with blending is using onsets and rimes. This would be the next step after blending two sounds. I do this with my dyslexia students and it really helps them. A soon to be retired Dyslexia Specialist.
Hi there. I just bought the CVC blending slides and I saw that you mentioned successive blending in the CVC blending slides but I don’t see them. Is there a certain place to look or are they not ready yet? Thanks!
Such a helpful video! I teach EFL in Japan and have a student who just cannot blend non-continuous sounds with vowels (he can read all the examples given in that part of the video, but can't read CAT or BED). Do you have any tips on moving on from continuos sounds to not?
I'd suggest breaking down the words so he reads the first two sounds then adds on the last sound once he is comfortable reading the first part of the word e.g. slowly drag from c to a (in cat) -= ca then add t when he is comfortable with ca. It's going to be technique over speed so give him as much time as he needs to master this
I work with students ages 3-5 in a licensed childcare home. What do you recommend that I work on each day with them to have them ready for Kindergarten when they start?
For initial individual sound/letter recognition, I'd say yes, but because words don't usually have capitals throughout, perhaps use lowercase thereafter.
Great question! When students get to that point, they should learn about syllable types and syllable division to help them decode! Successive blending really helps with cvc words, words that end or begin with consonant blends, and digraphs!
@@SusanJonesTeaching yes..so I was dilemma on how to make the kids on spectrum understand this differentiation that when it comes to syllables they need to forget successive blending.
Do you know of a resource for kids that cannot blend two letter sounds. They know the letter sounds but can't seem to figure out how to blend them. Even after examples and modeling with the same two letter word, the student can't do it the following day.
I am a new reading tutor and have the same issue. I have twin kindergarten girls who are struggling with letter recognition and their phonemes. Can you point me to videos that can help?
Perhaps try engaging them in more (playful) activities that involve sound recognition e.g. cards that have the sound and an image so they can refer to the image as a reminder of the starting sound
Again, I'm sorry, but you are advising people incorrectly. Start off with 2 letter words by all means, but you are not teaching people how to blend properly and I'm finding it really irritating to listen to your advice. I have taught special needs children phonics via Reading Reflex. You are making 'u' and 'p' 2 completely separate sounds. Uh and puh won’t automatically blend to form 'up'. To properly teach blending, you need to stretch the sounds out and not finish each sound with a harsh ending or beginning in many cases. Uuuup. Separate your lips when saying p, not puh, but pu.
I’m sorry, but I've taught phonics at English primaries and your blending sounds are a little off. You are ending the first vowel sound too harshly. 'a' should have a soft ending, not a hard aH. In fact the the A should be sounded out more like aa and the T should also be soft. Otherwise children can’t learn to blend proper when reading. aH - Tuh, does not make at. It makes two unblendable sounds. aa - t = at.
This is a video that I found that my 5-year old enjoys to watch to help her stay familiar with her letter sounds: ua-cam.com/video/SA6zjBcxbj4/v-deo.html.
Anyone who wants a comprehensive and highly successful guide to teaching phonics should use Reading Reflex, a comprehensive book filled with exercises by Carmen and Geoffrey McGuinness. I have helped a number of struggling children learn to read using this system. Another great system, is a software system called Nessie, which has games, songs and rewards, as well as a scoring scheme and levels structure.
Happy Sunday! If you're looking for the blending slides mentioned in this video, you can find those here: bit.ly/SJTBlendingSlides
How to pronouncing long words
I just purchased this slides. There is no PPT with 200+ Words in it. All i see a 2 PDF in each folder(7 Folders) with each word saying how to read for $16. Can you pls include the CVC Blending slides 200+ Words that you have shown in this video 11:23 duration ua-cam.com/video/j3kTqDuORAg/v-deo.html
In my 9 years of teaching, I’ve yet to use anything from our so-called “professional development” trainings, which by the way go on for hours, but I hop on here and watch a 13 minute video with great takeaways that I can actually use with my class! Thank you so much!
Know exactly how you feel
I'm a first-year reading specialist and I am finding your videos incredibly helpful. Grad school didn't teach me everything I needed to know to do literacy intervention so I'm happy that I can watch your videos during my prep as personal PD. :)
Have you ever thought of having a student teacher? teaching college classes? doing a program at a teacher conference etc.? If not, you really should. You have enthusiasm, energy, excitement, positivity, etc.
Yes, absolutely! You are who I turn to for literacy/math support for my Grade 1 classroom -- thank you for all you do!
Susan you are A mmmmmaaazzzzing!!! I share all your videos with my K-2 teachers!!!!
Much appreciated. I work with a 10 year old intellectually disabled student.
Im lost often, always restarting.
Will use all these tips
Thank you for this, we are introducing blending this week and as first year teacher I am so glad I found your videos and resources! God bless you!
I’m not a teacher but I’ve been looking for helpful videos to try to teach my granddaughter to read. This is very helpful ❤
I am currently studying for my RICA exam and I found your video soooo helpful. I hope you keep posting some more of these… ❤
Thank you again for sharing your great tips and ideas. You’re awesome Susan!! I am sharing this with my primary team tomorrow 😀
These videos have been so great with homeschooling my kids! Thank you so much
Great information! My 6 year old is non-speaking but does a lot of different sounds and we are doing myofuntional therapy to help him connect his sounds together! Can't wait to try this with my kiddo 🙂
Try Reading Reflex.
I absolutely LOVE your concrete ideas!!!!!!! Thank you!!! You're the best!!!!!!
Beautiful, beautiful lesson....thank you...love...JA.🇯🇲
Excellent tips, thanks for sharing 👍.
Love this! Will definitely implement. Thank you for sharing!
I do enjoy your videos. They are great refreshers. You are excellent.
One challenge, what strategies can be used to move them into saying the word . Some have a difficult time moving on to saying the word. I hope you understand what I’m saying.
Wow I find this video as I am teaching blending to my daughter and it is useful thanku soo much ❤️❤️
as a school administrator I also find most of teachers they lose of patience when the kids unable to do the blending, they start to have some temper and kids are so sensitive. End-up we got the compliant frm mum that their kid refuse to come and learn phonics again. I strongly recommend teacher to learn the skill frm this video before teaching. You never know who will be your student.
Thanks for this great video, I like how you recap the tips at the end. I teach first grade in a trilingual classroom with Russian and French being taught on alternate days so I'm looking for ways to help facilitate blending in English in easy and interesting ways. Just checked out your blending slides as well!
Dang! I thought my job was hard!
Thankyou for the video, help us to understand how to execute blending sound effectively
Another awesome video! Thank you so much for your videos and helpful tools. 😊
Thank you for this information 🙏 😊 ☺️
Also a great way to help,with blending is using onsets and rimes. This would be the next step after blending two sounds. I do this with my dyslexia students and it really helps them. A soon to be retired Dyslexia Specialist.
Very useful tips. Thanks Susan!
Thank you soo much for this. Found it really helpful. You are amazing!
I love your videos. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for showing this important tips
This is super helpful
Such an informative video 👍🏽
Thanks Susan .
Good advice
True with my students lower group is facing problem . It may help this
Hi there. I just bought the CVC blending slides and I saw that you mentioned successive blending in the CVC blending slides but I don’t see them. Is there a certain place to look or are they not ready yet? Thanks!
How about c at = cat?
When will the literacy club be open again? I’m in desperate need to try and help my 7 year old get better at reading.
Amazing!
I teach esl kinder in Japan and this video was really helpful
Such a helpful video!
I teach EFL in Japan and have a student who just cannot blend non-continuous sounds with vowels (he can read all the examples given in that part of the video, but can't read CAT or BED). Do you have any tips on moving on from continuos sounds to not?
I'd suggest breaking down the words so he reads the first two sounds then adds on the last sound once he is comfortable reading the first part of the word e.g. slowly drag from c to a (in cat) -= ca then add t when he is comfortable with ca. It's going to be technique over speed so give him as much time as he needs to master this
Thank you!!
Can you explain some techniques to use with nonverbal students?
Hello Susan I'm from Pakistan. And I really wanted to know how you differentiate between /c/ and /k/ sounds. Thank you
Both are pronounced the same way but c is referred to as the curly c while k is referred to as the kicking k
I work with students ages 3-5 in a licensed childcare home. What do you recommend that I work on each day with them to have them ready for Kindergarten when they start?
ensure they're comfortable with their basic sounds - recognising, pronouncing as well as writing them
Great. Is it okay to teach sounds using upper case?
For initial individual sound/letter recognition, I'd say yes, but because words don't usually have capitals throughout, perhaps use lowercase thereafter.
interesting, your tips.
Nice
thank you
Please present a differentiation task for nursery kids
I love it
pretty good.
I don’t have a computer how do I access the blending slides
Where do I get the blending slides?
Doesn't kids get confused with successive blending when we have to teach them the open syllables with long vowel sounds like ta ble
Great question! When students get to that point, they should learn about syllable types and syllable division to help them decode! Successive blending really helps with cvc words, words that end or begin with consonant blends, and digraphs!
@@SusanJonesTeaching yes..so I was dilemma on how to make the kids on spectrum understand this differentiation that when it comes to syllables they need to forget successive blending.
Do you know of a resource for kids that cannot blend two letter sounds. They know the letter sounds but can't seem to figure out how to blend them. Even after examples and modeling with the same two letter word, the student can't do it the following day.
My little one likes to add Uhhh at the end of the first letter sound and drags it out.
Which ways do you see students learn decoding and blending best? by word family, successively, or sound by sound?
yse
Student 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 😃
I have a kindergartner that knows the letter names but cannot remember the letter sounds no matter how many times we go over it.
I am a new reading tutor and have the same issue. I have twin kindergarten girls who are struggling with letter recognition and their phonemes. Can you point me to videos that can help?
Perhaps try engaging them in more (playful) activities that involve sound recognition e.g. cards that have the sound and an image so they can refer to the image as a reminder of the starting sound
@@wobblerwe362 We do everyday. I believe there are underlying issues.
ahh....then it .might take slightly longer. Are the issues being addressed professionally?
My kid is 4.5 years.shebisbunable to blend even two words she told phonics of each word but couldn't blend them together
spend more time practising how to 'drag' the sounds together e.g. c-a-t = caaaaaat
Again, I'm sorry, but you are advising people incorrectly. Start off with 2 letter words by all means, but you are not teaching people how to blend properly and I'm finding it really irritating to listen to your advice. I have taught special needs children phonics via Reading Reflex. You are making 'u' and 'p' 2 completely separate sounds. Uh and puh won’t automatically blend to form 'up'. To properly teach blending, you need to stretch the sounds out and not finish each sound with a harsh ending or beginning in many cases. Uuuup. Separate your lips when saying p, not puh, but pu.
I’m sorry, but I've taught phonics at English primaries and your blending sounds are a little off. You are ending the first vowel sound too harshly. 'a' should have a soft ending, not a hard aH. In fact the the A should be sounded out more like aa and the T should also be soft. Otherwise children can’t learn to blend proper when reading. aH - Tuh, does not make at. It makes two unblendable sounds. aa - t = at.
This is a video that I found that my 5-year old enjoys to watch to help her stay familiar with her letter sounds: ua-cam.com/video/SA6zjBcxbj4/v-deo.html.
Nice joke thank you so much to realize me everything that how much I am greedy and and selfish
Anyone who wants a comprehensive and highly successful guide to teaching phonics should use Reading Reflex, a comprehensive book filled with exercises by Carmen and Geoffrey McGuinness. I have helped a number of struggling children learn to read using this system. Another great system, is a software system called Nessie, which has games, songs and rewards, as well as a scoring scheme and levels structure.