About Course
Phonics
Phonics is a method of teaching reading and writing by helping learners understand the relationship between letters and sounds. It teaches children how letters represent spoken sounds and how these sounds combine to form words.
Phonics is one of the foundational components of early literacy instruction because it helps learners decode unfamiliar words, improve pronunciation, and develop reading fluency.
Main Goals of Phonics
Phonics instruction helps learners:
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Recognize letter sounds
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Blend sounds into words
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Read unfamiliar words
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Improve spelling
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Develop reading confidence
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Strengthen listening and speaking skills
Key Phonics Skills
Phonics includes several important skills:
Letter-Sound Recognition
Understanding which sound belongs to each letter.
Blending
Combining sounds to read words.
Example:
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/c/ /a/ /t/ → cat
Segmenting
Breaking words into individual sounds.
Example:
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dog → /d/ /o/ /g/
Decoding
Reading words by sounding them out.
Encoding
Spelling words using sounds.
Letter Sound Identification
Letter sound identification is the ability to recognize the sound associated with each letter of the alphabet.
Instead of only naming letters, learners connect letters to their spoken sounds.
For example:
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Letter B makes the /b/ sound
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Letter M makes the /m/ sound
This skill is essential because reading depends on recognizing sounds quickly and accurately.
Importance of Letter Sound Identification
It helps learners:
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Read words correctly
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Build phonemic awareness
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Improve spelling
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Decode new vocabulary
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Increase reading fluency
Teaching Methods
Teachers may use:
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Flashcards
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Songs and chants
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Picture association
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Repetition drills
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Matching games
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Alphabet charts
Example:
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A → apple → /a/
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S → sun → /s/
Common Learning Sequence
Children usually learn:
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Letter names
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Letter sounds
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Sound blending
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Word reading
A–Z Sounds
A–Z sounds refer to the sounds made by each letter of the English alphabet.
The English alphabet has:
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26 letters
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21 consonants
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5 vowels
Each letter has one or more sounds.
Alphabet Letter Sounds
Vowels
A a
Common sound:
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/a/ as in apple
E e
Common sound:
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/e/ as in egg
I i
Common sound:
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/i/ as in igloo
O o
Common sound:
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/o/ as in octopus
U u
Common sound:
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/u/ as in umbrella
Consonants
B b
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/b/ as in ball
C c
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/k/ as in cat
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/s/ as in city
D d
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/d/ as in dog
F f
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/f/ as in fish
G g
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/g/ as in goat
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/j/ as in giraffe
H h
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/h/ as in hat
J j
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/j/ as in jam
K k
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/k/ as in kite
L l
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/l/ as in lion
M m
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/m/ as in moon
N n
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/n/ as in nest
P p
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/p/ as in pen
Q q
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/kw/ as in queen
R r
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/r/ as in rabbit
S s
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/s/ as in sun
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/z/ as in rose
T t
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/t/ as in tiger
V v
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/v/ as in van
W w
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/w/ as in watch
X x
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/ks/ as in box
Y y
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/y/ as in yellow
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Sometimes acts as a vowel
Z z
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/z/ as in zebra
Alphabets
The alphabet is a set of letters used to write a language. The English alphabet contains 26 letters arranged in a fixed order from A to Z.
Uppercase and Lowercase Letters
Each letter has:
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An uppercase (capital) form
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A lowercase (small) form
Examples:
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A a
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B b
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C c
Categories of Letters
Vowels
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A
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E
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I
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O
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U
Consonants
All other letters besides vowels.
Importance of Learning the Alphabet
Alphabet knowledge helps learners:
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Recognize letters
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Learn sounds
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Read words
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Write sentences
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Develop spelling skills
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Build vocabulary
Alphabet mastery is the first step toward reading and writing.
Alphabet Teaching Strategies
Alphabet Songs
Songs help learners remember letter order and sounds.
Tracing Activities
Children practice writing letters.
Picture Matching
Matching letters with pictures:
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B → ball
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D → dog
Letter Hunts
Finding letters in books or classrooms.
Sound Practice
Repeating sounds aloud for pronunciation practice.
Relationship Between These Topics
These concepts are closely connected:
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Learners first recognize alphabets.
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They learn the sounds of each letter (A–Z sounds).
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They practice letter sound identification.
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They apply phonics skills to read words.
Example:
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Letter: C
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Sound: /k/
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Word: cat
This process builds strong early reading and language skills.
Learning Outcomes
By studying phonics, letter sound identification, A–Z sounds, and alphabets, learners should be able to:
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Recognize all alphabet letters
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Identify uppercase and lowercase forms
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Produce correct letter sounds
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Match sounds to letters
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Blend sounds into words
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Read simple words independently
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Improve spelling and pronunciation
Sample Classroom Activities
Alphabet Recitation
Students say letters A–Z aloud.
Sound Matching
Match letters to pictures with the same beginning sound.
Phonics Drills
Practice repeating sounds:
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/b/, /m/, /s/
Letter Tracing
Writing uppercase and lowercase letters.
Beginning Sound Game
Identify first sounds in words:
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Dog → /d/
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Sun → /s/
Alphabet Ordering
Arrange letters in correct alphabetical order.
These activities help learners develop strong foundational literacy skills.