Literacy Fundamentals: Structured Literacy & Phonics Foundations

Evidence-based systematic phonics instruction using 'The Code' methodology for Year 7-8 students needing foundational literacy support

Lesson 1: Phonics Foundations 1 - Introduction to 'The Code'

🌿 Whakatau & Te Ao Māori Integration

Begin with calm, collective wairua before diving into unfamiliar literacy mahi. Anchor the session in tikanga so every ākonga feels seen.

  • Karakia timatanga: Use your kura’s karakia (e.g., Whakataka te Hau) to open the space and focus minds.
  • Whakawhanaungatanga: Invite a quick pair-share: “He aha te oro ka tino rata koe?” (Which sound feels fun to make?).
  • Kupu Matua: Introduce oro (sound), reta (letter), waha (mouth) — display on the board with icons.
Encourage students to connect sounds to taonga in their lives (e.g., /s/ for saute from Samoan kai, /a/ for aroha). This promotes linguistic pride alongside accuracy.

🎯 Learning Objectives

  • Understand that letters represent sounds (alphabetic principle).
  • Identify and produce the sounds /s/, /a/, /t/, /p/ with clarity.
  • Match the four focus sounds to their letter symbols.
  • Use sound buttons to blend simple CVC words.
  • Participate confidently within a culturally safe literacy space.

📦 Materials & Prep

Teacher Materials

  • 'The Code' cards: s, a, t, p.
  • Whiteboard, markers, and magnetic letters.
  • Sound button worksheets or laminated cards.
  • Mini poi or rakau for kinaesthetic sound tapping.
  • Simple decodable word list (sat, tap, pat).

Student Materials

  • Individual 'Code' cards (s, a, t, p).
  • Sound button worksheets with three-dot guides.
  • Pencils or whiteboard pens.
  • Coloured dots/stickers for sound buttons.
  • Vocabulary display strip with kupu hou.
Setup: Display the kupu hou alongside English so tamariki can see bilingual pairings (e.g., oro – sound). Position the hui circle close to the board for quick shifts between kōrero and modelling.

1. Warm-Up: Kimi Oro / Sound Detective (5 mins)

Purpose: Build phonemic awareness and set an affirming tone.

Activity: “I’ll say some kupu/words. If you hear the /s/ sound, show me pīkau (thumbs up). If not, keep your hands still.” Layer in a quick rhythm clap before each word to maintain attention.

Word List

  • With /s/: sun, sit, mouse, snake, saute (Samoan borrowed word).
  • Without /s/: cat, dog, ruru, awa.
Teaching Tip: Model the listening stance by cupping ear and stretching the sound: “Whakarongo mai: sssun. Ka rangona te /s/ i te tīmatanga!”
Prompt students to ask each other, “He aha te oro ka rangona e koe?” to normalise te reo interaction.

2. Introducing 'The Code': Letter /s/ (10 mins)

Teacher Script: “Today we’re unlocking a secret code that helps us read and write. The first piece of our code looks like this…” (hold up the letter card).

Step-by-Step Process

  1. Show the letter ‘s’ and trace it in the air.
  2. Say: “This letter makes the /s/ sound.”
  3. Model the sound clearly: /s/ (no extra vowel).
  4. Students repeat three times using whisper, normal, and “taniwha” voices.
  5. Air-write together, calling out “ringa – ringa – oro!”

Multisensory Elements

  • Visual: Large Code card anchored to the board.
  • Auditory: Vary volume and pitch to cement the sound.
  • Kinesthetic: Trace letter in sand tray or on taumanu.
  • Whakaaro: Link to pakiwaitara of Ngārara Huarau coiling with a soft /s/ hiss.
Ask a student to mihi to the new letter: “Tēnā koe, reta S!” — building playful relationship with the alphabet.

3. Sound-Symbol Practice (10 mins)

Quick fire round: Repeat the above routine with /a/, /t/, /p/, using mnemonic anchors (e.g., /a/ as in aroha).

Practice Sequence

  • /a/: “Apple says /a/” or “Aroha begins with /a/”.
  • /t/: “Tiger says /t/” or “Tāne says /t/”.
  • /p/: “Penguin says /p/” or “Pounamu starts with /p/”.
Interactive Game: “I’ll flash a letter. Show me the sound silently with your lips, then we’ll chorally respond.” Add poi tapping for each phoneme to reinforce rhythm.
Assessment Check: Note ākonga who need extra scaffolds (picture cue, hand sign). Pair them with a confident buddy for echo practice.

4. Sound Buttons Guided Practice (15 mins)

Concept Introduction: “Sound buttons help us see how many sounds live inside a kupu. Each sound earns its own button.”

Demonstration Words

  • sat: s-a-t (3 sounds, 3 buttons).
  • pat: p-a-t (3 sounds, 3 buttons).
  • tap: t-a-p (3 sounds, 3 buttons).
Guided Process:
  1. Write ‘sat’, touch each letter, say the phoneme.
  2. Draw a dot under each letter — “takiia ngā oro”.
  3. Students mirror on worksheets or mini whiteboards.
  4. Tap each button while voicing the sound; blend together.
  5. Swap to a te reo kupu loan such as pati to show transfer.
Whānau Link: Capture a quick photo of exemplar sound buttons to include in the weekly pānui.

5. Independent Practice & Exit Ticket (5 mins)

Task: Students choose a word card (sat/pat/tap) and recreate the sound buttons independently.

Exit Ticket Prompt

“Draw sound buttons under the word tap, then blend aloud to your partner.”

Success Criteria

  • Emerging: Places at least one sound button correctly.
  • Developing: Matches all sounds to buttons and attempts blending.
  • Secure: Accurately places buttons, blends smoothly, and explains the strategy.
Celebrate with a short chant: “He toa ngā kaiako iti! We cracked the first part of the Code!”

📊 Assessment, Differentiation & Next Steps

Formative Assessment

  • Track accuracy of /s/, /a/, /t/, /p/ production.
  • Note who matches letters to sounds without prompts.
  • Observe sound button placement and blending attempts.
  • Capture anecdotal notes in Literacy Passports.

Support & Extension

  • Āwhina: Use tactile letters, slower pacing, echo reading.
  • Wero: Challenge confident readers with 4-letter blends (pats, taps) or bilingual word hunting.
  • ELL: Provide picture cues and sentence frames: “I hear /s/ in sun.”
Next Lesson Preview: Revise today’s sounds, introduce m-d-g-o, and extend blending practice with new kupu.
Te Ao Māori Momentum: Schedule a 2-minute reflection circle tomorrow asking, “Ko wai tō tautoko i a koe i te ako?” to reinforce ako as collective practice.