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 10: Complex Patterns 2 – Diphthongs & Alternative Vowel Sounds

🎯 Learning Objectives

  • Identify and produce the vowel teams ou, ow, oi, oy in spoken and written words
  • Explain that vowel teams can represent more than one sound and use context to decide which sound fits
  • Decode decodable texts that feature diphthongs with fluency and expression
  • Use sound mapping and syllable division to spell complex vowel patterns with accuracy
  • Reflect on learning using metacognitive strategy “What did my mouth do?” to track sound production

📦 Materials & Prep

Teacher Toolkit:

  • “The Code” cards: ou, ow, oi, oy + previously learned vowel teams
  • Anchor chart: “What sound do I hear?” decision tree
  • Magnetic letter tiles & sound mapping mats
  • Large decodable poster text “The Loyal Brown Cowboy”
  • Fluency timer / visual timer
  • Week 5 resource pack (decodable, probes, pānui)

Student Materials:

  • Individual sound mapping boards (with 5 sound boxes)
  • Decodable reader set: “Out in the Bay”, “The Kōwhai Boy” (Level 5)
  • Writing notebooks + coloured pencils for coding patterns
  • Diphthong detective recording sheet
  • Whānau pānui template (to take home)

Prep Tip: Pre-stick vowel team cards around the room for the “Sound Safari” activity and highlight Māori-English cognates that feature diphthongs (e.g., kauri, taonga).

Lesson Flow (45 minutes)

1. Warm-Up: Sound Safari (5 mins)

Karakia & Whakataukī Connection: Begin with “Mā te rongo, ka mōhio” – acknowledging that listening carefully reveals knowledge. Students close eyes, listen to teacher pronounce vowel teams, and hold up matching gesture (hands create au spiral, oi point to ears, etc.).

Purpose: Activate phonemic awareness and link sounds to prior knowledge from Lesson 9.
  1. Teacher says words with diphthongs; students decide if vowel sound is “round” (ou/ow) or “point” (oi/oy).
  2. Quick check: learners move to wall cards that match the sound they heard.

2. Explicit Teaching: Decoding Diphthongs (10 mins)

Introduce rule families:ou/ow often say /ow/ like in cloud, but ow can also say /ō/ like in snow. oi/oy both say /oi/, with oy usually at the end.”

Interactive mini-board:

  • Write example words and colour-code vowel teams
  • Have students mouth the sound silently before voicing
  • Note Māori loanwords with ou (e.g., kauri) to highlight cross-language patterns

Multisensory hook:

  • Use a poi to model the /oi/ sound rhythmically
  • Create “crowd vs. cowboy” gesture pair to anchor /ou/ vs /ow/
  • Link to te reo Māori vowels to emphasise mouth position

3. Guided Practice: Word Building Carousel (12 mins)

Set-up: Students rotate through three stations, spending four minutes at each. Heterogeneous groupings ensure peer modeling.

  1. Station A – Sound Mapping: Build words (shout, plow, loyal) with tiles, tap sound boxes, and code vowel teams with coloured pencils.
  2. Station B – Word Sort: Sort cards into /ow/ vs /ō/, /oi/ vs /oy/. Include te reo Māori cognates to reinforce pattern recognition.
  3. Station C – Syllable Smash: Clap and chunk multisyllabic words (cowboy, voyage, joyful, destroy), marking stress and vowel sounds.

Teacher Role: Circulate with “sound prompt” cards, providing immediate corrective feedback. Note any students requiring reteach on specific teams.

4. Decodable Reading: “Out on the Bay” (10 mins)

Partner Structure: Pair readers by complementary strengths. Partner A reads page 1 aloud while Partner B tracks, switching each page.

  • Before reading, preview vocabulary: buoy, voyage, plough. Discuss meaning and whakapapa connections (e.g., voyaging traditions).
  • During reading, prompt students to highlight or tap each diphthong they encounter.
  • Post-reading discussion: “Which vowel team was the trickiest? How did you work it out?” Encourage use of the metacognitive question: “What did my mouth do?”

Extension: Fluent pairs complete a one-minute timed reread, graphing words correct per minute to track growth.

5. Apply & Reflect: Diphthong Detective Exit Slip (8 mins)

Students choose one focus word from each vowel team and:

  1. Write the word and colour-code the vowel team
  2. Note whether the sound is “round” (/ow/, /oi/) or “long” (/ō/)
  3. Use the word in a sentence connected to their own whānau or kura life
  4. Reflect: “How did I know which sound to use?” (Options: the letter after the vowel, word position, meaning, whānau/friends support)

Success Criteria:

  • Emerging: Identifies some vowel teams but needs support choosing sounds
  • Developing: Accurately codes vowel teams and uses context to decide sound
  • Secure: Explains thinking clearly and applies pattern in original sentence

Assessment, Differentiation & Next Steps

📊 Quick Checks

  • Collect exit slips and highlight students misapplying ow/ou or oi/oy.
  • Use a 1-minute fluency probe from the decodable reader to gather WCPM data.
  • Document anecdotal notes using the diphthong observation sheet in the teacher notebook.

🌈 Differentiation

Awhina (Support):

  • Use Elkonin boxes with picture prompts
  • Teach hand motions for each vowel team
  • Provide decodable sentences with visual cues
  • Pre-teach vocabulary using real objects (e.g., rope, toy cow)

Wero (Extension):

  • Create a short comic using at least six diphthong words
  • Research and present Māori kupu featuring similar sounds
  • Design a mini-lesson teaching classmates when to use oy vs. oi
  • Compare English diphthongs to another language spoken in the class

🔮 Looking Ahead

  • Tomorrow’s lesson (11) focuses on reading fluency strategies—keep decodable readers handy for repeated readings.
  • Send the “Diphthong Detective” whānau pānui home; invite students to record a whānau member reading one of the decodable paragraphs.
  • Update progress tracker with today’s vowel team mastery—note targeted reteach groups for tomorrow’s warm-up.

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