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 13: R-Controlled Vowels - When 'r' Takes Control

🎯 Learning Objectives

  • Students understand that 'r' changes the sound of vowels (r-controlled concept)
  • Students can identify and read words with ar, or, er, ir, ur patterns
  • Students recognize that er, ir, ur all make the same /ər/ sound
  • Students can spell words with r-controlled vowel patterns
  • Students apply r-controlled vowel knowledge to decode new words

📦 Materials Needed

Teacher Materials:

  • 'The Code' r-controlled vowel cards (ar, or, er, ir, ur)
  • Word cards with r-controlled patterns
  • Whiteboard and colored markers
  • R-controlled vowel sorting mats
  • Picture cards (car, corn, bird, etc.)
  • Week 6 resource pack (decodable, word lists, centre briefs, pānui)

Student Materials:

  • Individual r-controlled vowel cards
  • Word sorting worksheets
  • Pencils and erasers
  • Small whiteboards and markers
  • R-controlled word building mats

1. Warm-Up: Bossy 'r' Introduction (8 mins)

Purpose: Introduce the concept that 'r' is "bossy" and changes vowel sounds.

Teacher Script: "Today we're going to learn about a bossy letter - the letter 'r'. When 'r' comes after a vowel, it takes control and changes the sound!"

Demonstration Activity:

Compare these sounds:

  • ca (short a sound) → car (r-controlled sound)
  • fo (short o sound) → for (r-controlled sound)
  • he (long e sound) → her (r-controlled sound)

Key Point: "The 'r' is so bossy, we can't hear the regular vowel sound anymore!"

Engagement Tip: Use a dramatic voice for the "bossy r" concept. Students enjoy the personification!

2. Teaching 'ar' and 'or' Patterns (12 mins)

Systematic Introduction: Start with the most distinct r-controlled sounds.

ar pattern - /är/:
  • Sound: /är/ (like "are")
  • Words: car, park, farm, start
  • Memory: "ar says /är/ like in car"
  • Hand motion: Drive a car
or pattern - /ôr/:
  • Sound: /ôr/ (like "or")
  • Words: for, corn, sport, north
  • Memory: "or says /ôr/ like in for"
  • Hand motion: Point north

Teaching Process for Each Pattern:

  1. Show the 'Code' card and teach the sound
  2. Model clear pronunciation (avoid adding extra sounds)
  3. Practice with multiple example words
  4. Students repeat with hand motions
  5. Identify the pattern in new words

3. Teaching er, ir, ur - The /ər/ Family (12 mins)

Key Concept: "These three patterns all sound the same! They're like triplets - they look different but sound exactly alike."

The /ər/ Sound Family:

er

her, fern, teacher

ir

bird, girl, first

ur

turn, hurt, nurse

All three say /ər/ - same sound, different spellings!

Teaching Strategy:

  1. Sound first: Teach the /ər/ sound clearly
  2. Show examples: Use words students know (her, bird, turn)
  3. Emphasize similarity: "They all sound the same!"
  4. Memory device: "her, bird, turn - all say /ər/"

4. R-Controlled Vowel Sorting (10 mins)

Interactive Practice: Students sort words by their r-controlled vowel patterns.

Word Sorting Activity:

Words to Sort:
  • car, her, for, bird
  • park, turn, corn, girl
  • start, nurse, sport, fern
  • farm, first, north, hurt
Sorting Categories:
  • /är/ sounds: car, park, start, farm
  • /ôr/ sounds: for, corn, sport, north
  • /ər/ sounds: her, bird, turn, girl, nurse, fern, first, hurt
Differentiation: Advanced students can explain why er/ir/ur words go in the same category.

5. Independent Practice & Exit Ticket (3 mins)

Exit Ticket Task

"Circle the r-controlled vowel pattern in each word: farm, bird, sport, nurse. Then write one new word for each pattern."

Success Criteria:

  • Emerging: Identifies some r-controlled patterns correctly
  • Developing: Identifies most patterns and provides some new words
  • Secure: Accurately identifies all patterns and provides appropriate new words
Celebration: "You've learned to read when 'r' takes control! Tomorrow we'll practice breaking longer words into parts."

📊 Assessment & Differentiation

Formative Assessment:

  • Observe r-controlled vowel sound production
  • Check pattern recognition accuracy
  • Monitor understanding of er/ir/ur equivalence
  • Assess application to new words

Support Strategies:

  • Struggling: Focus on ar and or first, use picture support
  • Confident: Explore less common patterns (air, eer, ear)
  • ELL Support: Practice sound discrimination with minimal pairs
Next Lesson Preview: We'll learn to break down multisyllabic words into manageable chunks using all our phonics knowledge.