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 2: Phonics Foundations 2 - Expanding 'The Code'

🎯 Learning Objectives

  • Students review and consolidate s-a-t-p sounds
  • Students can identify and produce the sounds /m/, /d/, /g/, /o/
  • Students can read simple CVC words using all learned sounds
  • Students segment words into individual sounds for spelling
  • Students build fluency with sound button technique

πŸ“¦ Materials Needed

Teacher Materials:

  • All 'Code' cards: s, a, t, p, m, d, g, o
  • Word building magnetic letters
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Sound button demonstration sheet
  • Simple decodable sentences

Student Materials:

  • Individual 'Code' card set (8 cards)
  • Sound button practice worksheets
  • Small whiteboards and markers
  • Letter tiles or magnetic letters
  • Reading tracking sheet

1. Quick Review: Code Challenge (5 mins)

Purpose: Activate prior knowledge and build confidence before new learning.

Activity: "Let's see how well you remember yesterday's code! I'll show you a letter, you give me the sound."

Review Sequence:

  • Flash cards: s, a, t, p (random order)
  • Quick check: students hold up correct letter when they hear sound
  • Challenge word: "sat" - can students segment it?
Praise Focus: "I can see you're remembering the code really well! Today we're adding four more sounds."

2. New Sounds Introduction: /m/, /d/, /g/, /o/ (15 mins)

Teaching Pattern (per sound): Use the same multisensory approach from Lesson 1.

Sound-by-Sound Teaching:

  • /m/: "Mouse says /m/" (lips together)
  • /d/: "Dog says /d/" (tongue tap)
  • /g/: "Goat says /g/" (back of throat)
  • /o/: "Octopus says /o/" (short /o/ sound)

Practice Activities:

  • Air writing each letter
  • Sound repetition (3x each)
  • Quick letter-sound matching
  • Body movements for each sound
Memory Strategy: "Let's practice all 8 sounds in order: s-a-t-p-m-d-g-o. Can you say them with me?"

3. Word Building Practice (15 mins)

Teacher Demonstration: "Now that we know 8 sounds, we can make lots of words!"

Guided Word Building:

  • Start with familiar: sat, pat, tap
  • Add new sounds: mat, dog, got
  • Build together: mad, gap, mop
  • Challenge words: dogs, maps

Word Building Process:

  1. Teacher says the word: "mat"
  2. Students repeat and segment: "m-a-t"
  3. Count sounds on fingers: 3 sounds
  4. Build with magnetic letters/tiles
  5. Add sound buttons underneath
  6. Blend back together: "mmm-aaa-ttt... mat!"
Student Practice: In pairs, students take turns building words using letter tiles. Partners check each other's work.

4. Reading Simple Sentences (8 mins)

Introduction: "You know enough sounds now to read whole sentences! Let's try together."

Decodable Sentences:

  • Pat sat on a mat.
  • The dog got a mop.
  • Tom has a map.
  • Sam sat at the top.
Reading Strategy:
  1. Sound out each word individually
  2. Use sound buttons if needed
  3. Read the whole sentence
  4. Check: "Does this make sense?"
Celebration Moment: "Look at you reading whole sentences! You're using the code to unlock words."

5. Spelling Practice & Exit Ticket (2 mins)

Exit Ticket Challenge

"Listen to this word and spell it using sound buttons: 'dog'"

Success Criteria:

  • Emerging: Identifies some sounds in 'dog'
  • Developing: Segments and spells most sounds correctly
  • Secure: Accurately segments, spells, and uses sound buttons
Next Lesson Preview: "Tomorrow we'll practice more word building and start reading longer sentences with our growing code!"

πŸ“Š Assessment & Differentiation

Formative Assessment:

  • Quick sound recall (all 8 sounds)
  • Word building accuracy
  • Blending fluency in sentences
  • Sound button placement
  • Spelling attempt quality

Support Strategies:

  • Struggling: Focus on 2-3 new sounds only
  • Confident: Try 4-letter words (dogs, mats)
  • ELL Support: Picture cards for vocabulary
  • Extension: Write their own simple sentence
Homework/Extension: Practice reading the simple sentences at home. Family members can help by covering words and asking students to sound them out.

πŸ“Ί Related Videos