Letters and Sounds
Ways you can support your children at home: talking and listening
- Make time to listen to your child talking – as you meet them from their setting or school, as you walk, or travel home by car, in the supermarket as you shop, at meal times, bath times, and bedtimes – any time!
- Switch off the TV, radio and mobile phones – and really listen! Show that you are interested in what they are talking about – look at your child, smile, nod your head, ask a question or make a response to show that you really have been listening.
- Make a collection of different toy creatures – for example, a duck, a snake, an alien, say the sound it might make as you play together, for example, ‘quack-quack’, ‘ssssssss’, ‘yuk-yuk’, and encourage your child to copy you.
- Listen at home – switch off the TV and listen to the sounds, both inside and outside the home.
- Can your child tell you what sounds they heard, in the order in which they heard them?
- Play-a-tune – and follow me! Make or buy some simple shakers, drums and beaters, then play a simple tune and ask your child to copy. Have fun!
- Use puppets and toys to make up stories or retell known ones. Record your child telling the story and play it back to them.
Term Documentation
‘Letters & Sounds’ is the government programme for teaching phonics and high frequency words.
It is split into 6 phases with the different phases being covered in different years in Foundation Stage and Key Stage 1.
It is split into 6 phases with the different phases being covered in different years in Foundation Stage and Key Stage 1.
- Phase 1– Nursery / Reception
- Phase 2– Reception
- Phase 3– Reception
- Phase 4– Reception / Year 1