How to Teach Phonological Awareness Skills

How to Teach Phonological Awareness Skills

Phonological awareness skills are the building blocks of future reading success. It’s important to help your little learners develop phonological awareness skills in Preschool, Pre-K, and Kindergarten, because without these basic literacy skills they will struggle with reading later.

What is phonological awareness

What is Phonological Awareness?

Phonological awareness refers to the ability to segment and manipulate the sounds of oral language. It is not the same as phonics, which involves knowing how written letters relate to spoken sounds. Activities that help develop these literacy skills in children provide practice with rhyme, beginning sounds, and syllables. (from ILA, International Literacy Association) and can aid them when they learn to read later.

  • Phonological awareness is not just phonics.
  • Phonological awareness is auditory and does not involve words in print.
  • Phonological awareness is not a curriculum.

why are phonological awareness skills important

Why are phonological awareness skills important?

The ability to hear, identify and manipulate the sounds in spoken language has been proven to help young children become better readers. Even before they learn to read and identify the letters of the alphabet, children can say the sounds they hear in spoken language. When they can hear the sounds in a word and identify where the sounds occur in the word, they are developing good pre-reading skills.

Phonological Vs. Phonemic Awareness

Phonological and phonemic awareness skills are not the same thing. Phonological awareness skills is a larger umbrella that includes phonemic awareness.

Phonemic awareness skills is the ability to hear and manipulate individual phonemes. Phonological awareness skills includes this ability, but also includes the ability to hear and manipulate larger units of sound, such as syllables.

 

phonological awareness cheat sheet

Components of Phonological Awareness

The term ‘phonological awareness’ does not describe just one skill, rather it encompasses a whole list of important skills. The following are all important parts of phonemic awareness:

Blending and Segmenting Phonemes

Phonological awareness can have your preschoolers work on blending sounds and skills such as:

  • (initial sound isolation): What is the first sound in mop?
  • (final sound isolation): What is the last sound in mop?
  • (Tells difference between single phonemes) Which one is different? /s/ /s/ /k/ ?
  • (orally blends 2 or 3 phonemes into one word) What word am I trying to say? /m/ /o/ /p/?

Onset-Rime Blending and Segmentation

(orally blends onset-rimes) What word is this? m-ilk

Syllable Blending and Deletion

  • (identifies number of syllables in spoken words) Claps syllables in 1, 2, and 3 syllable words
  • (orally blends syllables) What word is this? mon-key

Sentence Segmentation

“I have a dog” = four different words.

Alliteration

Words that have the same initial sound: Marvelous Monday, Terrific Tuesday etc. – This super fun and easy paper bag puppet activity, Alliteration with Peter the Cat, will help your preschool and kindergarten students develop alliteration skills.

Rhyming

  • (Identifying rhyming words) Do “cat” and “mat” rhyme?
  • (Produces a rhyming word) Tell me what word rhymes with nose?

Sound Word Discrimination

Sound word discrimination, like in this Valentine Rhyming activity, is a great way to work on telling whether words or sounds are the same or different.

  • (Tells whether words or sounds are the same or different) cat/cat= same cat/car= different
  • (Identifies which word is different) sun, fun, sun = fun is different

how to teach phonological awareness

How to Teach Phonological Awareness Skills

So now that you know what this skill is, how do you teach these skills to your students?

The best way to teach it to your little learners is through

  • Games
  • Songs
  • Hands-On Activities
  • Nursery Rhymes
  • Poems
  • Read-Aloud Books

When it comes to teaching these important skills, fun games, songs and hands-on activities have proven to be highly-effective methods.

You can encourage play with spoken language as part of your daily routine.

Nursery rhymes, songs, poems, and read-alouds are all effective methods you can use to develop phonemic awareness skills.

Teaching Trailblazers

Knowing what phonological awareness skills are is a great place to start! But let’s face it, you also need to learn which activities are most effective for teaching these skills to your little learners. The best place to discuss teaching best practices and get the support you need is in the Teaching Trailblazers. We have many printable lessons and on-demand video trainings to help you become the best teacher you can be! If you want to get on the waiting list for the Teaching Trailblazers, do it soon so you don’t miss the next open enrollment period!

More Literacy Ideas from Pre-K Pages

picture of a stop sign with words environmental print below
Morning Message Example
Handwriting Skills
How to Teach the Alphabet
How to Teach Nursery Rhymes
What is a Word Wall
Letter of the Week

10 thoughts on “How to Teach Phonological Awareness Skills”

  1. So helpful knowing the exact definition of phonological awareness including the breakdown examples. Thank you super helpful.

  2. Thank you so much, you made it clear and made me understand phonological awareness much better. Thank you once more again. Your article is helpful.

  3. This was so helpful to me! I have a daughter in speech/language therapy, and her therapist explains it well. But by the time I get home, it’s sometimes over my head and I can’t quite remember all she had mentioned, even with notes! This was a great breakdown of exactly what she was trying to explain to me today. I now have a better idea of how to support her here at home during the rest of the week.

  4. This Information Activities that help develop these literacy skills in children provides practice with rhyming, beginning sounds, and syllables.

  5. Wow! I am blown away with all the knowledge I have just been reading! It has been so fun and I can’t wait to implement this as I work with our kids in the classroom. Thank you for providing this information in all the different ways.

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