Word Play Throughout the Day: Phonological Awareness in the Preschool Classroom

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Ms. Diane and her preschoolers are preparing for snack time. As the children come to the table, she begins to play a rhyming game. This chair is for someone whose name rhymes with dawn,泭she says.
Shawn! shout the children.
Thats right. Shawn, can you help me? Please give everyone something that rhymes with dune.
A spoon! Shawn replies.
Yes. Were eating applesauce today, and we each need a spoon. Spoon and dune rhyme. They sound the same at the end.
Activities like the one above help build childrens developing泭phonological awareness, or the awareness of the sound structure of an alphabetic spoken language (like English and Spanish) and the ability to manipulate it. As a speech-language pathologist and an early childhood educator, we (the authors) focus on the importance of authentic, play-based experiences for fostering preschoolers language development. In this article, we highlight specific phonological awareness skills, then offer suggested activities to help children泭develop them.
Identifying Phonological Awareness Skills
Phonological awareness skills emerge during the early years and continue to develop through elementary school. This means that the lessons and activities introduced by early childhood educators can build a strong foundation for literacy development later on. Specific skills (adapted from泭Literacy Learning for Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers: Key Practices for Educators泭by Tanya S. Wright and泭colleagues) include:
- Rhyming:泭Cheese泭and泭knees泭sound the same at泭the end.
- Alliteration:泭The words泭peanut泭and泭pasta泭start with the泭same sound.
- Sentence segmentation:泭It is raining泭has three泭separate words.
- Syllabification:泭Butterfly泭has three泭syllables (bu-tter-fly).
- Onset-rime blending and segmentation:泭The泭onset泭is the beginning consonant or blend (two consonants) of a word. The泭rime泭is the rest of the word. The /m/ sound can be blended泭with the rime /ap/ to make泭map泭(blending); the onset /t/ can be separated from the rime /op/ in the word泭top泭(segmentation).
- Phonemic awareness:泭Attending to the smallest units of sound (phonemes), such as the phonemes /h/, /o/, and /p/ within the word泭hop,泭or blending the sounds /t/, /i/, and /p/ to make the泭word泭tip.
(Key Terms, below, offers definitions for related yet different elements of sound and letter learning associated with an alphabetic language.)
Key Terms
Phonological awareness:泭A broad term that refers to the awareness of the sound structure of an alphabetic spoken language, including the ability to manipulate it.
Phonemic awareness:泭A subskill of phonological awareness that refers to the ability to identify and manipulate the smallest unit of sound that distinguishes one spoken word from another.
Phoneme:泭An individual unit of sound that can distinguish one word from another (for example, /b/ and /m/ are different phonemes in English because泭bat泭and泭mat泭are different words).
Grapheme:泭A symbol (in English and Spanish, for example, a letter or set of letters) that represent(s) a phoneme.
Alphabetic principle:泭The understanding that alphabet letters represent spoken sounds in a systematic way.
Phonics:泭An instructional practice that explicitly maps graphemes onto phonemes.
Spelling:泭Connecting phonemes to graphemes to represent spoken words in print.
Source:泭Literacy Learning for Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers: Key Practices for Educators,泭by Tanya S. Wright, Sonia Q. Cabell, Nell K. Duke, and Mariana Souto-Manning (2022)
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Introducing Phonological Awareness Activities
Because preschoolers learn best through a combination of planned and spontaneous learning experiences, effective phonological awareness instruction incorporates some planned small- and/or large-group instruction as well as learning opportunities like the one in the opening vignette. Its important to include childrens home languages and other aspects of their social and cultural contexts when planning these activities. Consider incorporating words in a childs home language, using a nursery rhyme or familiar story that is important to the familys culture, and sharing fingerplays that families can use in their泭home languages.
Remember that children do not need to master one skill before moving on to another; rather, teachers can introduce these concepts at the same time. Following are some ideas for playful activities that teachers can incorporate throughout the learning day that integrate movement, songs, books, and泭creative expressions.
- Embed rhymes to help develop泭rhyming泭skills. For example, recite Humpty Dumpty as children build with blocks or play in the kitchen. Say Pat-A-Cake as children play with clay. Send children on a rhyme search: ask them to find something that rhymes with cook (book), rink (sink), and boar (door). Or use a rhyming word instead of a childs name to call on them (as in the opening vignette). There are a variety of engaging rhyming books to read aloud with children, such as泭Families, Families, Families, by Suzanne Lang,泭Frog on a Log?, by Kes Gray, and泭Billy Bloo Is Stuck in Goo, by Jennifer Hamburg. Also consider tapping into favorite rhyme and rhyming books from childrens homes泭or communities.
- Read books rich in泭alliteration.泭Pete the Cat and the Perfect Pizza Party, by James and Kimberly Dean,泭The Worrywarts, by Pamela Duncan Edwards, and泭Old MacDonald Had a Dragon, by Ken Baker, are some of our favorites. Along with stopping to note and play with the alliteration in these texts, practice this skill by adding a word before a childs name that starts with the same sound (Jumping Jada,泭Charming Charles).
- Practice泭sentence segmentation泭by counting the words in familiar sentences. For example, tell the children Its time to get our coats, counting the six words with your fingers as泭you speak.
- Introduce movement into泭syllabification泭by clapping, hopping, or stomping each syllable. Bring in musical instruments (drums, tambourines, rhythm sticks), and ask children to hit them for泭each syllable.
- Use your hands or objects (magnetic tiles, puzzle pieces, blocks, or pieces of playdough) to illustrate泭onset-rime泭blending and segmenting. For blending, face the children and hold out your right hand (by itself or holding an object) as you say the onset, then your left hand (with or without an object) as you say the rime. Move your hands or the objects together as you say the whole word. When practicing segmenting, begin with your hands or the objects together, then move them apart as you segment the word into its onset and泭its rime.
- Build泭phonemic awareness泭skills by calling childrens attention to the smallest unit of sounds in familiar words, such as pointing out two names that start with the same sound or telling the children, Its cold outside. We will all need to wear something on our heads that starts泭with /h/.
Conclusion
Phonological awareness is critical for childrens literacy development. As these skills develop in the preschool years, we should incorporate them into our daily practices. Word play that includes movement and manipulatives will help you target phonological awareness in developmentally appropriate ways that are also playful泭and joyful.
Photograph: 穢 Getty Images
Copyright 穢 2024 by the 51勛圖厙. See permissions and reprints online at泭51勛圖厙.org/resources/permissions.
This article supports the following 51勛圖厙 Early Learning Programs standards and topics
Standard 2: Curriculum
2D: Language Development
2E: Early Literacy
2J: Creative Expression and Appreciation for the Arts
Anne Gritt,泭MS, CCC-SLP, is a clinical assistant professor and speech-language pathologist in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, where she coleads the Preschool Language Program, a preschool for children with developmental language disorder and a clinical education site for students.
Kalie Standish,泭MEd, is the early childhood泭specialist/coleader泭of early childhood programs in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University. Kalie has over 15 years of experience working in early childhood education, including home visiting, special education, preschool director/teacher, and coaching and mentoring.