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Hard and Soft G and C is my favorite phonics study! Does that make me a nerd? haha! Here are the different activities we did this past week! You can print out my mini packet on TPT. Mini PostersSorting PicturesSorting WordsFinding Words in the Books we ReadEach week we look for words that fit into our phonics sort. Each student writes a word or two onto a sticky note and then we sort them whole group onto the whiteboard.
4 Comments
2/13/2018 03:49:18 am
This sounds quite fun to use Y as a following vowel although it's generally a consonant. The reason why Y is being used is because Y can sometimes behave like a vowel. When Y behaves like a vowel, it usually sounds like an E or I, which steals their place for softening.
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2/14/2018 01:20:43 am
This sounds quite fun to use Y as a following vowel although it's generally a consonant. The reason why Y is being used is because Y can sometimes behave like a vowel. When Y behaves like a vowel, it usually sounds like an E or I, which steals their place for softening. If the Y begins a word or a syllable, then it's generally a consonant. If the Y ends a word, or if it's through or at the end of a syllable, then it behaves like a vowel
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2/14/2018 01:35:39 am
Things usually goes in these rules but there are some exceptions, which can be called the "rule-breaker". Sometimes, the G remains hard although the following letters would soften the G like gear, get, gelding, give, girl, giggle, gift, tiger, gill, etc. Present participle of verbs ending with G and G-interceding compound words like banging, ringing, singing, hanging, login, etc. would remain a hard G sound although the following letter would soften the G because if these words makes a soft G.
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