The Spelling Route
The Spelling Route outlines 6 stages: 1) Discovering Words, 2) Preparing for Phonics, 3) Early Phonics, 4) Further Phonics, 5) Beyond Phonics and 6) Near-Correct. These are detailed below.
Discovering Words
What learners do when writing
· Learners "write" scribbles, which are beginning to look like real letters.
· They want to communicate in this "grown-up" way.
· They are enjoying some words purely for their sounds.
What learners know
· Learners know that writing is different from drawing.
· They have a dawning awareness that there are such things as letters.
· They have a dawning awareness that words are made up of separate sounds.
What learners need, in order to move on
· To have their written "messages" accepted and valued
· To watch how writing is done, and have that talked-through
· To play around, orally, with the sounds in words
· To begin to learn a few straightforward letter-sound matches that are personally important, and some letter names.
See Discovering Words - Stage 1 of the Spelling Route.
Preparing for Phonics
What learners do when writing
· Learners get some letters right when writing words.
· They often get the left-right sequence correct.
· They are confident to have-a-go at writing.
What learners know
· Learners have grasped the principle of coding: they understand that letters stand for sounds.
· They know that actual letter shapes matter; they've left letter-like shapes behind.
· Beginning to know a growing number of letter-sound matches.
What learners need, in order to move on
· To polish their skills in hearing the sounds in words
· To become sure about the left-right sequence of sounds and letters
· To learn yet more letter-sound matches
· To learn by sight some frequently-used whole words
· To work at L-S-T-C-W-C, with great care over the 'look' component.
See Preparing for Phonics - Stage 2 of the Spelling Route.
Early Phonics
What learners do when writing
· Learners write some words with 1, 2 or 3 letters, which will be mainly consonants.
· They are confident to experiment with words, seeing spelling as a problem-solving task.
What learners know
· By the end of this stage, learners know all the single letter-sound matches.
· They also know some digraphs.
· They can read and spell a good number of whole words (with words read probably outnumbering words spelled).
What learners need, in order to move on
· To practise hearing the sequence of sounds in words, and to write them in that sequence, left to right
· To learn all the most frequently occurring letter-sound matches
· To add to their word-bank of frequently-used whole words, for reading and spelling
· To work at L-S-T-C-W-C, with great care over the "look" component.
See Early Phonics - Stage 3 of the Spelling Route.
Further Phonics
What learners do when writing
· They encode almost all words directly from the way they sound, generally managing to represent every sound in the word.
· They have a positive attitude towards themselves as spellers.
What learners know
· They have acquired the ability to capture sound in spelling, and they are on course to acquire the whole phonic code.
What learners need, in order to move on
· To round off the acquisition of letter-sound matches
· To build an appreciation of the complications of the phonic code: how letters can represent different sounds, and sounds can be represented by different letters (multiple mapping)
· To look for visual spelling patterns (common sequences of letters in words)
· To work at L-S-T-C-W-C, with great care over the "look" component
· To be introduced to morphemes
· To add to their word-bank of frequently-used whole words for reading and spelling
· To begin to learn how to proof-read and edit their own writings.
See Further Phonics - Stage 4 of the Spelling Route.
Beyond Phonics
What learners do when writing
· When writing, learners employ a sense of "what looks right".
· They are complementing phonics with a growing memory bank of common visual patterns within words.
· They have a growing understanding of the value of the various kinds of morphemes.
· They are willing to take risks in their spelling.
What learners know
· Learners know that sound is not all there is to spelling.
· They are meeting morphemes.
· They are meeting spelling rules.
· They are meeting word derivations.
What learners need, in order to move on
· To continue an interest in the visual patterns of words
· To look at word meanings and derivations
· To work at discovering rules from generalisations
· To continue the use of word-banks, now often thematic
· To work at L-S-T-C-W-C, with great care over the "look" component
· To continue practising proof-reading and editing skills.
See Beyond Phonics - Stage 5 of the Spelling Route.
Near-Correct
What learners do when writing
· When writing, learners make some mistakes, but have a wide range of skills for their correction.
What learners know
· Learners put into practice what they've learned about phonics, and morphemics (and rules), and learning spellings by sight.
What learners need, in order to move on
· To focus on meaning as a guide to spelling
· To continue all the strategies that they've met over the course of their learning thus far.
See Near-Correct - Stage 6 of the Spelling Route.