How To Teach Vowels and Consonants: Vowel and A Consonant
How To Teach Vowels and Consonants: Vowel and A Consonant
How To Teach Vowels and Consonants: Vowel and A Consonant
Have you ever asked your students the difference between a vowel and a consonant?
Did they answer vowels are red?
UGH. This is the answer that I kept getting from my students last year.
WHY? Because every commercial made product I bought the vowels were all in red.
Students picked up on this pretty quick and could identify vowels (YAY!), but they could not
actually tell me why a vowel is different than a consonant.
Do you know why?
Of course we know, a word has to have a vowel in it to be vowel, but I wanted to know more.
Through my Orton-Gillingham training this year, I learned more.
Vowels actually open your mouth when you say them. Consonants close your mouth.
Try it. Say the short a sound like in cat. /a/. mouth open right? Try all the short and long vowels
sounds. Your mouth is open right?
Now try the consonants. B, C, D, F, G, your mouth is blocked by your teeth tongue or lips. Some
consonants are easier to tell than others. Pretty cool right. This will help your students a TON.
Now you will tell your students this and they will try it out and you will have one Miss Smartie Pants
say what about H? This is what happened to me, and honestly I was stumped. Your mouth is very
much opened. So I went to my speech teacher because she knows all, and explained that it is
blocked way in the back of your throat by your tongue, but used very technical terms. So if you
need a better explanation ask your speech teacher.
Anyway, I started doing this activity with all of my intervention groups last year. I was surprised
at how many of my second and third graders did not know this, and were very interested in it. It
really makes the concept of a vowel and consonant more concrete, rather than abstract.
First introduce this concept whole group: Put all the letters on sticky notes. As a class say each
letter sound and decided if your mouth is open or blocked by your teeth tongue or lips. Sort them
by vowels and consonants.
Then give them a chance to practice more at small groups and centers. You could use the same
sticky note idea, or have them write the consonants and vowels into two columns.
I made this quick little product to help you out if you need it.
There is a colored bug center activity, and a black and white sorting activity that could be done as
just a sorting activity or students can cut, paste and sort with it.
Here are some of my students working on the sort at my small group intervention.
Give it a try. Come back and let me know how it goes with your students, or shoot me an email at
180daysofreading@gmail.com
Amy
NEXT Read about how I teach syllables to my students: Why I Used to HATE Teaching Syllables!
I had already taught my students that vowels open the mouth and consonants close the mouth.
So I started by reviewing this.
I asked my students, what do vowels do with your mouth? open.
I am going to teach you today about syllables.
Each syllable has one vowel sound in it.
Watch as I say these one syllable words.
dog, cat, fish.
How many times did my mouth open? one time.
Watch me say these two syllable words.
cupcake, doghouse, robot
How many times did my mouth open? twice.
Watch me say this word.
fantastic
How many times did my mouth open? Three times
Very good. So we know that vowels open your mouth. We know that each syllable has one vowel in it. So how can
we tell how many syllables are in a word just by saying it? We can see how many times our mouth opens!
Guided your students then to practice counting syllables in words using this method. Some students will be able to say
the word themselves and tell how many times their mouth opens. Some will need to use a mirror to watch their mouths
open, or feel with their hand how many times it opens. Be careful using words with lip poppers at the end (p,b) they
may mistake the pop that their mouth makes with another syllable/vowel sound. Just bring this to their attention when
they are ready.
Here is a free list of words by syllable. I really only go to three syllables right now. They will come up with super crazy
words to try...LET THEM, then they will own this skill. Have fun with words!
GET IT HERE!
But seriously this really helped make connections for my students. Then later they used their knowledge of syllables
(one vowel sound in each syllable) to "see" syllables in the words they are reading.
Give it a try! Let me know how it goes! Comment below or shoot me an email at 180daysofreading@gmail.com.
Amy
You might like these resources to help you. Click on the product to read more.
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