In a 50 minute lesson, "Building Words" takes about 5 minutes. If we are practicing a new concept, we often "borrow" 5 extra minutes from the next steps, but always keep at least 20 minutes for reading connected text (Step 6).
Step 3 is a chance to immediately practice new concepts, or review "not yet mastered" concepts. We practice less with word chains or minimal pairs to review current phonics patterns once our phonics concepts are beyond single syllables. But we do keep returning to minimal pairs to focus in on sounds or symbols that students are challenged by.
The year begins with word chains focusing in on skills the students need to learn. As always, we keep up a brisk, professional pace.
If a student is having difficulty with /ng/, spend the week doing word chains like hug, hung, lung, lug, rug, rung, rang, ring, rings, sings, sing, sin. Deleting and adding /ng/ to words. Noticing how /ng/ is formed, and how it is spelled "n" within words and "ng" at the end of words.
This is not a "one and done" activity - with our most challenged readers we can spend many months with single syllable word chains. And then return to them regularly.
This student's spelling and reading improved rapidly once he understood the sound/symbol connection.
At 13, he didn't appear to grasp the alphabetic principle - and he was challenged by the very first levels of our PA curriculum.
T: "Touch and say the sounds you say and hear in blunt." Ss repeat the word, touch each box and pronounce the phonemes in blunt. Then Ss spell by sound, then write the whole word. Ss then read the word, then read the whole list to each other when finished.
These simple templates are "age-appropriate." We start with 3-sound words. The letter "x" goes between two boxes to illustrate that it represents two sounds. "Qu" uses two boxes as well. We write those letters very close together.