I know that there are four common spellings for the /or/ sound that is made by the r-controlled syllable types ‘or/ore/our/oar’. ‘or’ as in orbit, ‘ore’ as in score, ‘our’ as in four and ‘oar’ as in boar.
-ful, -ous, -ish, -ive suffixes form adjectives
-ly suffix forms adverbs,
-age suffix forms nouns
I know that there are three common spellings for the /er/ sound that is made by the r-controlled syllable types ‘er/ir/ur’. ’er’ as in ‘nerve’, ‘ir’ as in ‘birth’ and ‘ur’ as in ‘spurt’.
-ing suffix forms verbs,
-ous suffix forms adjectives
I know that there are three common spellings to make the long /ū/sound and have developed the ability to orthographically map the correct use of ‘ew/ue/ui’. ‘ew’ as in ‘new’, ‘ue’ as in ‘statue’ and ‘ui’ as in ‘fruit’.
un-, re- prefix, -in, -ed suffixes form verbs
-able suffix forms adjectives
I know that there are two sounds for /oa/ as in boat and /ow/ as in slow. These have to be orthographically mapped.
under- prefix, -er suffix forms nouns
I know that the most common spelling pattern to produce the long /ī/ vowel sound is ‘igh’ as in tight.
-er, -able suffixes form adjectives,
-ness suffix forms nouns
I know that when I am wanting to spell a word with the ‘oi/oy’ sound and that sound is at the beginning or middle of the word, the spelling will be ‘oi’ as in spoil and if the sound is at the end of a word or syllable, the spelling will be ‘oy’ as in boy or loy/al.
dis-, un- prefix, -able suffix forms adjectives.
-ly suffix forms adverb.
-ty suffix forms nouns.
I know that when I am wanting to spell a word with the long vowel sound ‘a’ and the vowel sound is at the beginning or middle of the word, the spelling will either be ‘a-e’ as in made or ‘ai’ as in maid and if the sound is at the end of a word or syllable, the spelling will be ‘ay’ as in stay or cray/fish.
: -y suffix forms adjective,
-ly suffix forms adverb
-er suffix forms noun
I can use my knowledge of open and closed syllables to spell 2 syllable words that end in a consonant and ‘le’, such as am/ple, ta/ble, crum/ble, dim/ple. I have a strategy to read these words. I also know that when adding a vowel suffix I must drop the ‘e’
re-, un- prefixes form verbs,
-y suffix forms adjectives,
-er suffix forms nouns
I know that when adding a vowel suffix/inflection to a base word with a ‘silent e’, we need to drop the ‘e’ before adding the suffix. I can identify how each suffix determines the tense and/or word class.
in-, un-, re- prefixes.
I can use my knowledge of open and closed syllables and identify syllables that contain a ‘schwa’ sound due to the pronunciation.
‘er’ or ‘a’ sounds like /ŭ/ or /ĭ/ vowel sound.
-in-, im-, dis- prefixes, -ly suffix forms adverbs.
Know that when adding a basic suffix to a base word with a short vowel sound we need to double the consonant to keep the vowel short.
Can identify how each suffix determines the tense and/or word class e.g: hopping, dripping -verbs, slipper -noun, nutt.
know that the suffix ‘-ed’ can say 3 different sounds. It says /d/ as in rubbed, /t/ as in winked and /id/ as in bunted.
-re, -un prefixes form adjectives
know that when I hear a word, or syllable that has a short vowel sound followed by a /ch/ sound, in most cases the correct spelling is ‘tch’.
-able suffix forms adjectives,
-ly suffix forms adverbs
-ness suffix forms nouns
Know that when I hear a word, or syllable that has a short vowel sound followed by a /k/ sound, in most cases the correct spelling is ‘ck’.
-er suffix forms nouns,
-ing, -ed suffixes form verbs
I am able to apply my increasing knowledge of the ‘soft sounds of g’ rule in generous, gigantic, gymnast.
-ion, -ment suffixes form nouns
-ive, -al, -ary suffixes form adjectives
identify when the letter ‘c’ is followed by an ‘e’ it will change the sound to a ‘soft sound’. ce = /s/ as in race. Able to apply increasing knowledge of the ‘soft sounds of c’ rule in eccentric, cyst, inciteful.
es, -s suffixes form verbs.
use the r controlled vowel ‘ar’ as in cart, car, far, bar, barn, farm, tarnish.
-ly suffix forms adverbs,
-er suffix forms adjectives - comparative
-est suffix forms adjectives - superlative
identify the "Floss" rule
the Floss rule means that we double the f, l or s when it follows a short vowel sound = hill, toss, cliff and I can add a basic suffix
identify the ‘silent e’ syllable type
this is where the e sound is not voiced/heard.
The ‘silent e’ makes the long vowel sound say its name = cake, smile.
identify a blend/consonant cluster - a blend/consonant cluster is two letters, two sounds, at the end of a word.
identify a blend/consonant cluster - a blend/consonant cluster is two letters, two sounds, at the beginning of a word.
Consonant ‘r’ blends - br cr dr fr gr pr tr.
'S' blends sc/sk sp st sw sl sm sn
Consonant 'l' blends - bl cl fl gl pl.
recognise that the letter ‘q’ is always followed by the letter ‘u’ and that the letters ‘ph’ together sound like /f/
identify which words require the /wh/ beginning sound in order to be spelt correctly.
identify the two sounds of /th/.
use the basic English /ch/ sound as /ch/ progressing to the Greek sound /ch/ as /k/ and the French sound /ch/ as /sh/
use the /sh/ - beginning and end sounds
read and spell 2 syllable words.