Beginning readers take the individual sounds of letters (phonemes) and connect the sounds together smoothly to read the word accurately.
If you see students who . . .
Proficient reading requires smooth blending of sounds. Readers often learn sounds in isolation, and this strategy helps them bring those sounds together.
When saying a word slowly, all the sounds must stay hooked together or the word will come apart.
A favorite way to teach this strategy is to give each student a rubber band. Then proceed as follows:
Stretch and Read is an activity for teaching students to say the word slowly:
Suggested Language
Also consider materials, setting, instructional practices, and cognitive processes.
These strategies may provide support before, during, and after teaching this strategy:
Each book below has a coordinating lesson with an explicit example to teach this strategy. Select a book cover below, then download the lesson to see for yourself. At The Daily CAFE these were called Lit Lessons.
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