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Decoding Toolkits for Literacy Success

When we used to teach reading within a leveled reading framework, early readers often used the pictures and sentence structure, along with some letters in order to predict or solve tricky words. We now know that this isn't the most efficient and effective way to teach early readers. Rather than saying things like "Reread and think about what makes sense," or "Check the picture and think about the first letters," we know that children should look at the word and use their phonics to decode it. That's what good readers do!


In order to provide early readers the opportunity to truly decode, we need to offer them texts that match their levels of phonics proficiency and learning. We can teach phonics and decoding step by step and bit by bit, allowing for successful practice in isolation (word lists and individual words) and in context (sentences and books). Fun tidbit: That's why we call our collections Bit by Bit Instructional Decodables.


It can help to think about the materials and practices that you need to teach early readers as your own decoding toolkit. In this post, we'll explore the flow of a lesson and the materials that are helpful to have in a decoding toolkit.


Generally, a great whole group, small group, or 1-1 early reading lesson includes phonemic awareness and phonics work in isolation to boost students' decoding abilities and then the opportunity to put that decoding to use in a carefully selected text, sometimes a decodable one.


Here's how it might work in a lesson supporting the a_e sound spelling. This target sound spelling comes in our Bit by Bit Decodables Collection 2: Blends and CVCe.


A lesson may start with a quick phonemic awareness warm up, asking students to blend sounds together and say words and segment sounds to take apart words. We recommend that you use words with the lesson's target sound spellings. For example, a lesson that will teach the a_e sound spelling for the long a, might begin with students blending and segmenting words like cake, bake, and name.


Next, the teacher can get to the core of the lesson, introducing or reviewing a target sound spelling. In this case, the a_e spelling for the long a. Here's a tip: Remember to use consistent language and images that support phonics keywords with students in whole group, small group, 1-1, and tutoring to avoid confusion! Consistent language and visuals can be a part of your toolkit. Our teacher guides provide example language, but we recommend you work with your own consistent language if you have a core phonics program.


Example lesson plan that includes phonemic awareness and phonics components

Then, the sound spelling can be put into use in isolated practice. Many teachers like to use blending lines, a term likely coined by Wiley Blevins, in order to do so. The teacher can model, invite students to work along chorally, and then provide corrective feedback as students practice decoding with the target sounds. Many blending lines also include words for review.


Blending lines with phonics words focusing on the silent e spelling of long a

After students have practiced decoding in isolation, it's time to put that decoding to good use. Using a carefully selected text, like a decodable one, can offer lots of targeted decoding practice. Because reading is a meaning making activity, introduce the text, focus on vocabulary, and set a purpose for reading. Then, get going! The text can be read in an echo reading, choral reading, partner reading, and/or independent reading model. Provide informative and corrective feedback as students read and work their decoding muscles.


Cover of decodable text that says At the Bake Shop

After reading the text, take a moment to make meaning about the text after the reading. This can be with just a few simple questions about the plot or even encouraging students to use a new vocabulary word. Fun tidbit: our Bit by Bit Decodables are purposefully brief so students can read the text relatively quickly.


Here's an example of before and after reading language that supports comprehension:

Example language for introducing and discussing a decodable text

To close, offer the text to children for rereading or to take home. You've done it! With your own decoding toolkit in hand, this kind of lesson can take place in just 8-12 minutes.


Daffodil Hill Press Bit by Bit Decodables provide resources to do just that. Both the Classroom Sets and One of Each Sets come with decodable texts that unroll phonics sequentially and systematically, as well as online lesson plans and phonic decoding word lists (we call them blending lines for each book). Classroom Sets come with these resources printed and spiral bound as a Teacher Kit. Our Spanish collection, Los Narcisos, offers the same instructional support for decoding in original Spanish language decodable texts, too.


Explore all of the Daffodil Hill Press collections here.

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