LEARNING SET 1 SPEED SOUNDS
These are the Set 1 Speed Sounds written with one letter:
m a s d t i n p g o c k u b f e l h r j v y w z x
These are the sounds written with two letters (your child will call these ‘special friends’):
sh th ch qu ng nk ck
Check if your child can read these sounds. Make sure they say sounds like ‘mmm’, not letter names like ‘em’. Watch the Sound Pronunciation Guide video to help you.
You can help your child practise the Speed Sounds they have learnt with the Speed Sounds practice sheets further down this page.
Set 1 Sounds are taught in the following order together with rhymes to help children form the letters correctly and instantly recognise sounds ready for blending.
Set 1 |
|
Sound |
Rhyme |
m |
Down Maisie then over the two mountains. Maisie, mountain, mountain. |
a |
Round the apple, down the leaf. |
s |
Slide around the snake |
d |
Round the dinosaur's back, up his neck and down to his feet. |
t |
Down the tower, across the tower, |
i |
Down the insects body, dot for the head. |
n |
Down Nobby and over the net. |
p |
Down the plait, up and over the pirates face. |
g |
Round the girls face, down her hair and give her a curl |
o |
All around the orange |
c |
Curl around the caterpillar |
k |
Down the kangaroos body, tail and leg |
u |
Down and under the umbrella, up to the top and down to the puddle |
b |
Down the laces, over the toe and touch the heel |
f |
Down the stem and draw the leaves |
e |
Slice into the egg, go over the top, then under the egg |
l |
Down the long leg |
h |
Down the horse's head to the hooves and over his back |
sh |
Slither down the snake, then down the horse's head to the hooves and over his back |
r |
Down the robot's back, then up and curl |
j |
Down his body, curl and dot |
v |
Down a wing, up a wing |
y |
Down a horn, up a horn and under the yak's head. |
w |
Down, up, down, up the worm. |
th |
Down the tower, across the tower, then down the horse’s head to the hooves and over his back |
z |
Zig-zag-zig, down the zip. |
ch |
Curl around the caterpillar, , then down the horse's head to the hooves and over his back |
qu |
Round the queen’s head, up to her crown, down her hair and curl |
x |
Cross down the arm and leg and cross the other way |
ng |
A thing on a string |
nk |
I think I stink |
LEARNING TO BLEND WITH SET 1 SPEED SOUNDS
Your child is learning to read words containing Set 1 Speed Sounds by sound blending. For example:
m-a-t mat
c-a-t cat
g-o-t got
f-i-sh fish
s-p-o-t spot
b-e-s-t best
s-p-l-a-sh splash.
If your child is learning to sound blend, watch the Sound Blending video for tips on how to support them.
LEARNING SET 2 SPEED SOUNDS
These are the Set 2 Speed Sounds:
ay ee igh ow (as in blow) oo (as in zoo)
oo (as in look) ar or air ir ou (as in out) oy
Check if your child can read these sounds.
If your child is learning the Set 2 Speed Sounds, you could help them to:
- Complete the Speed Sounds practice sheets for the Speed Sounds they have learnt.
- Read the paper books and book bag books sent home with your child.
- Read the free eBooks at Red Ditty level, then Green level and then Purple level, in order. We recommend children read each eBook three times, as they would at school: once to read the words correctly, a second time with more fluency, and a third time in a ‘storyteller voice’ that shows their understanding.
The children are then taught Set 2 Sounds - the long vowels. When they are very confident with all of set 1 and 2 they are taught Set 3 Sounds.
Long vowel sound |
Set 2 Speed Sound cards Teach these first |
Set 3 Speed Sound cards |
|
ay |
ay: may I play |
a-e: make a cake |
ai: snail in the rain |
ee |
ee: what can you see |
ea: cup of tea |
e: he me we she be |
igh |
igh: fly high |
i-e: nice smile |
|
ow |
ow: blow the snow |
o-e: phone home |
ao: goat in a boat |
oo |
oo: poo at the zoo |
u-e: huge brute |
ew: chew the stew |
oo |
oo: look at a book |
|
|
ar |
ar: start the car |
|
|
or |
or: shut the door |
aw: yawn at dawn |
|
air |
air: that’s not fair |
are: share and care |
|
ir |
ir: whirl and twirl |
ur: nurse for a purse |
er: a better letter |
ou |
ou: shout it out |
ow: brown cow |
|
oy |
oy: toy for a boy |
oi: spoil the boy |
|
ire |
|
ire: fire fire! |
|
ear |
|
ear: hear with your ear |
|
ure |
|
ure: sure it’s pure? |
|
These are Set 3 Speed Sounds:
ea (as in tea)
oi (as in spoil)
a–e (as in cake)
i–e (as in smile)
o–e (as in home)
u–e (as in huge)
aw (as in yawn)
are (as in care)
ur (as in nurse)
er (as in letter)
ow (as in brown)
ai (as in snail)
oa (as in goat)
ew (as in chew)
ire (as in fire)
ear (as in hear)
ure (as in pure)
Check if your child can read these sounds.
If your child is learning Set 3 Speed Sounds, you could help them to:
- Complete the Speed Sounds practice sheets for the Speed Sounds they have learnt.
- Read the paper books and book bag books sent home with your child.
- Read the eBooks at Pink level, then Orange level and then Yellow level, in order. We recommend children read each eBook three times, as they would at school: once to read the words correctly, a second time with more fluency, and a third time in a ‘storyteller voice’ that shows their understanding.
If your child has learnt all three sets of Speed Sounds, they need to practise them and read books with words made up of those sounds. They could:
- Complete the Speed Sounds practice sheets for the Set 3 Speed Sounds.
- Read the eBooks at the Blue level and then the Grey level, in order. We recommend children read each eBook three times, as they would at school: once to read the words correctly, a second time with more fluency, and a third time in a ‘storyteller voice’ that shows their understanding.
Green and Red Words
Within all the books children will have Red and Green words to learn to help them to become speedy readers. Red words are words that are not easily decodable and challenge words to extend children’s vocabulary. Green words are linked to the sounds they have been learning and are easily decodable.
Dots and dashes represent the sound each letter makes.
These words are in the front of each of the paper books and book bag books sent home with children for you to practice.
During the RWI session, children will read the book three times and at each new reading they will have plenty of opportunities to practise using their developing comprehension skills. You may have heard your child talking about ‘hold, edit or build a sentence’.
Hold a sentence is an activity that encourages children to remember a whole sentence while focusing on spelling and punctuation.
Build a sentence is to give children the opportunity to create their own sentence to that shows the meaning of a word and edit a sentence allows the children to critique a sentence using their knowledge of spelling punctuation and grammar. Children complete a longer piece of independent writing, which gives them the opportunity to show off their creativity and to practice their spelling, grammar and punctuation.