Pupils should be taught to:
The boundary between revision of work covered in Reception and the introduction of new work may vary according to the programme used, but basic revision should include
Statutory requirements | Rules and guidance (non-statutory) | Example words (non-statutory) |
---|---|---|
The sounds /f/, /l/, /s/, /z/ and /k/ spelt ff, ll, ss, zz and ck | The /f/, /l/, /s/, /z/ sounds are usually spelt as ff, ll, ss, zz and ck if they come straight after a single vowel letter in short words. Exceptions: if, pal, us, bus, yes. | off, well, miss, buzz, back |
The /ŋ/ sound spelt n before k | bank, think, honk, sunk | |
Division of words into syllables | Each syllable is like a 'beat' in the spoken word. Words of more than one syllable often have an unstressed syllable in which the vowel sound is unclear. | pocket, rabbit, carrot, thunder, sunset |
-tch | The /tʃ/ sound is usually spelt as tch if it comes straight after a single vowel letter. Exceptions: rich, which, much, such. | catch, fetch, kitchen, notch, hutch |
The /v/ sound at the end of words | English words hardly ever end with the letter v, so if a word ends with a /v/ sound, the letter e usually needs to be added after the ‘v’. | have, live, give |
Adding s and es to words (plural of nouns and the third person singular of verbs) | If the ending sounds like /s/ or /z/, it is spelt as –s. If the ending sounds like /ɪz/ and forms an extra syllable or ‘beat’ in the word, it is spelt as –es. | cats, dogs, spends, rocks, thanks, catches |
Adding the endings –ing, –ed and –er to verbs where no change is needed to the root word | –ing and –er always add an extra syllable to the word and –ed sometimes does. The past tense of some verbs may sound as if it ends in /ɪd/ (extra syllable), /d/ or /t/ (no extra syllable), but all these endings are spelt –ed. If the verb ends in two consonant letters (the same or different), the ending is simply added on. | hunting, hunted, hunter, buzzing, buzzed, buzzer, jumping, jumped, jumper |
Adding –er and –est to adjectives where no change is needed to the root word | As with verbs (see above), if the adjective ends in two consonant letters (the same or different), the ending is simply added on. | grander, grandest, fresher, freshest, quicker, quickest |
Some may already be known, depending on the programmes used in Reception, but some will be new.
Vowel digraphs and trigraphs | Rules and guidance (non-statutory) | Example words (non-statutory) |
---|---|---|
ai, oi | The digraphs ai and oi are virtually never used at the end of English words. | rain, wait, train, paid, afraid, oil, join, coin, point, soil |
ay, oy | ay and oy are used for those sounds at the end of words and at the end of syllables. | day, play, say, way, stay boy, toy, enjoy, annoy |
a–e | made, came, same, take, safe | |
e–e | these, theme, complete | |
i–e | five, ride, like, time, side | |
o–e | home, those, woke, hope, hole | |
u–e | Both the /u:/ and /ju:/ (‘oo’ and ‘yoo’) sounds can be spelt as u–e. | June, rule, rude, use, tube, tune |
ar | car, start, park, arm, garden | |
ee | see, tree, green, meet, week | |
ea (/i:/) | sea, dream, meat, each, read (present tense) | |
ea (/ɛ/) | head, bread, meant, instead, read (past tense) | |
er (/ɜ:/) | (stressed sound): her, term, verb, person | |
er (/ə/) | (unstressed schwa sound): better, under, summer, winter, sister | |
ir | girl, bird, shirt, first, third | |
ur | turn, hurt, church, burst, Thursday | |
oo (/u:/) | Very few words end with the letters oo, although the few that do are often words that primary children in year 1 will encounter, for example, zoo | food, pool, moon, zoo, soon |
oo (/ʊ/) | book, took, foot, wood, good | |
oa | The digraph oa is very rare at the end of an English word. | boat, coat, road, coach, goal |
oe | toe, goes | |
ou | The only common English word ending in ou is you. | out, about, mouth, around, sound |
ow (/aʊ/) ow (/əʊ/) ue ew |
Both the /u:/ and /ju:/ (‘oo’ and ‘yoo’) sounds can be spelt as u–e, ue and ew. If words end in the /oo/ sound, ue and ew are more common spellings than oo. | now, how, brown, down, town own, blow, snow, grow, show, blue, clue, true, rescue, Tuesday, new, few, grew, flew, drew, threw |
ie (/aɪ/) | lie, tie, pie, cried, tried, dried | |
ie (/i:/) | chief, field, thief | |
igh | high, night, light, bright, right | |
or | for, short, born, horse, morning | |
ore | more, score, before, wore, shore | |
aw | saw, draw, yawn, crawl | |
au | author, August, dinosaur, astronaut | |
air | air, fair, pair, hair, chair | |
ear | dear, hear, beard, near, year | |
ear (/ɛə/) | bear, pear, wear | |
are (/ɛə/) | bare, dare, care, share, scared | |
Words ending –y | very, happy, funny, party, family | |
New consonant spellings ph and wh | The /f/ sound is not usually spelt as ph in short everyday words (e.g. fat, fill, fun). | dolphin, alphabet, phonics, elephant, when, where, which, wheel, while |
Using k for the /k/ sound | The /k/ sound is spelt as k rather than as c before e, i and y. | Kent, sketch, kit, skin, frisky |
Adding the prefix un- | The prefix un- is added to the beginning of a word without any change to the spelling of the root word. | unhappy, undo, unload, unfair, unlock |
Compound words | Compound words are two words joined together. Each part of the longer word is spelt as it would be if it were on its own. | football, playground, farmyard, bedroom, blackberry |
Common exception words | Pupils’ attention should be drawn to the grapheme-phoneme correspondences that do and do not fit in with what has been taught so far. | the, a, do, to, today, of, said, says, are, were, was, is, his, has, I, you, your, they, be, he, me, she, we, no, go, so, by, my, here, there, where, love, come, some, one, once, ask, friend, school, put, push, pull, full, house, our – and/or others, according to the programme used |
Reading should be taught alongside spelling, so that pupils understand that they can read back words they have spelt.
Pupils should be shown how to segment spoken words into individual phonemes and then how to represent the phonemes by the appropriate grapheme(s). It is important to recognise that phoneme-grapheme correspondences (which underpin spelling) are more variable than grapheme-phoneme correspondences (which underpin reading). For this reason, pupils need to do much more word-specific rehearsal for spelling than for reading.
At this stage pupils will be spelling some words in a phonically plausible way, even if sometimes incorrectly. Misspellings of words that pupils have been taught to spell should be corrected; other misspelt words should be used to teach pupils about alternative ways of representing those sounds.
Writing simple dictated sentences that include words taught so far gives pupils opportunities to apply and practise their spelling.