SPELD SA Set 5 Sant Sings A song-DS
SPELD SA Set 5 Sant Sings A song-DS
SPELD SA Set 5 Sant Sings A song-DS
SPELD SA
Phonic Book Series
Learning to read
SPELD SA Phonic Books support the teaching of reading by using a structured synthetic
phonics approach. They are designed to build on the pre-reading skills of oral language
and phonological awareness needed for reading success. The books support the learning of
letter-sounds and blending in a sequential phonic order, helping students to develop their
independent decoding skills. The books also contain limited high frequency words that need
to be taught before reading the book. The questions and activities focus on increasing a
student’s vocabulary and fluency and encourage the student to make deeper connections
with the author’s message.
Reading tips
A combination of letters can represent a sound, such as in boat (b-oa-t), song (s-o-ng), fern
(f-er-n), shout (sh-ou-t), or night (n-igh-t).
The suffix ‹ed› can represent the sound /d/ as in ‘rubbed’, /t/ as in ‘packed’ and
/id/ as in ‘landed’.
Words can contain schwa vowel sounds. The schwa is pronounced as an /uh/ sound, such
as in, ‘Nana’, ‘butter’, ‘across’, ‘the’. Explore with the student which part of the word has the
schwa sound by breaking the word into its sounds. Take note of how the schwa sound is spelt.
Practice page
Practise the sounds
s, a, t, i, p, n
c, k, ck, e, h, r, m, d
g, o, u, l, f, b
ai, j, oa, ie, ee, or
z, w, ng, v, oo (book), oo (room)
Practise blending sounds
the he all a
Vocabulary
The words on this page can be used to help the student’s comprehension before, during or
after reading the book. Link the meanings of words with what the student already knows,
show examples or have students act out the words.
1
He sings for Dan in
the van.
2
He sings for the kid’s
band.
3
Sant sings for all the
mob. Is it a good job?
4
Sant sings as he looks
at a book. He sings
as he cooks.
5
He sings as he zooms
in the room.
6
Sant sings in the
pool too.
7
Wait! Can ants swim?
Just look at him.
8
From blending to fluency
To develop fluency, the student needs to re-read the same book multiple times. Students
might initially sound out every word and re-read every sentence but, with practice, blending
will become more automatic. The fluency chart can be used to develop automaticity of
blending by providing single word blending practice.
While reading the book, the student:
• blends the sounds of each unknown word in the sentence
• identifies and reads high frequency words
• re-reads the sentence from the beginning
• discusses the meaning of the sentence
When finished, the student needs to re-read the whole book and practise reading the same
book until they can read at a steady pace with minimal sounding out.
1. How many places did Sant sing in? Count them on your fingers.
3. Do you like singing? If you do, tell me four places where you
like to sing.
5. Do you think that ants can swim? Have you ever seen an ant swim?
Fluency chart
at up for too
‘This artwork represents the literacy and numeracy learning journey, and the path towards independent learning.
The circles represent the collaborative learning and supports around children with specific learning difficulties,
including children, schools, families, SPELD SA and others.’ Elizabeth Close, Artist.
Each set of books introduces a group of sounds for students to blend to read words. The books with a single star
icon on the front cover contain a lower word count and less high frequency words. The books with two stars contain
a higher word count, a greater number of high frequency words and/or more complex word structure. Please
consider your student’s ability when choosing a book for them to read. For a comprehensive explanation of the
structure of the series, please refer to the SPELD SA website.
Acknowledgments
Produced by SPELD SA, 2021 and supported by the Government of South Australia.
Thanks to Jan Polkinghorne for her contributions in the development of the series and to Angela Weeks for
permission to use and revise some of her stories. Thanks to the Anangu Lands and Rueben Burton for support of
this project. Thanks also to Sandra Ken for cultural advice on Anangu communities and language.
SPELD SA is grateful for the contributions of volunteers for: consultation and project development; writing
texts, comprehension questions, charts and games; illustrating, photography and graphic design; character
development and cultural advice; speech and language advice. This is a wide community project, with talents,
expertise and knowledge being shared for a common purpose – to improve literacy. Thank you all.
Book design by Tricia Smith Design, compilation and additional design by Janet Stone.
SPELD SA Phonic Books follow the sequence of letter-sounds used in the Jolly Phonics
synthetic phonics program. The books can be used with other phonics programs.
Set 1 s, a, t, p, i, n
Set 2 c, k, ck, e, h, r, m, d
Set 3 g, o, u, l, f, b
Set 4 ai, j, oa, ie, ee, or
Set 5 z, w, ng, v, oo (book), oo (room)
Set 6 y, x, sh, ch, th (think), th (that)
Set 7 qu, ou, oi, ue, er, ar
Set 8 y (sunny), a (apron), a-e (cake), e (female), e-e (eve), i (silent), i-e (kite),
o (open), o-e (home), u (student), u-e (tune)
Set 9 ay (play), ey (they), oy (toy), y (mystery), ea (dream), ie (chief), y (dry),
igh (night)
Set 10 oe (toe), ow (rainbow), ow (now), ir (bird), ur (turn), ew (few),
au (launch), aw (paw), al (talk)
SPELD SA
Phonic Book Series