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Chamchiman

Joined: 24 Apr 2006 Location: Digging the Grave
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2007 7:46 pm Post subject: Can you recommend a phonics website for my students? |
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Hi everyone,
I teach in a public elementary school. A few of my fifth and sixth grade students don't know the alphabet yet, and more than a few of them can't read a basic series of words (cat, hat, sat, mat, bat...). I'm already working with them individually (during test time, I choose two students per class (who will undoubtedly get zero on the test anyway) and bring them into my office to work on phonics) but they really need to do some work at home. I'm hoping that if I recommend (to the mother through the homeroom teacher) a good phonics/alphabet/phonemic awareness/basic reading drill website, they will do a little bit of home-study via the internet.
So, can anyone recommend such a site for me? (So far I've only found sites that are geared for kids who are native speakers. The vocabulary isn't appropriate - ideally, I'd like my students to learn the 'c' and 'd' sound by studying the words 'cat' and 'dog', not 'camel' and 'donkey'.)
Cheers! |
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Jshuah72
Joined: 18 Jul 2006 Location: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:02 pm Post subject: starfall |
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Back in the States I used starfall.com until the elementary school I worked at invested in Waterford (or something spelled like that). Starfall is pretty elementary, but it is free... |
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ddeubel

Joined: 20 Jul 2005
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:20 pm Post subject: |
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Starfall works and I like their stories. It just lacks some "friendliness" in my opinion. I would recommend for students, a software program. Much better option but then again, not free. I've used a few in my day, the Clifford from Scholastics is very expensive. this one has a cheap demo
http://www.phonicstutor.com/demo2.cfm
What I'd really recommend is something that is phonics but doesn't take the head on approach. I used with success, ereader, a text to speech software program that basically goes in your browser and reads everything. Kids love it and whatever they write, it speaks. Lots of cool voices. Great teacher tool also. Get it from CAST, the leaders in this technology, Aspire Reader is the new version. Demo probably available. I used this with kids with learning difficulties and it is great.
I also have in my video folder at the end, a whole series of videos, on phonics and about each letter. Also in the video folders, Sesame Street with lots of letter stuff. As well, I would have your kids try some of the kids books in my Booknook folder. Just put up some really cool flash ones, where you click a page and it turns, like a real book.
Lots of phonics workbooks and powerpoints on the site also, just browse....hope this works and yes, I do agree that Korean students really need a lot of remedial work with basic reading.....
DD |
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Chamchiman

Joined: 24 Apr 2006 Location: Digging the Grave
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Posted: Fri Apr 13, 2007 7:07 pm Post subject: |
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Jshuah72 and ddeubel: thank you for the replies. I'll check out Starfall. As for software programs, two of the kids I'm working with also went to the city-funded 'Christmas party for poor kids'/'fun with foreigners' event so I'm not entirely sure they'll be able to afford an expensive program.
Anyone else with any phonics sites (especially sites geared towards speakers of other languages) to recommend? |
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buymybook
Joined: 21 Feb 2005 Location: Telluride
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rokricky
Joined: 18 Feb 2006 Location: Yongsan, Seoul
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Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 3:39 am Post subject: Phonics website |
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Try this one: www.starfall.com
It's great for kids, so detailed. The best I've seen.
They start with the alphabet in a movie format. It's really entertaining. Then you can start reading simple stories which have the cutest animations. Check out the "Who am I", "My pet" ect. section it's sooo cool! |
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rokricky
Joined: 18 Feb 2006 Location: Yongsan, Seoul
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Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 3:41 am Post subject: |
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Ooops! I didn't read the other posts. I guess starfall is old news. |
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kat2

Joined: 25 Oct 2005 Location: Busan, South Korea
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Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 4:27 pm Post subject: |
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Someone already posted it, but I second this one:
http://www.starfall.com/n/level-k/index/load.htm?f
I gave it to my students who can't even recgonize the letters. Its quite good and entertaining for them I think (or hope). |
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mikekim
Joined: 11 Aug 2006
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Posted: Mon Apr 16, 2007 3:42 am Post subject: |
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I think this type of learning is really bad. I don't think Koreans can learn phonics to speak like us. They can't pronounce a lot of the sounds and then English looks nothing like it sounds. Unlike Hangul. So although a for apple and alligator work. There are 5 different A sounds in English and from this it looks like only 1 exists.
IE meat. mee-at? no its a silent A. meet = meat. OMFGWTFBBQ. Give up. |
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ajuma

Joined: 18 Feb 2003 Location: Anywere but Seoul!!
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K-in-C

Joined: 27 Mar 2003 Location: Heading somewhere
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Chamchiman

Joined: 24 Apr 2006 Location: Digging the Grave
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Posted: Wed Apr 18, 2007 5:56 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks everyone for your replies.
I've checked out Starfall and it seems pretty decent compared to what else is out there. I'm going to spend a little time with my kids taking them through the site and we'll see how it goes.
The hagwon I used to work at had a website with a phonics section that I thought was pretty good. I'm a little disappointed that I haven't been able to find a comparable site (dedicated to speakers of other languages), but Starfall will do for now I'm sure.
mikekim wrote: |
I think this type of learning is really bad. I don't think Koreans can learn phonics to speak like us. They can't pronounce a lot of the sounds and then English looks nothing like it sounds. Unlike Hangul. So although a for apple and alligator work. There are 5 different A sounds in English and from this it looks like only 1 exists.
IE meat. mee-at? no its a silent A. meet = meat. OMFGWTFBBQ. Give up. |
If I let the mother know that I'm giving the kid a website to play on, a list of sight words with a CD, and a pat on the back, it's a way for them to do something (at home) which is better than the nothing that they're currently doing (at home) and better than what I can do to teach them how to read during their public school class time (which is also nothing). |
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