The 4 Must-Know Syllable Division Rules for Teaching Reading

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Ever wonder how to teach syllable division, especially if your current curriculum doesn’t cover this topic? In this video, I break down the 4 must-know syllable division rules, plus share my step by step process for teaching syllable division!
    Get your free week of phonics lesson plans here: www.fromsounds...
    ----------
    Phonics & Word Work Instruction Playlist: • How to teach letter so...
    Check out Learning At The Primary Pond teaching resources:
    TeachersPayTeachers: www.teacherspa...
    Phonics Program: www.fromsounds...
    Kindergarten Literacy Club: www.kindergart...
    1st & 2nd Grade Literacy Club: www.firstandse...
    Follow along on social:
    Facebook: / learningattheprimarypond
    Instagram: / learningattheprimarypond
    #learningattheprimarypond #teaching #literacy

Комментарии • 120

  • @valeryclark
    @valeryclark 16 дней назад +1

    Awesome! This is soooo much easier to teach and retain than the 7 syllable types that I have used in the past. Thank you

  • @glumraidh
    @glumraidh 2 года назад +25

    Great instructional video - works for independent / adult ESL learners too. I teach this in my adult classes and it's proven to tremendously advance not only their reading but also their speaking.

  • @lilylia7375
    @lilylia7375 8 месяцев назад +6

    very helpful video! My 5y old son had no idea how to read 2 months ago. I started to teach him phonics and at the same time, I read Razkids C level articles with him. Now he has no problem to read Razkid level F and know how to pronounce the words he didn’t know.

    • @lilylia7375
      @lilylia7375 8 месяцев назад

      I divided the word for him every time when he saw a new word. This video helps a lot when I teach him syllables. Thank you🎉

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  8 месяцев назад +1

      Wow! Sounds like you're doing a ton to support him and that he's made a lot of progress in a short amount of time!

  • @schokobrot72
    @schokobrot72 10 месяцев назад +3

    As a german student in (10th grade, having been studying english for 7 years lol), this helped a LOT! Thank you so much!

  • @hattierobinson347
    @hattierobinson347 2 года назад +5

    I needed this basic knowledge to teach syllable patterns. Thank You Allison.

  • @CarlosRamos1996
    @CarlosRamos1996 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is going to help me a lot on my EFL classes. Thank you so much!

  • @bannienglishkaliyona1960
    @bannienglishkaliyona1960 10 месяцев назад

    does this help to identify the long vowel or short vowel in the first syllable ? nope then why this syllable concept i don't understand.my point here is how do I know if it is a long vowel or short vowel in the word CABIN.what ist the point in knowing the pronunciation of a word and dividing it into syllables ?.if syllable helps in pronouncing the words accurately then its worth studying else its just a waste of time .

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  10 месяцев назад

      Knowing syllable types and rules can help you identify if it's a short or long vowel sound.

  • @davidchapman5835
    @davidchapman5835 Год назад +3

    Extremely helpful video. Please keep up the good work. I will definitely look into your other work.

  • @danielchigbue7962
    @danielchigbue7962 11 месяцев назад +1

    You made my day! Thank you.

  • @svetlanasovushka2075
    @svetlanasovushka2075 3 года назад +2

    Hello ! Warm Greetings from Moscow! You know this way to teach kids how to read ...really look like reading in Russia!!! We usually teach our kids to read like this)))) it is a discovery!!!

  • @noulor3571
    @noulor3571 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for all of your short and specific subject videos.🙌🏼🎉💕

  • @emiliaarmstrong1315
    @emiliaarmstrong1315 2 года назад +1

    Thank you. Your videos are very helpful. I love your phonic program.

  • @strikerguimaraes
    @strikerguimaraes Год назад

    Thanks it also helps foreigners who's learning English

  • @pacifist_SA
    @pacifist_SA 2 года назад +3

    I really appreciate your help but we need more videos about syllables, with more examples.
    Is there a book or a website we can learn more from?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 года назад

      I have a bunch of blogs about syllables you can check out! learningattheprimarypond.com/?s=syllable

  • @GideonJubilee
    @GideonJubilee Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for this lesson. You nailed it down for me.

  • @beccajohnson5557
    @beccajohnson5557 2 года назад +1

    Thank you SO much!!

  • @BabuBabu-dg3zf
    @BabuBabu-dg3zf 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks

  • @Schuler789
    @Schuler789 Год назад +1

    What a fantastic video

  • @mdsanaulhaque5307
    @mdsanaulhaque5307 Год назад +1

    thank you

  • @BabuBabu-dg3zf
    @BabuBabu-dg3zf 7 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent

  • @nancyg4321
    @nancyg4321 11 месяцев назад +1

    Could you explain how to divide “stubborn”, “possum”, “married”?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  11 месяцев назад +1

      stub-born, pos-sum, mar-ried

    • @morganwyatt5953
      @morganwyatt5953 10 месяцев назад

      These would all fall under the VC/CV category :)

    • @keithdenyer3937
      @keithdenyer3937 3 месяца назад

      I think it should be ma rried. We don't say mar ried. The rules don't always work.

  • @homulilly
    @homulilly 3 года назад +1

    I learned to teach with scoops underneath as opposed to splitting it with the line because the line could be confused with an L

  • @kimsummers2581
    @kimsummers2581 4 месяца назад

    The examples 'bathtub' and 'softball' are different because they are compound words. The syllable boundary is between the two words that have been compounded. This removes the need to incorrectly treat 'ft' as a digraph. This is separate to the VC/CV split which is as per some of your other examples in the comments is related to double consonants or consonant clusters, e.g. married, supper, dimple.

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  4 месяца назад +1

      Hey! Just wanted to clarify something - "ft" is actually a blend (so each sound maintains a different sound /f/ and /t/ producing two different consonants and sounds.) In the other example, "th" is a digraph so the "t" and "h" come together to make one sound /th/.

    • @kimsummers2581
      @kimsummers2581 4 месяца назад

      @@learningattheprimarypond Hi. Yes, you do make that clear in your video :) You do say that you're going to treat the 'ft' as one consonant sound though, so my info was meant as a way of helping to show how this can be avoided if compound words are considered in relation to syllables. Great video that makes it clear how the vowel plays a key role in syllables!

  • @asifmuniruniverse7732
    @asifmuniruniverse7732 Год назад +1

    It was important thing for me

  • @seekpeace494
    @seekpeace494 Год назад

    Awesome!
    Thank you so much ❤

  • @svetlanasovushka2075
    @svetlanasovushka2075 3 года назад +1

    Thank you !!! I teach kids English)))

  • @TaiLe-dr5ve
    @TaiLe-dr5ve 10 месяцев назад +1

    v|cv and vc|v, how to know which one is use for a word, we must look up dictionary or is there any tip to know this rule?

  • @jacksonamaral329
    @jacksonamaral329 Год назад

    Good lesson.

  • @Amy-eq4et
    @Amy-eq4et Год назад +1

    My 3 year old can read 3 letter words now. Can blend well. What should be the next step?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад

      Wow! If you think the child is ready, you could start doing some work with high frequency words! That's amazing :)

  • @mydancefitness
    @mydancefitness Год назад

    can you comment more on the VC/V pattern & why the example word COMET is broken as COM / ET vs CO / MET? Thanks!

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад +3

      Hi! This pattern is tricky because a word can either be divided before or after the single consonant in the middle of the vowels. You can teach students to "try it both ways" and see which one makes a word. In my dialect of English, comet has a short o sound, therefore it makes the most sense to create a closed syllable (and therefore a short vowel) and divide it like com/et. If we divided it like this: co/met, it would be pronounced with a long o sound. Hope that helps!

  • @SunandaHans-o2i
    @SunandaHans-o2i 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks ma'am this video so helpful .Can you please send pdf ma'am

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  5 месяцев назад

      Here is the link for the free phonics week: www.fromsoundstospelling.com/freetrial

  • @lisathomas8127
    @lisathomas8127 2 года назад

    Great video! Where is the link for the free resources to go along with the 4 must know syllable division rules?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 года назад

      Hi Lisa! Here's a free week of lesson plans from my From Sounds to Spelling phonics program: www.fromsoundstospelling.com/offers/kDL9WShY/checkout

  • @jacobstc
    @jacobstc 5 месяцев назад

    There is only one syllabification rule in English:
    Syllables are to be divided in such a way that the written syllables match the spoken ones in a one-to-one correspondence. For example, using the International Phonetic Alphabet, belly has the
    transcription /'be.li/ as the spoken syllables are ['be] and ['li].

  • @chrisbach1533
    @chrisbach1533 Год назад

    Well done! Like it very much. I hope in the future hyphens will get replaced with vertical bars to do syllabifications because they (hyphens) lead to confusions some times.
    Example:
    Chinese and korean given names mostly consists of two syllables. Some romanizations show the syllables, others dont. I ll give you an example from Korea:
    1) Gildong
    2) Gil-dong
    Its a given name. The problem is hyphens are also used to connect two seperate names with each other, like Jean-Claude or the german names Hans-Peter.
    The only difference is the first letter of the second syllable isnt capitalized, Gil-dong, not Gil-Dong.
    But since today so many ppl are spelling without usuing capital letters anymore, it looks like gil-dong and hans-peter, you cant see gildong is one name but hans and peter are two names.
    A vertiacal bar is better.
    Gil|dong and Hans-Peter
    gil|dong and hans-peter
    There is no confustion anymore.

  • @glasssmirror2314
    @glasssmirror2314 Год назад

    Tks Madam for these however, I was waiting how to pronounce the second syllable of the softball i.e ball as all are short vowels but it did not happen so pls help.

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад

      Hey there! "ball" follows the double final consonant rule which can be explained here - ruclips.net/video/KdorFVceIJg/видео.html

  • @alexandrearaujodecarvalho
    @alexandrearaujodecarvalho 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am studying English right now.

  • @sarahahmedabdel-hamid1209
    @sarahahmedabdel-hamid1209 Год назад

    Please I want to ask a question
    There are a lot of videos teach kids to read in that pattern
    Pa. Pe. Pi. Po. Pu
    And pronounce the vowel as short sound. Isn't that wrong??
    I think it will be opened syllable that way and will be pronounced as long sound not short as they do. Am I right??

  • @james09610
    @james09610 11 месяцев назад +3

    now I'm really confused. No wonder I can't do haiku.

  • @AaliyahWyndham
    @AaliyahWyndham 8 месяцев назад +2

    🎉

  • @vidhivora3578
    @vidhivora3578 9 месяцев назад

    How would you say Poem? Is it like po-em or poem?

  • @جنةالرحمان-خ7ش
    @جنةالرحمان-خ7ش Год назад

    Hello, I have got a question:
    We divide the word process right after the consonant which is between two vowels though the first vowel is long, could you tell me why????🤔

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад

      In the word "process," the "o" makes a short vowel sound!

    • @جنةالرحمان-خ7ش
      @جنةالرحمان-خ7ش Год назад

      @@learningattheprimarypond but actually it is a diphthong, why then it makes a short vowel sound? It is like the word procedure where we break the rule, but again why??
      I hope you could answer that, waiting your response.
      Thanks.

    • @keithdenyer3937
      @keithdenyer3937 2 месяца назад

      @@جنةالرحمان-خ7ش in US these words have a short 'o' but in UK they are long, procedure being usually pruhcedure.

  • @learningattheprimarypond
    @learningattheprimarypond  3 года назад +2

    Did you learn about syllables by simply clapping?⁠

  • @MsTranthihai71
    @MsTranthihai71 Год назад +1

  • @bekhtibrahim1670
    @bekhtibrahim1670 2 года назад

    When i Split as v/cv or vc/v please.thank you toi much.

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 года назад

      Hey there! You divide before the consonant if the first vowel has a long sound and divide after the consonant if the first vowel has a short sound.

  • @hardworkcreatively6545
    @hardworkcreatively6545 3 года назад

    Great Alice

  • @gigichiang2229
    @gigichiang2229 2 года назад

    why does counter has two syllables as count-er, while not as coun-ter?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 года назад

      Hey there! I think it could be coun-ter because you have the vc/cv combo. Something that I emphasize with my students is that we just do the best we can in dividing up a word and pronouncing it, but we know that sometimes the rules don’t all apply perfectly. Hope this helps!

    • @gigichiang2229
      @gigichiang2229 2 года назад +1

      @@learningattheprimarypond thank you so much. IT just confuses me so much .I can`t figure out which rule it follows. The same issue with festival divided into fes-ti-val (not fes-tiv-al like camel into cam-al)

  • @MrgrtaMBcs
    @MrgrtaMBcs 2 года назад

    What is the rule for consonant belnds? like start, floor, cream

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 года назад +1

      Those are all 1 syllable words, so this particular video isn't necessarily addressing that however, if they are part of a multisyllabic word, the blends are viewed as two separate consonants because they each still make their own sound!

    • @MrgrtaMBcs
      @MrgrtaMBcs 2 года назад

      Thank you very much for responding.

    • @MrgrtaMBcs
      @MrgrtaMBcs 2 года назад

      Your video has helped me in designing ny self crafted module for my niece. ❤❤🌸🌸

  • @ThilagaLashmi
    @ThilagaLashmi 6 месяцев назад

    Child is learn my English but he is not read what can I do

    • @ThilagaLashmi
      @ThilagaLashmi 6 месяцев назад

      He is 9y old

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  6 месяцев назад

      Hey there! I have tons of resources/blogs here that you may want to check out - learningattheprimarypond.com/parents/
      Is he in school? What does his teacher say?

  • @keshaunlewis9825
    @keshaunlewis9825 Год назад

    Do you provide worksheets

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад

      The worksheets in the video come from my phonics program, From Sounds to Spelling - www.fromsoundstospelling.com/
      I also have a product that's focused on just syllable types and division! Here's the link for that - www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Complete-Guide-to-Teaching-Syllable-Types-Syllable-Division-Rules-7174680

    • @keshaunlewis9825
      @keshaunlewis9825 Год назад

      Thank you so much and also can this help people with dyslexia

    • @keshaunlewis9825
      @keshaunlewis9825 Год назад

      ???

  • @annabellefigueroa7210
    @annabellefigueroa7210 4 месяца назад

    Hey

  • @LIBORSCHANNEL87
    @LIBORSCHANNEL87 4 месяца назад

    ❤😊

  • @carolgraff2696
    @carolgraff2696 Год назад

    Offering a free week is a tricky method to sign a person up to pay for your program. I do not wish to receive any of your information.

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад

      The free week does not require any payment or anything up front. Let me know if you change your mind :)

  • @lindafortin7999
    @lindafortin7999 Год назад

    Ouf! Vous parlez beaucoup trop vite, c’est vraiment difficile de vous suivre. Dommage! Ce que vous dites sembles vraiment intéressant.

  • @keithdenyer3937
    @keithdenyer3937 2 месяца назад

    This way doesn't always work. Sh ou ted , not sh out ed.

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  2 месяца назад

      The word "shouted" would be divided shout-ed into its syllables.

    • @keithdenyer3937
      @keithdenyer3937 2 месяца назад

      @@learningattheprimarypond but then it sounds robotic. As I say, the syllable method doesn't always apply. It only teaches the letters, not the pronouncing.

  • @TaiLe-dr5ve
    @TaiLe-dr5ve 9 месяцев назад

    About the word 'city', do you pronounce /ˈsɪt-i/ or /ˈsɪ-ti/? In Cambridge Dictionary it writes /ˈsɪt.i/. Thanks!

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  9 месяцев назад +1

      Hi there! Good question. Technically, the stressed syllable is on the first part - "cit" - and so it's divided "cit-y." But remember sometimes the way it's divided up writing vs how we say it/stress it can differ!

    • @TaiLe-dr5ve
      @TaiLe-dr5ve 9 месяцев назад

      @@learningattheprimarypond Do you mean the native speaker doesn't link/blend the /t/ with /sɪ/ in first syllable when speaking, they speak /sɪ/ + /ti/ instead /sɪt/ + /i/?

    • @keithdenyer3937
      @keithdenyer3937 3 месяца назад +1

      I think it should be ci ty.

    • @TaiLe-dr5ve
      @TaiLe-dr5ve 3 месяца назад +1

      @@keithdenyer3937 I think so.

  • @TaiLe-dr5ve
    @TaiLe-dr5ve 10 месяцев назад

    The word 'rhythm' we divide /ˈrɪð.əm/ or /ˈrɪ.ðəm/?

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  10 месяцев назад +1

      There can be some debate about words like this, but I'd say "rhyth-um"

    • @TaiLe-dr5ve
      @TaiLe-dr5ve 10 месяцев назад

      @@learningattheprimarypond about the word 'original', we divide to [əˈrɪdʒ.ə.nəl ] or [əˈrɪ.dʒə.nəl ]?
      Is there any different sound for these two phonetics when speaking?
      Thanks!

    • @rachellaurie5700
      @rachellaurie5700 3 месяца назад

      Do you have/ know of workbooks for syllable division? Anything all in one.

    • @TaiLe-dr5ve
      @TaiLe-dr5ve 3 месяца назад

      @@rachellaurie5700 syllable division in Cambridge Dictionary is stu|pid, many English teachers say it is total wrong.

  • @glancekhoza307
    @glancekhoza307 Год назад +1

    Goog job

  • @nufar3202
    @nufar3202 Год назад

    Hello, teacher, how's it going? I'd like to know if you have a video explaining the stressed's word rules😅

    • @learningattheprimarypond
      @learningattheprimarypond  Год назад +1

      Hi! I don't have a video but I'll add that to my ideas list! Often, the rule about stressing is that stress is put on the first syllable for nouns and second syllable for verbs. There are, of course, always exceptions though!

    • @nufar3202
      @nufar3202 Год назад

      @@learningattheprimarypondTeacher, thanks for answering me and for your explanation about it 🥺