ACLFWU014
Elaborations
- recognising the sounds and syllables of familiar spoken words
- learning with the visual support of writing how speech sounds join to form syllables, morphemes and complete words and phrases
- learning that the writing system represent sounds and meanings, associating individual sounds or a range of sounds with particular letters and combinations of letters
- recognising the letters of the alphabet and knowing that there are lower and upper-case letters and that letters are arranged from left to right
- noticing that different languages may share similar speech sounds
- using knowledge of sound–symbol correspondences to isolate and read syllables, morphemes and familiar words
- recognising high-frequency sight words and morphemes
- recognising special alphabetic conventions, for example, digraphs representing a single sound, diacritics that alter the regular value of a letter
- using morphemes and syllabification to break up simple words and using visual memory to write more complex or less familiar words
- checking for inclusion of relevant punctuation, including capital letters for sentence beginnings, full stops, question marks and exclamation marks
- learning that written text in the language has conventions relating to words, spaces between words, layout on the page
- using known words in writing and spelling new or less familiar words using developing visual and morphemic knowledge
- reading texts aloud showing knowledge of sound–symbol relationships
ScOT catalogue terms