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Phonics

Phonics is the study of the sounds that make up words. In reading education, children are taught the sounds of letters and how those letters combine to form words.

The European languages share the Roman alphabet, while many of the Slavic languages used the Cyrillic alphabet. Some European languages have many irregularly pronounced words, which children must memorize. English has hundreds of "spelling words" for children to learn.

In the phonic method of teaching English, the schoolchildren are taught the following rules in English pronunciation:

Some educators who support the phonic method believe that when children master the pronunciation rules, they can read on their own. The children will be able to tie the written words with the verbal English they hear on TV and around the house. The educators who oppose this method believe knowing the sound without knowing the meaning of the word does not work. On the other extreme, some educators do not teach the pronunciation rules, words in books are read aloud in class. The children are supposed to remember how each word sounds one by one as they encounter them in the context of a story or other reading materials. Some smarter kids recognize certain pronunciation patterns on their own and they can extrapolate on how to read new words. Some unfortunate kids become illiterate if they fail to do enough reading exercise along with teachers or older kids. Kids who have parents who don't know English would have a hard time to learn reading this way.

Some school systems, such as California's, flip-flopped between the two controversial extremes over the years. Nowadays, some schools would do both Phonic and the whole language approach because most educators now recognize that the two systems complement each other and each alone has its drawbacks.

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