WORKBOOK excerpt w.toc 1 1.pdf

Speech to Print Workbook

Language Exercises for Teachers

Third Edition

Louisa Cook Moats, Ed.D.

Moats Associates Consulting, Inc. Sun Valley, Idaho and Bruce L. Rosow, Ed.D. Windham Central Supervisory Union Williamsville, Vermont

Baltimore • London • Sydney

Excerpted from Speech to Print Workbook Third Edition by Louisa Cook Moats, Ed.D. and Bruce Rosow, Ed.D.


Contents

About the Downloads

About the Authors

Chapter 1 To the Student

Chapter 2 Phonetics

Chapter 3 Phonology

Chapter 4 The Structure of English Orthography

Chapter 5 Morphology

Chapter 6 Syntax

Chapter 7 Semantics

Appendix A Phoneme Tile Templates

Appendix B Developmental Spelling Inventories

Chapter 2 Phonetics

Exercise 1: Phoneme Counting

Count the speech sounds in the following words. Draw a short line for each speech sound you can identify (a “parking spot”) and, using conventional symbols as best you can, write the separate sounds in each word. The first three are done for you.

Word Sounds
ace /ā / /s/
nose /n/ /ō/ /z/
say /s/ /ā/

Exercise 2: Why Phonemes Are Elusive

  1. Does the phoneme /t/ sound and feel the same or different in tag, stag, water, and passed?
  2. Does the phoneme /k/ sound and feel the same or different in cat, scat, pinky, and tack?
  3. Look in a mirror or look at a partner and say the word pairs below. Does the mouth look and/or feel the same?
    • see, so
    • cheese, choose
    • zebra, zone
    • me, moo
  4. If the mouth is shaped differently for each of these first sounds, what do you think is causing the mouth position to change?
  5. What is the implication of this phonological reality for teaching and learning about speech sounds?

Exercise 3: Identify the Third Phoneme

Identify the third phoneme in the following words:

Exercise 4: Rationale for Phonetic Alphabet and Transcription

  1. cape, kick, chord, quit
  2. flew, blue, moo, do
  3. glad, glade, luggage

Exercise 5: Distinctive Features of Phonemes

  1. Circle the speech sounds that can be said continuously until you run out of breath.
  2. Circle the speech sounds that send air through the nose.

Exercise 6: Discover the Consonant Sounds of English

Use the chart to categorize the consonants.

Manner of articulation lips lips/teeth tongue between teeth tongue behind teeth roof of mouth back of mouth throat
stops
nasals
fricatives
liquids
glides

Chapter 2 Answer Key


Exercise 1: Phoneme Counting

Answers are shown using phonic symbols: ace /ā / /s/, say /s/ /ā/

Exercise 2: Why Phonemes Are Elusive

Mouth position varies for variations of sounds. Students’ perceptions are influenced by mouth position changes.

Exercise 3: Identify the Third Phoneme

Examples include music, squeeze, etc.

Exercise 4: Rationale for Phonetic Alphabet and Transcription

There are many ways to spell the same sound; a single letter can be used in different patterns.

Exercise 6: Discover the Consonant Sounds of English

Answers will vary based on categorization of consonants.