Teaching phonics in accordance with Breaking the “Sound” Barrier (BSB) allows students to grasp a personal understanding of fluency related to a few key components of research, study and instruction. BSB establishes its foundations on the following goals:
- Develop a meaningful set of keywords for each phonic sound
- Develop an overall theme using the key words.
- Make the key words memorable to the students by having them draw colorful pictures of the key words.
- Reinforce the overall theme while students are drawing to further develop memory links.
- Encourage students to overlearn the key words in sections by sending them to stations around the classroom using all of their senses.
- Have students write or say the key words over and over at the stations even if they seem to remember them the first time through.
- Recognize that after students master the key words with 100% accuracy, they transfer the word sounds to individual phonics sounds.
- Send them to the same multisensory stations. Students think of the word for the phonic letter and then only say the sound.
- Continue the stations until the sounds have been overlearned with 100% accuracy.
- Teach students to spell only what they can read. Now is the time to have students spell all of the sounds that they have learned to read.