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WE BLEND ORAL SOUNDS TO MAKE WORDS


We blend oral sounds together every day when we speak to create words. We speak millions of words in conversations across the globe every day. Speech comes naturally to nearly everyone. Reading, on the other hand, is not so easy.


The term blends has been around a long time, I remember blends from my school days. This term is used to describe adjacent consonant sounds — two consonants that sit together are also called consonant clusters by speech pathologists who work on articulation problems with children.


As Carmen McGuinness states in Reading Reflex,

“Readers blend all sounds in a word as they read, not just the adjacent consonant sounds.”

Blending is the process of pushing sounds together to form words. It is vital that children can blend sounds in their own speech before moving on to segment and blend the sounds of unfamiliar words on a page.


Blends are often confused with digraphs, A digraph is 2 letters that represent a single sound. There are consonant digraphs and vowel digraphs. Often the letters represent a completely new sound, not the initial sounds together.


c and h go together to create /ch/ as in chips

s and h go together to create/sh/ as in ship

o and i go together to create /oi/ as in oil

In a blend, we can distinctly hear the two initial sounds, lamp, frog, gift.


Here is the problem, we can sound out frog, lamp, and gift using initial sounds. So why confuse matters and teach blends as a unit of sound. Let’s take the word frog as an example, f r o g from a phoneme point of view, the word has four sounds that correspond to 4 letters. The f and the r are independent of each other. The f and the r don’t go together to represent a new sound, they represent their initial sounds /f/ and /r/. Teaching them as the blend fr is an unnecessary step and often causes confusion.

All children need to start with the smallest unit of oral sound (phoneme) and build on from there. Segmenting words into individual sounds and blending the sounds together to form the word is a key skill for fluency. It is a skill that needs teaching. Often children don’t pick this up on their own.


Here are other examples,

The word blue has 4 letters and 3 sounds /b/ /l/ /ue/


The /b/ and the /l/ are separate sounds. The /b/ sound is first and the /l/ is second. The u and e go together as one vowel digraph the /oo/ sound and is the end sound.


The word cream has 5 letters and 4 sounds /c/ /r/ /ea/ /m/


The /c/ and the /r/ are separate sounds. The /ea/ go together as 1 vowel digraph the /ee/ sound and /m/ is the last sound.

In the beginning, children can’t possibly know how the whole alphabet system works.

Systematic literacy instruction that teaches all children how to decode and gives students an awareness of how sounds and letters work together must go hand in hand with incidental discussions about unknown words, their meaning, and definitions to build vocabulary. This explicit and implicit instruction will highlight the complexities of our language, and through this process, all children can flourish.


Talking is automatic and speech sounds are not something you think about unless there is a problem. The only time as an adult you think about sounds and letters is when you can’t read or spell a word and you revert to sounding it out. If you are the parent of a dinosaur lover, you can often find yourself sounding out many words.


Some children have trouble blending sounds to create words.

If this is happening to your little one, try starting with continuant consonants. Don’t know what they are? Read on to find out!


We can stretch continuant consonant sounds, this gives your little one has more time to hear the sounds. Try it — ssssss u n starting with sounds that stretch can have a big effect if your child is struggling to blend sounds. Now say — pan. Can you notice the difference? So words such as, sat, sit, mat, man, run, sun, zip are all great words to start your little learner off.


There is also research to back up this strategy. Gonzalez-Frey and Ehri (2020) demonstrated in their paper, that in the beginning, connected phonation is more effective than segmented phonation.


Surely, we want to teach all young children to read, write, and spell in the most effective way possible that limits confusion and quickly develops strong literacy skills.

Writing is an invented system so approaching reading, writing, and spelling from a speech to print point of view helps all children to gain ground quickly.

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The original sketch note.

And just for fun!

Want to know more about decoding and the decodable books that should be on every early learner’s shelf, go here

Fun activities for learning all about sounds letters and words can be found here.

A parent guide to the reading jargon can be found here.


More reading about blends

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