Phonological awareness is when you can hear and play with the sounds in words, like building blocks.
Imagine you have a toy box full of letter blocks, sound blocks instead of letters. When you say a word out loud, like "cat," it's like taking that toy box apart into smaller pieces: c, a, and t. That’s what phonological awareness is, being able to hear those little sound blocks inside words.
Playing with Sounds
Sometimes you take just one sound out of a word. Like if you say "cat" and then remove the c sound, you're left with "at." It's like taking away a block from your tower, it still stands, but it’s shorter!
Other times, you put sounds together to make new words. If you add a b sound in front of "at," you get "bat", like adding a new block to your tower.
Hearing the Pieces
You don’t need letters to do this; you just use your ears. It’s like listening closely to music and hearing individual notes inside a song. You can hear the sound blocks even if you can't see them, just by paying attention when you speak or listen.
Examples
- A child breaks down the word 'cat' into /k/, /a/, and /t/.
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See also
- What are affixes? | Reading | Khan Academy?
- Part 1: What is Literacy?
- What is The ability to read and write?
- How Does 5 Reasons English is Ridiculously Hard #Short Work?
- What is Trilingualism?