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Phonemic and Phonetics (Developmental Reading)

First Edition, 2019


ISBN________

Republic Act 8293, Section 176 states that, “No copyright shall subsist in any work of
the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or
office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit.
Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition, payment of
royalties.”

Borrowed materials included in this module are owned by the respective copyright
holders. Effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from
their respective copyright owners. The publishers and authors do not represent nor claim
ownership of them.

Published by the Department of Education Division of Cagayan de Oro


Schools Division Superintendent: Jonathan S. Dela Peña, PhD, CESO V
Assistant Schools Division Superintendent: Alicia E. Anghay, PhD.
OIC Chief- Curriculum Implementation Division: Lorebina C. Carrasco

Development Team of the Phonemic and Phonetics (Developmental Reading)

Writers:Effie May B. Arces, Aisa T. Badana, John Vincent Besas, Arlyn Lea Luisita M. Cabatino,
Eva P. de los Santos, RomelritaL. Maghuyop,Analiza V. Sabello, Jocelyn Rovie N. Salo,
Lucille T. Tura, Darlenie G. Tulang, Beverly Zapanta
Illustrators:Sol C. Balista, Jayviert R. Bucalon, Jessica A. Bunani,Ruel Caiňa, Sheena Marie R.
Cascon, Maria Irene D. Casiňo, Cyrus Bradlee Galeon, Romualdo L. Isabela, Ryan
Boyd Pahapay,Johnwyne B. Liloc, Ryan Z. Roa
Cover Design Artist: Ryan Roa
Content Lay-out: Jairus John M. Gochuco
Internal Reviewers and Editors: Anita M. Gochuco – Division Reading Coordinator
Anita M. Gomez – Asst. Division Reading Coordinator
Jerry G. Roble, PhD. – Division English Coordinator
January Gay T. Valenzona, PhD. – LRMDS Manager
Reproduction (LRMDS): Gemma P. Pajayon and Lanie M. Signo
External Reviewer: Maria Flerida T. Nery, PhD.- Associate Professor II, XU SOE

DepEd-Division of Cagayan de Oro City-Learning Resource Management and Development System


Office Address: Fr. William Masterson Avenue, KM 5, Upper Balulang, Cagayan de Oro City
Email: cagayandeoro.city@deped.gov.ph
PREFACE
The Division of Cagayan de Oro City has come up with this
phonemic and phonetics material as an aid in teaching reading as a
developmental form. Based on the Phil-IRI manual, thirteen modules are
involved in this material to cater to the needs of the learners. It is
composed of exercises commencing from word, phrase, sentence, and
paragraph levels. Such arrangement is done in order to motivate
learners to read the texts with reading teachers modelling them.
To settle problems on sound productions, IPA symbols are used.
Every section of the material contains samples serving as a guide for
readers to follow.
This material requires teachers to be models first in producing
sounds. Hence, explicit teaching is promoted along this aspect. The
teachers do impart sounds to learners in four levels: word, phrase,
sentences, and paragraphs emphasizing a particular phoneme in
transcribed from using IPA symbols. For mastery level, teaching of
sounds in repeated form is needed.
On the other hand, the story has to read orally by the learner while
the teacher listens. The teacher corrects immediately the learner when
error is committed or just count the mistake without interrupting,
depending upon the purpose of the teacher. The comprehension
questions will be answered by the learner upon the teacher’s assistance.
If the learner answers in vernacular but is correct, it is credited as one
point since comprehension assessment is the target. However, if the
purpose of reading is mastery, the comprehension questions could be
excluded.
It is hoped that this material empowers both teachers and students
to love reading.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Copyright Notice ………………………………………………….. i
Preface ………………………………………………….. ii
Table of Contents …………………………………………………… iii
Summary of Modules …………………………………………………… iv

Module 6: Vowel Digraphs I


Lesson 1: The Sound ai, ay ……………………………………………………………… 1-9
A. Words ……………………………………………………………… 2
B. Phrases ……………………………………………………………… 6
C. Sentences ……………………………………………………………… 7
D. Story ……………………………………………………………… 8
Lesson 2: The Sound ee ……………..………………………………………………. 10-18
A. Words ……………………………………………………………… 11
B. Phrases ……………………………………………………………… 15
C. Sentences ……………………………………………………………… 16
D. Story ……………………………………………………………… 17
Lesson 3: The Sound ea …….……………………………………………………….. 19- 33
A. Words ……………………………………………………………… 20
B. Phrases ……………………………………………………………… 26
C. Sentences ……………………………………………………………… 28
D. Story ……………………………………………………………… 32
Lesson 4: The Sound ie …………………………………………………………….. 34- 48
A. Words ……………………………………………………………… 35
B. Phrases ……………………………………………………………… 41
C. Sentences ……………………………………………………………… 43
D. Story ……………………………………………………………… 45,47
SUMMARY OF MODULES
Module 1: The Short Vowel Sounds
Lesson 1: The Sound a
Lesson 2: The Sound e
Lesson 3: The Sound i
Lesson 4: The Sound o
Lesson 5: The Sound u
Module 2: Consonant Initial Blends
Lesson 1: Bl, CL, Fl and Gl blends
Lesson 2: Br, Cr, Dr and Pl blends
Module 3: Consonant Final Blends
Lesson 1: -ft, -lt, -nt, -st
Lesson 2: -lk, -ck
Lesson 3: -nd, -rd, -mp
Module 4: Consonant Digraphs
Lesson 1: ng
Lesson 2: nk
Lesson 3: sh
Lesson 4: -th (voiced)
Lesson 5: -th (unvoiced)
Lesson 6: ch, -ch, -tch
Lesson 7: wh
Module 5: Long Vowel
Lesson 1: long a
Lesson 2: long e
Module 6: Vowel Digraphs I
Lesson 1: ai as in pail
Lesson 2: ee as in sheep
Lesson 3: ea as in beat
Lesson 4: ie as in pie
Module 7: Vowel Digraphs II
Lesson 1: oa as in goat
Lesson 2: ou as in mouse
Lesson 3: oo as in cool
Lesson 4: au as in clause
Lesson 5: ew as in brew
Module 8: Diphthongs
Lesson 1: ow as in blow
Lesson 2: oy as in boy
Module 9: Phonograms
Lesson 1: -ld as in bold
Lesson 2: -ar as in bar
Lesson 3: -or as in born
Lesson 4: -er as in fern
Lesson 5: -al as in call
Lesson 6: -ul, -ull, -ush as in full, blush
Module 10: Words ending in –ed, -le, -tion, sion
Lesson 1: Final vowel y as in army
Lesson 2: Words ending in -le, -tion, -sion
Lesson 3: Words ending in -ed
Module 11: The sound of oo and ajar
Lesson 1: oo as in book
Lesson 2: unaccented /e/ as in ajar
Module 12: The sound of dz, f, se, ph, e, -tion, -sion
Lesson 1: c having /s/ sound
Lesson 2: ph having /f/ sound
Lesson 3: se having /z/ sound
Module 13: Words with silent sound of k, w, t, b, l
Lesson 1: The silent sound of k, w, t, b, l
Lesson 1

The Vowel Digraph: ai, ay

/eɪ/
as in Ail, Lay
PCLS SYMBOL THE IPA
/ey/ /eɪ/

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 1


A. Words

/p/

/p/+/eɪ/

/p/+/eɪ/+ /l/=

pail

[peɪl]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 2


/k/

/k/+/l/

/k/+/l/+/eɪ/=

clay

[kleɪ]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 3


/m/

/m/+/eɪ/

/m/+/eɪ/+/n/=

main

[meɪn]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 4


fail may

paid fray

wail play

raid sway

wait slay

rain relay

brain array

strain today

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 5


B. Phrases

gay maid

snail mail

straight way

fail to play

way to say

rain on May

painted way

waiting to play
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 6
C. Sentences

1. I am afraid of pain.
2. The maid is plain and
gay.

3. The painter painted the


way.

4. Yesterday, I waited in
the rain.

5. The stray man waited


on the main gate.

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 7


D. Story

The Snail

Gail the snail was very sad. She felt


she was too plain. “I know how to fix
this!” she said in her brain. I will stain
my shell with paint!” Gail did not want
to wait. Oh no! It started to rain. The
paint washed off. Gail the snail was
plain again!
Adapted from https://vi4.ilovetranslation.com/ifE8KCeMD2B=d/

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 8


Comprehension Questions:

1. What was the name of the snail in the


story?

2. Why was Gail sad?

3. What did Gail do to her shell?

4. At the end, why was Gail plain again?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 9


Lesson 2

The Vowel Digraph: ee

/i/
as in Bee
PCLS SYMBOL THE IPA
/iy/ /i/

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 10


A. Words

/b/

/b/+/i/

/b/+/i/+/f/=

beef

[bif]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 11


/ʤ/

/ʤ/+/i/

/ʤ/+/i/+/p/=

jeep

[ʤip]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 12


/g/

/g/+/r/

/g/+/r/

/g/+/r/+/i/

/g/+/r/+/i/+/n/=

green [grin]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 13


feel deep

keen heel

free seem

reed feet

peek greet

peep sleep

weed bleed

queen screen

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 14


B. Phrases

green weed

keen queen

three streets

a deep sleep

a green seed

bee on the tree

heels of my feet

feet under the sheet


Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 15
C. Sentences

1. I need to sneeze.
2. I feel free to sleep
deeply.
3. The bee is chasing me
up the tree.

4. Will the queen feed her


three sheep?

5. I like to keep my feet


under the sheet.

6. We need to sweep the


street.
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 16
D. Story

The Mean Queen

Jean was a queen. She was not a


nice queen. Jean was a very mean
queen. No one wanted to see her. Jean
would scream a mean scream. Jean
would scream at the cook. She threw

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 17


green beans at the cook. Jean threw
her red beets at the cook, too. Jean was
mean to her teacher. Jean did not like
to read her books, so she threw them.
No one liked mean Jean for a queen.
They were sad that she was their
queen.

Comprehension Questions:

1. Who is Jean?

2. What kind of queen is Jean?


3. What does Jean do that makes her
mean?
4. Why were the people sad that she
was their Queen?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 18


Lesson 3

The Vowel Digraph: ea

/i/;/ɛ/
as in Each;Bread
PCLS SYMBOL /iy/ PCLS SYMBOL /ɘ/
THE IPA /i/ THE IPA /ɛ/

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 19


A. Words

/l/
/l/+/i/
/l/+/i/+/f/=
leaf
[lif]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 20


/b/
/b/+/i/
/b/+/i/+/n/=
bean
[bin]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 21


/b/
/b/+/r/
/b/+/r/+/ɛ/
/b/+/r/+/ɛ/+/d/=
bread
[brɛd]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 22


/b/
/b/+/r/
/b/+/r/+/ɛ/
/b/+/r/+/ɛ/+/s/
/b/+/r/+/ɛ/+/s/+/t=
breast
[brɛst]
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 23
beat read
each seam
real leave
leap cream
beach lean
reach cheat
clean breathe
bleak teach

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 24


dead deaf
head stead
tread threat
dread heavy
death jealous
breath feather
dreamt health
thread zealous

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 25


A. Phrases

real deal
each meal
lean meat
beat the heat
teach to reach
neat and clean
steal the cream
beast at the beach
heavy lead
death threat
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 26
healthy head
steady health
tread heaven
zealous deaf
measure wealth
spread the bread

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 27


B. Sentences

1. Peanuts are a good


treat.

2. I will eat meat at the


feast.

3. I like to be neat and


clean.

4. Jean cleaned and


bleached her jeans.

5. When will the teacher


wear the beads I gave
her?
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 28
6. The girl ate bread for
breakfast.

7. The toy has a feathery


head.

8. The zealous deaf


dreamt big.

9. The politician received


death threat.

10. The man cannot


measure his wealth.

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 29


D. Story

Dean and the Bean

Dean got some beans from his


teacher. His teacher said he had to put
the beans in the grass and wait. Dean
expected a peanut or a peach tree. He
didn’t get what he expected.

Two weeks passed. Dean went to see


the plant. It was big and had many
leaves. Under each leaf was a meat. It

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 30


was not a peach tree. It was a meat
tree.
(Adopted from Blend Phonics Lessons and
Stories)

Comprehension Questions:

1. What did Dean’s teacher give him?

2. Where did Dean put the beans?

3. What was under each leaf?

4. Why did Dean not get what he


expected?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 31


C. Story

The Wet Hen

The hen got fed in a pen. The hen fell in the

cup. The hen got wet. The hen got wet, a wet

mess.

(Adopted from Blend Phonics Lessons and Stories)

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 32


Comprehension Questions:
1. Who get fed in the pen?
2. Where did the hen fall?
3. What happened to the hen when it fell in the
cup?
4. Can a hen lay eggs?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 33


Lesson 4

The Vowel Digraph: ie

/aɪ/;/i/
as in Pie;Field
PCLS SYMBOL /iy/ PCLS SYMBOL /a/]
THE IPA /i/ THE IPA /aɪ/

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 34


A. Words

/p/

/p/+/aɪ/=

pie

[paɪ]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 35


/d/
/d/+/r/
/d/+/r/+/aɪ/
/d/+/r/+/aɪ/+/d/=
dried
[draɪd]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 36


/p/
/p/+/r/
/p/+/r/+/i/
/p/+/r/+/i/+/s/
/p/+/r/+/i/+/s/+/t/=
priest
[prist]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 37


/ʧ/
/ʧ/+/i/
/ʧ/+/i/+/f/=
chief
[ʧif]

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 38


lie vie

lies skies

lied flies

tied fried

tried plies

cries belie

dries untie

spies applied

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 39


brief thief

grief yield

siege wield

belief movie

relief niece

shriek believe

fierce achieve

shield retrieve
Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 40
B. Phrases

fried pies

dried the tie

ties and plies

untie the plies

lied and cried

tries the plies

cried the spies

flies in the skies


Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 41
brief relief

chief priest

piece of brief

fierce thieves

shield from grief

believe the niece

believe the movie

retrieve the thieves


Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 42
C. Sentences

1. Ali tried to tie the rope.

2. The girl lied and cried.

3. The carpenter tries the


plier.

4. Little children vie for


the pies.

5. The skies dried the


ties.

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 43


1. Shiela’s grief is brief.

2. The chief priest sighed


a relief.

3. The thief believed he


did not lie.

4. She believes the


movie is brief.

5. My niece grieved when


the thief stole the fried
piece.

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 44


D. Story

Shiela’s Pie

Shiela makes fine pies. He who lies


or cries will not get pie. Shiela made
fried pies; at least she tried. “Flies, do
not eat the pies!” she cried.

(Adapted from Blend Phonics Lessons and Stories)

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 45


Comprehension Questions:
1. What kind of pies does Shiela
make?
2. Do liars get to eat her pie?
3. Can you get her pies if you cry?
4. What does Shiela think of flies on
pies?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 46


The Chief Priest

Do not give the chief priest grief. He


can help you see to believe and find
relief. Belief comes to those who yield.

(Adapted from Blend Phonics Lessons and


Stories)

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 47


Comprehension Questions:

1. How can the chief priest help?

2. To whom does belief come?

3. Have you ever felt grief?

4. Is seeing believing?

Deped-CDO-Reading Phonemic and Phonetics 6 | Page 48

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