Congratulations on your purchase of the Really Good Literacy Center-in-a-Bag ™ Spanish Phoneme Puzzles, a hands-on, engaging activity that builds students’ phonological awareness and phonics skills. Objective Segment and blend words with three to five sounds. Meeting the Standards Spanish Phoneme Puzzles (Rompecabezas de fonemas) aligns with the Common Core State Standard for Spanish Language Arts below. For alignment with other state standards, please refer to our Web site’s Standards Match. Conciencia fonológica DF.K.2.d Separan y pronuncian los sonidos iniciales, medios y finales (fonemas) en palabras monosilábicas de tres fonemas (consonante-vocal consonante, o CVC). Incluyen palabras que terminan con /l/ y /r/ (ejemplo: sal, sol, mar, por). Phonological Awareness RF.K.2.d Isolate and pronounce the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds (phonemes) in spoken single-syllable words. This Really Good Stuff product includes: • 30 Phoneme Puzzles • Center Task Card • This Really Good Stuff Instructional Guide Spanish Phoneme Puzzles makes segmenting and blending phonemes, or sounds, easy and fun for emergent and early readers. Students put together puzzle pieces to build a complete picture, each piece representing one sound. Through repeated practice, students will begin to recognize how words are composed of individual sounds, an important component of early reading and writing instruction. Managing the Center-in-a-Bag™ • Visit our Web site www.reallygoodstuff.com to download Really Good Stuff Instructional Guides. • Separate the puzzles into colored sets (three-piece puzzles have green backs, four-piece puzzles have purple backs, five-piece puzzles have orange backs) and store in zippered plastic bags. • Make sure the selected puzzle pieces belong together. Matching pieces have the same number on the back. • Display the Center Task Card. Introducing Spanish Phoneme Puzzles Spanish Phoneme Puzzles introduces early learners to blending and segmenting phonemes in words. A phoneme is a sound segment in a word; for example, “ojo” has three phonemes: /o/j/o/. Phonological awareness instruction shows students how the sounds they hear in spoken language are represented in print. Teaching sounds along with letters helps students see how phonemic awareness relates to reading and writing. Phonemic awareness instruction is most effective when students are taught to use letters to represent phonemes. As students develop phonemic awareness, they will use their knowledge of letter sounds to decode and spell words. Spanish Phoneme Puzzles includes 30 puzzles—10 each of words with three, four, and five phonemes. The number of pieces for each puzzle matches the number of phonemes; for example, the puzzle for “ojo” has three pieces, one for each sound—/o/j/o/. Each puzzle is two-sided—the front shows a pictured word and the back shows the letters. To practice isolating and hearing individual sounds in words, students start on the picture side. They slide together the pieces to complete a picture, pronouncing each sound as they proceed, and then flip over the pieces to reveal the letters and read the word. To practice building words, students start on the other side. They pronounce each letter and put them in the order needed to make a word. They check their work by flipping over the pieces to see if the picture is complete. A correctly built word equals a complete picture. Helping Teachers Make A Difference ® © 2016 Really Good Stuff ® 1-800-366-1920 www.reallygoodstuff.com Made in China #307395 Rompecabezas de fonemas (Spanish Phoneme Puzzles) All instructional guides can be found online Helping Teachers Make A Difference ®