Chart 4 - Consonant Digraphs, Married Consonants
GOALS of CHART 4 Married Consonants:
Consonant Digraphs are two consonant letters together that give up their individual Chart 2 sounds and make one new sound. We call them Married Consonants. Students need to recognize “Married Consonants” as a unit of sound.
The consonant digraphs are important to learn because the individual letters do NOT make the same consonant SOUNDS as they did on Chart 2, such as /s/ as in snake and /h/ as in hair. When these consonants join together, they make a whole new SOUND, /sh/ as in ship.
Important Hanson Have-to-know Application for Chart 4
Charts 1,2 and 3 need to be mastered; practice in Chart 3 with Syllable sequencing
Prompts for Chart 3.
Consonant Digraphs are two consonant letters together that give up their individual Chart 2 sounds and make one new sound. We call them Married Consonants. Students need to recognize “Married Consonants” as a unit of sound.
The consonant digraphs are important to learn because the individual letters do NOT make the same consonant SOUNDS as they did on Chart 2, such as /s/ as in snake and /h/ as in hair. When these consonants join together, they make a whole new SOUND, /sh/ as in ship.
Important Hanson Have-to-know Application for Chart 4
Charts 1,2 and 3 need to be mastered; practice in Chart 3 with Syllable sequencing
Prompts for Chart 3.