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Teaching Phonics

eel words – Phonics Poster

Suggested Price $1.20

eel Words Phonics Poster – A FREE PRINTABLE phonics resource which focuses on phonemic awareness, auditory discrimination and decoding.

$

Suggested Price $1.20

Change to Zero for Free$0.00

Description

 Words that end with eel

eel Words Phonics Poster 

eel words

eel words

This eel words for kids poster is a great addition to any reading lesson.
It is i
deal for eel sound practice or as a 
student reference at a writing station.

(an eel phonics poster for you to download and print)

eel words list

eel
feel
heel
keel
kneel
peel
reel
wheel
steel

How to Download Your Words that end in eel Phonics Poster:

  1. Add the eel sound poster to your Cart using the ‘Add to Cart’ Button. NB You can only get the resources 2 at a time. #longstory
  2. Press the very small ‘View Cart’ Button at the very top right of this page.
  3. Press the ‘Proceed to Checkout’ Button
  4. Add your email address to prove you are human 
  5. Press ‘Place Order’ and then scroll down to ‘Order Details’ and click on your resource there. It will open ready to save, print, cut out and laminate.

One Way to Use this Poster eel sound Poster:

  1. Students sit in pairs.
  2. Teacher introduces the eel poster on the website and models decoding the words.
  3. Teacher models giving clues for the students to guess e.g. ‘The invention of the ______ is considered one of the most important in history’, ‘An underwater creature _______ ‘. 
  4. Students guess the word and spell it to their partner. 
Another Possible to Use this Poster:
  1. Complete a running record or a student.
  2. If the eel sound appears to be a sound the student needs knowledge on, go to https://phonics-teaching.com and find & print the eel words poster.
  3. Explore the vocabulary of the poster together.
  4. Practice decoding the words.
  5. Place the poster in a loose-leaf folder to create a book or personal sounds the student needs to work on. 

Yet Another Way You Might Like to Use this Poster

  • Recorded reading – students record themselves reading the word lists (phone, tablet, PC) and listen to themselves reading the words back. Ask them to identify words they need to practice and what they perceive to be the problem. How will we fix that problem?

Where to Next?

How about an Electronic Boggle Game or a FREE Sight Word Game

 
or some Bossy r Posters or maybe a Collection of Reading Games
 
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