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Struggling to teach those tricky "Wild Old Words" or "Kind Old Words"? As literacy teachers, we know the closed syllable rule means a short vowel sound, right? But what happens when words like wild, cold, or most break the rule? A standard closed syllable is a syllable that ends with one or more consonants, resulting in the vowel representing a short sound. This type comprises about 70% of all syllables in English. We often teach jingles, like "closed syllable, short sound," to help students remember this rule. However, in certain letter sequences, these closed syllables include long vowel sounds—these are the exceptions! Why Teaching Closed Syllable Exceptions is Crucial: Teaching these patterns is key because it: 1. Prevents Confusion: Without this explicit instruction, students might make errors, for example, reading "kind" with a short 'i' sound instead of a long 'i'. 2. Builds Flexibility: Students learn that certain patterns result in different vowel sounds, encouraging them to "flex those vowel sounds" when decoding unknown words. 3. Eliminates Memorization: Instead of relying on rote lists, kids can simply apply the knowledge of these specific word families that have long vowel sounds. 4. Connects Phonics to Etymology: You can provide a brief history lesson! Explain that these exceptions are old Anglo-Saxon words (fossils of very old words) whose spellings were "etched in stone" in our dictionaries, even when pronunciation changed over the last few hundred years. Key Exception Patterns Covered in the Video: We break down the specific letter sequences you need to teach, including examples of words that contain the long vowel sound: • ID: (like wild, mild, child) • IND: (like mind, find, blind) • OLD: (like mold, told, cold) • OLT: (like bolt, colt, jolt) • OST: (like most, host, post) • OLL: (like roll, pole, troll) Practical Teaching Strategies for Your Classroom: ⭐️ Sound Boxes: Use these for encoding practice, having students spell the long vowel sound represented by a single vowel letter. Get no-prep sound boxes here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/P... ⭐️ Decodables: Use excellent resources like decodable sentences and stories that include many words following these exception patterns. ⭐️ Word Ladders: Get no-prep word ladders for practicing here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/P... ⭐️ Word Sorts: Have students separate and sort words based on whether they hear a short or long vowel sound to reinforce the long sounds in these exception words. ⭐️ Anchor Charts: Display these concepts visually to reinforce learning. Watch now to gain confidence in teaching these essential syllable exceptions! Get the posters seen in this video: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/P... Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more PD in Pieces.