Yes Phonics

8 Replies

I've been looking around for extra materials to add to this site's Phonics Resources pages, so I thought I'd work through the ones on Wikipedia's List of Phonics Programs page.

The first one on the list is Yes Phonics. So I went to the Yes Phonics website and found an orange box saying "Test Drive The Express Program For Free! Start Teaching Phonics Today! Start now".

"How good is that?" I thought. Two exclamation marks. I signed up straight away.

Immediately there was an email in my inbox, thanking me for signing up and promising me 14 days of exciting sample lessons, ready to use with my learner.

The email says, "Start by watching this fun, engaging 26-minute video" to learn the basics of how to easily decode English.

26 minutes is nearly half an hour, which is quite long, but anyway it's school holidays and I had time, so I settled down to watch.

The video contains a brief introduction by the grandson of the person who invented Yes Phonics, and then consists of a long sequence of 72 spellings and their sounds, often giving additional information about the sounds, plus an example word, phrase, or sentence.

The spellings are presented one after another, like this:

A voice says the sound or sounds for each spelling, any additional explanation and the word/phrase/sentence.

Unfortunately the information about use is sometimes inaccurate, as in the above example – what about "fiancee", "matinee", "melee", "puree" and "toupee"? Here's another one:

Really? What about "bayou", "caribou", "thou" and "you"? There is a great little website called "More Words" where you can search for words containing any spelling pattern. Click here for all 28 English words it says end in "ou".

The stated goal of this video lesson is for the student to watch the whole 26-minute video and "sound out each of the phonograms presented".

There isn't time for learners to sound out the spellings before the video voice starts, so I assume learners are meant to copy the voice. However a single instance of each spelling and its sounds is not likely to be enough for anyone to learn even one of them from this lesson.

Here's another screenshot which concerns me a little:

How many beginning readers/spellers even know what a root word is? Do they need to know at this stage?

How many can understand what is meant by "after a single vowel that says /a/-/e/-/i/-/o/-/u/". I know that my language-impaired learners struggle with sentences containing the conjunctions "before" and "after", so such a description isn't going to be much help to them.

I also wonder why the example sentence is "prick a pickle", not something more likely to be interesting and relevant to young learners, like "duck says quack". But maybe in Missoula, Montana, they do a lot of pickle-pricking.

Here's a description that seems especially calculated to send my kind of learners crosseyed:

"Beginning"? "Ending"? "But not"? "After the first"? "Except"? All in the same sentence? Forget it.

Having sat through all 26 minutes of this video, I can tell you that the Yes Phonics people's idea of fun and engaging is not mine.

I'm inclined to think that this video is more likely to make learners feel bored, overwhelmed and confused than anything else. I felt a bit that way myself while watching it, especially when I saw things like this:

As this is an American program, "leisure" is pronounced to rhyme with "seizure", which it doesn't in Australian or UK English. And if they don't count "air" as in "care", "fair" and "their" as one of what they say are the 45 (? what's the bonus sound?) sounds of English, what are they counting instead?

Also,"glutei", "lei" and "nuclei". When talking about English spelling, it's best to never say never.

The narrator's accent makes the word "root" sound like "rude", and he repeatedly says things like "used only at the end of a root word", so perhaps there has been some giggling which misled them to the conclusion that this video is fun and engaging for learners.

Anyway, Yes Phonics works from spellings to sounds, not from sounds to spellings, so it's not Synthetic Phonics. This video doesn't fill me with confidence that Yes Phonics presents information in a way that is effective and engaging for learners. So I don't plan to use or recommend it.

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8 responses to “Yes Phonics”

  1. Cheyenne says:

    Hi Alison, Wow! Quite the review of our program. Thanks for taking the test drive and offering your opinion on the matter.  I'm sure if you were to use the program with your students, you'd see a different outcome, in my humble opinion. http://www.yesphonics.com/english-spelling-rules-foreign-words/ Best Regards, Cheyenne Joseph Adamson President

  2. Sheila Bair says:

    I know this is an old thread, and perhaps no one will see it, but I’ll comment just in case it can help someone. We used a similar program many years ago. The words “fiancee”, “matinee”, “melee”, “puree” and “toupee” are not English words. People mistakenly think that words adopted from other languages into English should follow English spelling rules. They don’t. For example, we learned “English words do not end in i.” What about “ski?” The answer is, “ski is not an English word.” And so on.

    Learning phonograms in this way is so effective that our son started reading with just the basics before I could complete the materials. There is so much more that could be said about all that goes into spelling within a language and why things change and seem confusing. This type of program is excellent, and the rules can make the learning very fun. Our program taught the different sounds of each phonogram makes in the order of most-frequent occurrence. We chose to be very silly in learning the sounds. For example, “ough,” “four-letter ough,” we sang OH, OO, UF, OFF, AW, OW, to the tune of “Shave and haircut, two bits!”

    • Christine Evak says:

      Yes to this 100 %. We need to be careful those words mentioned above are not English words. Teaching phonograms this was is brilliant and allows for spelling to happen alongside reading.

      • alison says:

        If your definition of “not English” is a word that comes from another language, then almost every word in English dictionaries is not English, as there are hardly any words left in English from the indigenous languages of England. Modern English is made up of Germanic, Old Norse, French, Latin and Greek words, plus borrowed words from hundreds of other languages, for example the word “coffee” came into English from Arabic via Turkish and Dutch. “Melee” (according to Etymology Online) came into English in the 1640s, and it’s in my Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary, so it’s definitely an English word now, its third sense being specific to Australian Rules football: “an incident (which brings detriment to the game) in which four or more players are involved”. You will not persuade Australian Rules Football fans that melee is not an English word. We can teach children that the accented ‘e’ and ‘ee’ at the end of cafe, pate, souffle, fiancee, matinee and melee are from French and that’s why they’re spelt this way, but I’m not sure how helpful it is to tell children they’re “not English”.

  3. Denise says:

    Whilst no program is perfect, teaching synthetic phonics using programs like LEM and the mnemonics on the yes phonics cards resulted in a drop of RTI need from 30% of the class (using sounds write) to 10-12% of the class using LEM at our school and has stayed at that ratio for as long as we used LEM in kindergarten. It is far better than teaching only the short sounds when the letter sounds are introduced.

  4. Althea Everett says:

    How can I download and print these phonics cards? Or buy them…

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