A Pattern-Based Approach to Teaching Long and Short Vowels
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Still have students who “just can’t get” long vowels versus short vowels—no matter how many anchor charts, hand signals, or reminders you try? In this segment, Dr. Pepin shares the shift that helps it finally stick: stop teaching long/short vowels as something students have to hear, and start teaching them as a spelling decision they can see.
You’ll learn how to simplify instruction by focusing first on one reliable contrast—closed syllables (short vowels) versus silent‑e patterns (long vowels)—and how to give students an easy script (“No e? Closed. Short.” / “E at the end? Silent‑e. Long.”) they can use every time they meet a word.
This episode also walks you through high-impact, low-prep routines that reduce guessing fast: minimal pairs (cap/cape, kit/kite), a “sounds first, then the word” decoding routine, change-one-letter dictation, and simple marking that doesn’t overwhelm the page. Practical, repeatable, and built for real classrooms—because when students can read the pattern, they can read the word.
Check out more at: www.ginapepin.com
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