Let's GO! Books have less text and build confidence towards the same title Chapter Book.
This collection is the five books in Step 5 of the DOG ON A LOG Let’s GO! book series.
The books are:
--Bake A Cake
--The Crane At The Cave
--Ride A Bike
--Crane Or Crane
--The Swing Gate
Sight Words:
a, are, as, be, could, do, egg, eggs, for, from, go, goes, has, have, he, her, here, his, I, into, is, me, of, OK, or, put, puts, say, says, see, sees, she, should, the, their, there, they, to, walks, want, we, what, where, would, you, your
Each book has about 135 to 165 words.
These are Step 5 Let's GO! Books.
Decodable books let a learner who has been taught the phonics rules and sight words in that book sound them out and read them. These are systematic books because each Step of books build on the skills practiced in the prior Steps.
Most kids who read DOG ON A LOG Books are proud that they can finally read a book without so much frustration.
DOG ON A LOG Phonics Progression
Step 1
•Consonants, primary sounds
•Short vowels
•Digraphs: ch, sh, th, wh, ck
•2 and 3 sound words
•Possessive 's
Step 2
•Bonus letters (f, l, s, z after short vowel)
•"all"
•-s suffix
Step 3
•Letter Buddies: ang, ing, ong, ung, ank, ink, onk, unk
Step 4
•Consonant Blends to make 4 sound words
•3 and 4 sound words ending in -lk, -sk
Step 5
•Digraph blends -nch to make 3 and 4 sound words
•Silent e, including "-ke"
Step 6
•Exception words containing: ild, old, olt, ind, ost
Step 7
•5 sounds in a closed syllable word plus suffix -s (crunch, slumps)
•3 letter blends and up to 6 sounds in a closed syllable word (script, spring)
Step 8
•Two syllable words with 2 closed syllables, not blends (sunset, chicken, unlock)
Step 9
•Two syllable words with all previously introduced sounds including blends, exception words, and silent “e” (blacksmith, kindness, inside)
•Vowel digraphs: ai, ay, ea, ee, ie, oa, oe (rain, play, beach, tree, pie, goat, toe)
WATCH FOR MORE STEPS AND BOOKS COMING SOON
My child needed an ongoing supply of progressive phonics books that use an Orton-Gllingham approach. This proved to be a nearly impossible, expensive task to accomplish.