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Speedy Sight Words

Avery shows us Mapped Words® in the Speedy Sight Words handbookThese high frequency words are SO important! To store them in the Brain Word Bank learners need to glue together the speech sounds, spelling and meaning.  

By bonding speech sounds, spelling, and meaning, we secure words in the orthographic lexicon (the brain’s word bank). This process facilitates orthographic mapping, allowing reading without the need to decode each word laboriously. With strong phonemic awareness (the goal of the 10-day Speech Sound Play plan), it can take only one or two exposures to store words for instant recognition (on sight) and to enable children to recognise when words are spelt incorrectly and do not ‘look right’.

Use the file to create these mapped sight word cards. Use with the Monster Spelling Piano app
Miss Emma creates 'how to' videos for teachers and children. 
Also learn to map words with the Word Mapping Mastery handbook.

Bookmark this page - more downloads here soon!

Monster Mapped® Words give neurodivergent children a clear, visual bridge between speech and print, which is essential in an opaque orthography like English. Each grapheme is highlighted and paired with a Speech Sound Monster® (a Phonemie®) that “says” its sound, so the link between letters and sounds is obvious from the start. This approach reflects Speech Sound Mapping Theory, which holds that reading development depends on bonding three elements—speech sounds, spelling, and meaning—into a single mental representation.
 

Research in Orthographic Mapping Theory (Ehri, 2014) and the Self-Teaching Hypothesis (Share, 1995) shows that once children can see how spoken sounds map onto written forms, they can begin to store words in their long-term memory and start to teach themselves new words through independent reading. Monster Mapped® Words provide that first, explicit demonstration of the mapping whenever a child encounters a new word. By literally showing the connections, these books reduce cognitive load and help children form the necessary speech–print–meaning bonds.
 

Because the mapping is made visible and audible at the outset, children quickly internalise the relationships and no longer need the visual cues. This smooth transition supports the move into the self-teaching phase, where they can decode and spell unfamiliar words on their own. For neurodivergent learners who may struggle with synthetic phonics programmes, this explicit, temporary scaffolding makes the complex English code accessible and empowers them to become confident, independent readers and spellers.

The Phonemies Family of Speech Sound Monsters® were designed so that they are all dispplayed on the Speech Sound Mat and screen, and link to phonics learning. 

Imagine trying to explain reading to aliens. How do little humans turn speech sounds into words on a page, and how can they learn it so quickly? In this video I show how Speech Sound Monsters make reading simple, fun, and fast for young children. You will see how speech sounds “squish” together to form words, and how showing the hidden code makes reading finally make sense.

This is especially important for children at risk of the word mapping difficulties associated with dyslexia.

Learning sight words in a classroom setting

Children learn to map over 400 words in reception, as part of the 30 Minute Routine

Mapped Words - MyWordz!

Follow the Monster Sounds to Say the Word

High frequency words - Monster Mapped!

Learning high-frequency words within meaningful context is far easier and more memorable for children than isolated drill. We 'show the code' with Monster Mapped Words®.

 

I recommend following the NeuroReadies Learning Framework even when children are not neurodivergent. As soon as they have mastered the Green and Purple Code Levels, they begin the One, Two, Three and Away! pre-readers. These engaging stories present a rich array of high-frequency words in a repetitive and predictable way that children love.

 

All 36 pre-readers are Code Mapped®, clearly showing which letters form each grapheme and the Phonemies show the speech sounds they represent. Monster Mapping® provides a true linguistic phonics approach with a speech-to-print focus, unlike traditional synthetic phonics, which is predominantly print-to-speech and not always aligned with natural schema-driven learning. Ask your local library for the hard copy non-mapped books!
One, Two, Three and Away! are Published by The Reading Hut®

Mrs Blue-hat and the Little Brown Mouse
Sight words within meaningful context

When working through the Ten-Day Plan, you will notice when the early resources show the Blue Cow Phonemies (Speech Sound Monster) rather than The Silly Schwa, eg mapped to the last /a/ in 'E/mm/a' or 'M/ay/a'.

It is an important concept to understand because it focuses on the child’s understanding (schema) not on the ‘correctness’ of word mapping. This comes up in week one as we map their names, and also in the first high frequency words eg words 'the' and 'a' . 
You will also be mapping words that are relevant to the children eg the word 'Ea/s/t/er' if it's that time of year! 

Th/e can be mapped another way!

Mapped Words® 
Fry 100 Sight Words

PM Levelled Reader Sight Words, Letters and Sounds, Fry 100, Dolch 100 and the 7 Duck Levels (400+ HFWs) videos with audio are in the ICRWY Lessons app 

Speedy Sight Words

Follow the Speech Sound Monster Sounds, Say the Word!

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