Parenting

Script bank · Stage 3

Syllables — the whole engine.

The complete open-syllable matrix — every consonant blended across all five vowels — plus the three spelling-shift rows that trip everyone up (ca·que·qui·co·cu), closed syllables, and the consonant blends that come next. Drill these like times-tables: a minute at a time, light and often, aiming for fast and effortless, not just possible.

Two parents, one script. The Spanish is the real thing; hints sit beneath for the non-native parent and toggle off for the native co-teacher.

Sílabas

La escalera de sílabas The full syllable matrix

Blending a consonant across all five vowels. Read a row together, then have your child solo it; add a new row only when the last is easy. ↗ on the playbook

Las consonantes regulares — one sound, straight across

+aeiou
mmamemimomu
ppapepipopu
ssasesisosu
llalelilolu
ttatetitotu
nnaneninonu
ddadedidodu
ffafefifofu
bbabebibobu
vvavevivovu
rrareriroru
rrrrarrerrirrorru
chchachechichochu
ññañeñiñoñu
llllallellillollu
jjajejijoju
yyayeyiyoyu

Pronunciation: vowels are always ah · eh · ee · oh · oo, so ma me mi mo mu = mah meh mee moh moo. Single r between vowels is a soft tap; rr is rolled.

Success looks like Your child reads a full row smoothly, in and out of order, without sounding out each letter.

Cuidado

The spelling-shift rows

Three sounds keep the same sound across the vowels but change how they're spelled — these are the rows that surprise a new reader. Teach each as a single chant.

Same sound, shifting spelling

soundaeiou
/k/caquequicocu
/g/gagueguigogu
/θ/zacecizozu
/h/jagegijoju

ca · que · qui · co · cukah · keh · kee · koh · koothe /k/ chant — the u in que/qui is silent

ga · gue · gui · go · gugah · geh · gee · goh · goothe hard /g/ chant — the u in gue/gui is silent

za · ce · ci · zo · zuthah · theh · thee · thoh · thoothe /θ/ chant — z and c (before e, i) are the “th” in think (Castilian / Barcelona)

ja · ge · gi · jo · juhah · heh · hee · hoh · hoothe throaty /h/ chant — je/ji can also be spelled ge/gi

Sílabas cerradas

Closed syllables vowel + consonant

Open syllables (consonant + vowel) are 80% of the work, but real words also need closed syllables that end in a consonant — al, en, sol, pan. Drill these once the matrix is automatic.

Las más comunes

+ l
  • al
  • el
  • il
  • ol
  • ul
+ n
  • an
  • en
  • in
  • on
  • un
+ s
  • as
  • es
  • is
  • os
  • us
+ r
  • ar
  • er
  • ir
  • or
  • ur

Then read words built from them:

al·to, can·ta, sol, pan, ár·bolAHL-toh, KAHN-tah, sohl, pahn, AR-bohltall, sings, sun, bread, tree

Grupos consonánticos

Consonant blends two consonants, one breath

The last syllable type: two consonants that glide together before the vowel — bl, br, cl, cr, dr, fl, fr, gl, gr, pl, pr, tr. These unlock a huge swathe of words.

Cada grupo con un ejemplo

  • blblanco · white
  • brbrazo · arm
  • clclase · class
  • crcruz · cross
  • drdragón · dragon
  • flflor · flower
  • frfresa · strawberry
  • glglobo · balloon
  • grgrande · big
  • plplato · plate
  • prprimo · cousin
  • trtren · train

bla · ble · bli · blo · blublah · bleh · blee · bloh · bloodrill any blend across the vowels, just like the matrix

tra · tre · tri · tro · trutrah · treh · tree · troh · troothe tr row

Sílabas

Sílabas relámpago Lightning syllables

Instant, automatic recognition — speed, not just accuracy. Flash a card for a second; child reads it fast, no stretching. ↗ on the playbook

Sets para las cartas — mix within a set so it's not a predictable row

set 1 easy mix
  • ma
  • si
  • lo
  • pe
  • tu
  • na
set 2 more letters
  • de
  • fo
  • bu
  • cha
  • ri
  • ya
set 3 the tricky ones
  • que
  • ge
  • lla
  • ño
  • ci
  • gui

Success looks like Your child names the syllable on sight, with no sounding-out. That automaticity is the whole point of this stage.

Sílabas

Encuentra la sílaba Find the syllable

Matching a heard syllable to its written form. Lay out a row; you say one, child points — then swap roles. ↗ on the playbook

Filas para señalar

ma · me · mi · mo · mu → “Señala mi.”seh-NYAH-lah meePoint to mi.

sa · se · si · so · su → “Señala so.”seh-NYAH-lah sohPoint to so.

pa · ta · la · da · na → “Señala la.”seh-NYAH-lah lahmixed consonants, same vowel — harder

que · ge · lla · ño · ci → “Señala ño.”seh-NYAH-lah nyohthe tricky set

Success looks like Your child points to the right syllable quickly, telling the five vowels apart by both sound and sight.

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