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Hi. my name is Anne Glass. I'm a reading and learning specialist at a private school in
New York City and I work with Kindergarteners through 3rd graders on Reading, Word Study,
and Writing Skills. In addition to be a reading specialist and learning specialist, I'm also
a parent and today I'm going to talk to you about topics in reading. Sight words are words
that occur frequently enough in written language that your child should just know them automatically
on sight. Sight words are also special for another reason in that they often do not follow
the rules of phonics. For example, one sight word, which is both a sight word because it's
high frequency and irregular would be the word, was. In the word was, if you were to
sound it out, you might end up writing W-U-Z, but we know that the word was is spelled W-A-S.
No the W is doing what it's expected to do, but the A sounds like a short U, and is not
saying a, like it normally would, and the S sounds like a Z. So that's why it's a tricky
word and when they are aught, you absolutely should make explicit that these words are
tricky and why they're tricky. Other examples of sight words that break the phonics rules
are said, and does, and have, and many many others. If you're interested in finding a
list, a complete list of sight words, I would refer you to the Dolch list. This was compiled
in the late 193o's by a psychologist named Edward Dolch and is easily found on the internet.
In the 1950's, the educational publishing company, Houghton Mifflin asked children's
author, Ted Geisel, if he could please write a children's book based on the Dolch word
list. And so he did illustrate and write a book which we now have grown to love, called
The Cat in the Hat, so that Dr. Seuss classic is actually the result of the challenge to
write a children's book using the Dolch list and there are 223 words in that book total
that are repeated.