An area of student need, involving detecting and discriminating differences in speech sounds. This is an oral skill and is not based on the student’s knowledge of letters.
• Use preferential seating to avoid distractions, so that the student is close enough to access assistive technology and manipulatives.
• Post reference information relating to phonology (word walls, word families, suffix and prefix rules, etc.).
• Provide additional time.
• Use oral testing and/or scribing.
• Allow the use of reference materials (dictionary).
• Ensure the student understands the questions.
• Provide opportunities for the student to demonstrate his/her learning by concrete application of the concepts.

A student with phonological processing needs may have limited sound-to-symbol (written letter) skills, may take longer or be unable to recognize sounds and identify parts of words (rhymes, blends, syllables etc.), may make errors in speech and/or written language and may not be able to remember things that are presented orally.
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