
Grades 3–5
Reading / Phonics / Word Study
45–60 Minutes
Students will be able to:
Identify the six common syllable types.
Divide multisyllabic words into syllables.
Apply syllable division strategies to decode unfamiliar words.
Read and spell multisyllabic words more accurately.
Whiteboard and markers
Syllable type anchor chart
Student notebooks
Word cards
Highlighters or pencils
Multisyllabic word list
Introduce the following terms:
Syllable
Closed syllable
Open syllable
Silent-e syllable
Vowel team syllable
R-controlled syllable
Consonant-le syllable
Explain that a syllable is a word part containing one vowel sound.
Write the following words on the board:
robot
basket
tiger
fantastic
Ask students:
Which word is the longest?
Can you clap the syllables in each word?
Have students clap and count syllables:
ro/bot (2)
bas/ket (2)
ti/ger (2)
fan/tas/tic (3)
Explain that breaking words into syllables helps readers decode longer words.
Introduce each syllable type with examples.
Ends with a consonant.
The vowel is usually short.
Examples:
cat
basket
rabbit
Ends with a vowel.
The vowel usually says its name.
Examples:
he
robot
tiger
Contains a silent e that makes the vowel long.
Examples:
cake
compete
athlete
Two or more vowels work together.
Examples:
team
coach
rainbow
A vowel followed by r.
Examples:
car
bird
market
Ends with consonant + le.
Examples:
table
candle
puzzle
Create a chart showing each type and examples.
Write the word:
sunset
Think aloud:
"I see two vowel sounds."
"The consonants are between the vowels."
"I divide between the consonants."
sun/set
Next word:
basket
bas/ket
Discuss how syllable division makes longer words easier to read.
Work through several examples together.
Words:
rabbit
tiger
sunset
market
candle
music
For each word:
Locate the vowels.
Count syllables.
Divide the word.
Identify the syllable types.
Example:
music
mu/sic
mu = open syllable
sic = closed syllable
Have students explain their reasoning.
Place students in pairs.
Provide word cards containing multisyllabic words:
pumpkin
rainbow
turtle
athlete
winter
complete
basket
candle
Students will:
Read the word.
Divide it into syllables.
Label each syllable type.
Read the complete word aloud.
Partners check each other's work.
Students complete the following chart:
| Word | Divide Into Syllables | Syllable Type(s) |
|---|---|---|
| robot | ______ | ______ |
| basket | ______ | ______ |
| candle | ______ | ______ |
| tiger | ______ | ______ |
| market | ______ | ______ |
Encourage students to use the syllable rules discussed during the lesson.
Write the word:
fantastic
Students independently:
Divide the word into syllables.
Read it aloud.
Identify the syllable types.
Possible answer:
fan/tas/tic
All three syllables are closed syllables.
Collect responses or review together.
Review:
What is a syllable?
Why do readers divide words into syllables?
Which syllable type was easiest to identify?
Which syllable type needs more practice?
Reinforce that syllable division is a powerful decoding strategy that helps readers tackle longer, unfamiliar words.
Use shorter two-syllable words.
Provide color-coded vowel highlighting.
Practice with teacher guidance in a small group.
Introduce three- and four-syllable words.
Challenge students to identify multiple syllable types in one word.
Have students create their own examples for each syllable type.
Students sort words by syllable type.
Students search classroom books for examples of each syllable type.
Students combine syllables to create new words.
Students identify and divide multisyllabic words during independent reading.
Students can:
Recognize the six common syllable types.
Divide multisyllabic words correctly.
Use syllable division strategies when reading unfamiliar words.
Explain how syllable types help with decoding and spelling.
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Posted 6/11/26
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