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Useless Maisie ABC - any recommendations?

21 replies

swedishmum · 19/11/2005 10:59

I put on a new Maisie ABC DVD with DD (22 months) yesterday. I was appalled at the pronunciation of the sounds - cuh, duh, ruh, huh etc and will write to them about dodgy educational content etc. What I want is a similar one without "uh" added to all the sounds. There's no need to start the learning process wrongly imo - I'm thinking she'll be too young for Jolly Phonics but haven't any experience of it really. I'm not trying to hothouse her or anything, just think that materials for children should be of a decent educational standard.
I'd appreciate your recommendations.
Thanks.

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Kathlean · 19/11/2005 13:35

I must be missing something.

Cuh, duh ruh is what you would get with jolly phonics as well isn't it? I think this is what most of them start with/sound like now. Cuh is for cat because that's how the 'c' sounds not how you say the letter.

Are you after the actual letter names instead cee, dee etc???

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tamum · 19/11/2005 13:39

I know what you mean swedishmum but it's very hard to type, isn't it? Just c rather than cuh or C. So many of them do that. I don't know of anything offhand as mine are too old, but surely there must be something?

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Twiglett · 19/11/2005 13:40

in jolly phonics R is 'rrr' though .. and there's no 'uh' really

Personally I wouldn't worry too much at this stage .. DS started with the proper names for letters .. as do most toddlers with the songs they sing and has had no problem picking up phonics

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Twiglett · 19/11/2005 13:40

is there anything on the jolly phonics site??

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SoupDragon · 19/11/2005 13:44

Easier to explain with S - sss rather than suh or ess.

I don't think it's going to be a problem with your 22month old DD though TBH! Apart from the problem of being American, what does Sesame Street do?

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Kathlean · 19/11/2005 13:47

ahh OK I get it now - told you I was missing something (-:

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bossykate · 19/11/2005 13:48

sesame street uses letter names not sounds.

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SoupDragon · 19/11/2005 13:49

Had a feeling it did. (didn't do me any harm as a child though ! )

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Twiglett · 19/11/2005 13:49

had a look at the jolly phonics site and I think their videos are only suitable for older children

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Eowyn · 19/11/2005 14:19

I agree about the pronunciation on the Maisy vid. Think we used to watch an old Mr Men one which was a bit less regional (I'm assuming it is Neil Morrissy's "problem" rather than the makers not knowing any better).

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MascaraOHara · 19/11/2005 14:26

I'm obviously missing something too, I teach dd with sounds - I also thought that was what jolly phonics did. DD does letterland at nursery and I think that is also sounds?

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aloha · 19/11/2005 14:28

Yes, but the right sounds - eg 'ssss' not 'suh'. If you say 'snake' you don't say 'suh-nake' you say 'sssnake'. Does that make sense?

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Eowyn · 19/11/2005 14:33

I think he pronounces a as uh if I remember rightly. Quite annoying but hasn't affected dd at all. So maybe neither here nor there...

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MascaraOHara · 19/11/2005 14:37

Oh I think I see - I was still thinking 'c' which I guess is a cuh sound - no? but I kow that 'cup' wouldn't be cuh-up - would it? I guess sounds don't really work over text?? as I could be reading the sound differently.

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Twiglett · 19/11/2005 14:42

'c' is actually the first sound so no voice in it .. does that make sense

because you wouldn't say cuh-astanets .. you'd just do the 'c' bit

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MascaraOHara · 19/11/2005 14:50

so is 'D' 'dee' or 'duh' - or am I still barking up the wrong tree?

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SoupDragon · 19/11/2005 17:02

It's just the d bit of duh if that makes sense A very short sound.

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motherinferior · 19/11/2005 17:03

But it's a lovely DVD! It's just Maisy! Don't worry about it!

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swedishmum · 19/11/2005 17:24

I know it might seem I'm over-reacting but as dd copies everything I'd rather she copied good habits - one of my other 3 is dyslexic and I know how much pronouncing phonemes correctly helps with mapping out words. I agree, the visual part's lovely.

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Wallace · 19/11/2005 19:46

It does help saying them correctly - makes spelling so much more difficult if they are wrong, for example ds would spell "super" as "s-oo-p" because he thinks "p" makes a "puh" sound. It wasn't me who taught him p=puh, but he picked it up anyway!

Quite a lot of the parents at dd's nursery talk about teaching their little ones the alphabet, empahsising that they are doing it correctly using the sounds of the letters, not the names - thay give things like "nuh" for "Nancy" instead of "en" as an example. I am always trying to explain (without looking like a know-it-all!) the the sounds is "nnn" not "nuh"

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Wallace · 19/11/2005 19:48

The point I was making (before I wandered off!) was that if you are keen for your dd to learn letters it is a good idea to start off with the correct phonemes, rather than learning one way, and then having to relearn

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