What is SSP?
Building the Alphabetic Code from the Start
SSP teaches children the alphabetic code of English, from the beginning, starting with simple letter sound correspondences and gradually being introduced to alternatives and more complex aspects.
Matching Reading and Spelling to Taught Sounds
In the first year children are never asked to read or spell any words that have letter sound correspondences they have not been taught.
Moving Towards Independent Reading
Once they have reached a sufficient level of fluency and confidence, with the use of decodable readers, they will be able to read any books that are suitable for their age and understanding.
A Shift from Whole Word Memorisation
In the past the majority of reading programmes have started with whole word memorisation, which we now know causes many children to have problems. These programmes have then used phonics incidentally or in an analytic style. This is very different to how SSP programmes teach.
Why SSP?
SSP introduces letter sounds in a planned sequence. Children learn how to synthesise (or blend) these individual sounds to form words. The ‘systematic’ part means that sounds are taught in a logical, structured order so that children build their skills step by step.
The Research Behind SSP
This approach has been proven by research to be the most effective way to teach early reading and writing, especially when taught daily with plenty of practice and revision. There are a number of pieces of independent research about learning to read, many of which have used Jolly Phonics, that have all found SSP to be the most effective method.