120k views
3 votes
Raeshawn has learned all of his basic letter sounds and easily associates the sounds with their graphemes. When he looks at words like "cat" or "ban," he clearly sees those words, because he is fluently decoding them from left-to-right at an automatic level, not even aware he is decoding. Reashawn is at what phase of reading?

a. pre-alphabetic
b. partial-alphabetic
c. full-alphabetic
d. consolidated alphabetic

User Bob Tway
by
5.7k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

Full alphabetic phase

Step-by-step explanation:

The full alphabetic phase is the third phase of reading. At this point the learners are knowledgeable about the graphophonemic system, and are able to make connections between the phonemes and graphemes in words. They are able to decode or recognize words that are unfamiliar, automatically. Learners are capable of decoding and sounding words that match their knowledge of phonics.

Reashawn is at the full alphabetic phase of reading.

User PSpeed
by
6.4k points