Kasey is in the consolidated alphabetic phase. which instructional approach will be most helpful to support her future reading skills?.

Respuesta :

Kasey can now use analogy to decipher words with many syllables, new words, and gibberish in the consolidated alphabetic phase.

The alphabetic phase of decoding, also known as the consolidated phase, emphasizes the order of the letters of a word. During this stage, a person organizes common letter and sound patterns into units. One also learns words from sight.

For instance, a pupil in the consolidated alphabetic phase who knew the sight words may, battle, tight, and sight would probably be able to associate the new word blight with the well-known rime, ight, without any direct instruction or letter-by-letter decoding.

A pupil also learns to recognize affixes during this period, including prefixes like un- and ex- and suffixes like -tion and -ly.

To learn more about alphabetic phase here

brainly.com/question/26698144

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