Words in Colour is an approach to literacy invented by Caleb Gattegno.[1] Words in Colour first appeared in 1962, published simultaneously in the UK and US. Later versions were published in French (French: Lecture en Couleurs) and Spanish (Spanish: Letras en Color).[2]
Words in Colour is a synthetic phonics system that uses colour to indicate the phonetic properties of letters.[3] The system has been adapted for the use of deaf children,[4] and for dyslexic children.[3] Words in Colour was one of a number of colour assisted schemes, being followed by Colour Story Reading, Colour Phonics System and English Colour Code.[5]
Colours
Colours of Diagraphs
Letters and Groups
IPA
Colour
t, tt, te, ed, d, pt, bp, ct, cht, th, phth, 't
/t/
Magenta
w, wh, u, o
/w/
Cyan
m
/ɱ/
Crimson to Yellow
e, i
Example
Red
s, ss, se, 's, c, ce, c sc, st, sw, ps, sce, sse, sch, sth, sz
/s/
Light Green
o, oe, ow, owe, oa, ou, ew, oh, ough, eau, oo, au, eo ol
^Brenda Hopkin (November 1964). "Eight Hours to Literacy". Schools and College.
^"Words in Colour Catalogue". The Cuisenaire Company. 1973. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^ abStringer, Bobrow and Linn (9 May 2011). "Jacob, a case study of dyslexia in Canada". In Peggy L. Anderson; Regine Meier-Hedde (eds.). International Case Studies of Dyslexia. Routledge. p. 119. ISBN978-1-136-73592-9.
^Sister Caterina, O.P. "Words in Colour for the Deaf". Educational Explorers. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^Experiments and Innovations in Education (1–9). Unesco Press: 18–20. 1973. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)