What Are Vowels?
A strong understanding of vowels can boost reading skills. Get insights on long and short vowels, vowel teams, the ‘Schwa’ sound, and more.
Vowels Versus Consonants
The alphabet is made up of 26 letters, five of which are vowels: A, E, I, O, and U. The other 21 letters, such as B, C, D, F, T, and Z, are called consonants. Vowels are the only letters in the alphabet that can be said by opening your mouth and using sound. In other words, when saying consonants, airflow is restricted, while vowels are pronounced with the mouth open and air flowing freely.
Try this: Say the letter A and hold the sound for five seconds. Notice how nothing needs to move to make the sound. Now say the sound for the letter B (“buh”). Your lips come together to block air to make the sound.
Why Are Vowels Special?
Vowels act as key building blocks to most words, making it essential for children to fully understand the sounds each vowel makes and how those sounds can change. Learning the basics and nuances of vowels can deepen your child’s understanding of phonics (the relationship between letters and the sounds they make), phonemes (distinct units of sound in a language), decoding, and ultimately help to improve their literacy and spelling skills.
What are Vowels? Vowels are letters that correspond to speech sounds made when air flows freely through the mouth, without being obstructed by the tongue, lips, or throat.
Short Vowels Versus Long Vowels
Vowels can make two distinct sounds–a short vowel sound and a long vowel sound. The ability to identify when a word uses a short or long vowel sound takes practice and is a milestone in growing literacy skills.
What Are Short Vowels?
Just as their name suggests, short vowel sounds are quicker to say and represents shorter letter sounds. When a single vowel occurs between consonants, it is often the short vowel sound. Here are a few examples of words using short vowel sounds:
- “a” as in “apple”
- “e” as in “elephant”
- “i” as in “igloo”
- “o” as in “octopus”
- “u” as in “umbrella”
What Are Long Vowels?
Long vowels sound just like the name of the letter and are often taught after short vowels. They’re usually made with pairs of letters, such as ea, or with the vowel-consonant-e pattern as in the words rake. Here are a few examples of words using long vowel sounds:
- “a” as in “acorn”
- “e” as in “eagle”
- “i” as in “ice cream”
- “o” as in “zone”
- “u” as in “unicorn”
Short vowel sounds are typically taught before longer vowel sounds because long vowel sounds often require an understanding of more complex concepts, such as two letters together (oi or ea) making a sound or the impact a silent “e” can have on the letter sounds in a word.
How to Teach Short Vowels
Short vowel sounds are more straightforward and are used in simpler words that young children encounter frequently, making them a good place to start when introducing vowels. Before diving into vowel instruction, be sure your child can recognize the letters of the alphabet, which allows them to understand that the letters A, E, I, O, and U are vowels.
Here are a few tips to help guide your approach to teaching short vowel sounds to your child.
- Use CVC words. Teach short vowel sounds using CVC words, such as cat and jet, emphasizing the short vowel sound in each word. CVC words are often easier for children to decode or sound out.
- Practice with word families. Word families, which repeat the same vowel-consonant ending and rhyme, can help children identify the same short vowel sound in different words.
- Teach one short vowel sound at a time. Don’t move on to the next short vowel sound until your child seems has a solid understanding of the vowel you’re currently working on.
- Use a variety of vowel activities. Incorporating a hands-on approach to teaching vowel sounds can help children stay engaged with learning and creates different educational opportunities for them.
How to Teach Long Vowels
Transition to teaching long vowel sounds after your child demonstrates mastery of short vowel sounds and can handle more advanced vowel patterns, such as silent “e” or vowel teams, such as”ai” in rain.
There are four common patterns that contribute to long vowel sounds. Understanding these patterns can help parents teach long vowel sounds and can aid children in knowing when a long vowel sound is used in a word.
Four Common Patterns to Long Vowel Sounds
- Vowel-Consonant-e: This is also known as the “magic e” pattern, where a vowel is followed by a consonant and then an “e,” which makes the vowel long, as in the words cake, hope, and tire.
- Vowel Teams: Certain pairs of vowels work together to form a long vowel sound, such as “ea” in beat or “ai” in train. Learn more about vowel teams below.
- Open Syllables: In an open syllable (where the vowel is at the end of the syllable), the vowel is long, as in the words me, go, piano, and she.
- “I” or “O” Plus Two Consonants. When the letters “I” or “O” come before two consonants, the “i” and the “O” typically take on a long vowel sound, as in find, cold, and child.
What About Y?
You may have heard the phrase, “a, e, i, o, u and sometimes y.” It’s important to teach your child about Y and how it can be both a consonant and a vowel depending on the word it’s used in.
If the word has no other vowel like (gym or my), or if it appears at the end of a word (candy), it can be a vowel. However, it’s considered a consonant when it’s the first letter of the word, as in yard or yank.
Vowel Teams
Along with short and long vowel sounds come more nuanced aspects of vowels, such as vowel teams. A vowel team is a combination of two or more letters that work together to make a single vowel sound. Vowel teams can be made up of vowel digraphs, diphthongs, or longer combinations of letters.
Vowel digraphs: two vowels working together to make one sound, such as “ai” and “ea.”
Examples: rain, green, goat
Diphthongs: two vowels working together to create a sliding sound, such as “oi” and “ou.”
Examples: boy, join, trout
Longer combinations: three or more letters producing a sound, such as “eigh” and “ough.”
Examples: neigh, tough
The Schwa Sound
The “schwa” sound is a vowel sound that occurs in unstressed syllables, where a vowel doesn’t make a long or short sound. It’s often described as a “lazy” vowel sound that sounds like a short “uh” or the short “u” sound but is softer and weaker. It’s also the most common vowel sound in the English language.
Words with the Schwa Sound:
- ‘o’ in bottom
- ‘a’ in banana
- ‘e’ in chicken
- ‘o’ in bacon
- ‘a’ in away
R-Controlled Vowels
R-controlled vowels, also known as “Bossy R,” refer to a vowel’s sound changing to an entirely new sound when that vowel is followed by the letter R. For example, the words four, mark, and chirp have r-controlled vowels. In other words, an R-controlled vowel occurs when a vowel is directly followed by the letter ‘r’ and loses its typical long or short vowel sound.
R-controlled Vowel Sounds
- /or/ sound: in words such as four, fort, store, core
- /er/ sound: in words such as bird, girl, pearl, treasure
- /ar/ sound: in words such as car, far, dark, arm
The ABCmouse Approach to Vowels
ABCmouse provides an interactive and engaging approach to learning, including vowels and their sounds. Many ABCmouse vowel activities focus on identifying vowels and distinguishing between short and long vowel sounds and vowel teams. This practice helps children grow their understanding of different vowel sounds in a way that feels like play.
An ABCmouse subscription includes hundreds of interactive books, educational games, puzzles, and more, many of which offer children a range of ways to practice vowel sounds to help develop their literacy skills.
- Word Search Games
- Vowel Sound Puzzles
- Cutout Puzzles
- Vowel Sound Games
- Read-Aloud Books
ABCmouse’s early childhood and elementary curriculum is backed by research and created by expert teachers with decades of experience in early literacy instruction. ABCmouse’s interactive reading games can help children learn the phonics fundamentals needed to become successful and confident readers, including short vowel sounds, long vowel sounds, and consonant sounds. Best of all, our fun reading games span the entire range of early reading. From the beginning of preschool through the end of second grade, ABCmouse can help your child learn and grow their understanding of vowel sounds.
Online Learning Tools
You don’t need specialized software to teach …., but using a tool like ABCmouse can make it a lot easier! Our app offers interactive and visually stimulating content that reinforces word recognition and reading skills through games and engaging activities.
Check Out ABCmouse ➜
Additional Resources
ABCmouse Letter Songs & Videos
Focus on vowels or explore all 26 fun and catchy letter songs and videos here. Each one includes lyrics for easy sing alongs.
Browse ➜
10 Reading Strategies to Grow Kindergarten Literacy Skills
Tips and engaging activities for parents to help their child become a more confident and fluid reader.
Browse ➜
What’s Phonics & How Do I Teach It?
Phonics are an essential part of learning to read. Here are some tips to help you get started with your child.
Browse ➜
ABCmouse’s expert advice review process:
Our team of ABCmouse Curriculum Experts, made up of talented professionals in early childhood education and development, take a close look at educational content and learning claims. They put in the effort to make sure our information is accurate and current. We have a certified educator or another respected authority review the content, matching their expertise with the topic at hand. They’ll make sure the content is thorough and follows the latest research and educational guidelines. If they think we can make things even better, they’ll chat with our editorial team, and we’ll make those improvements right away. Only after a reviewer gives their thumbs-up does a piece of content get the official stamp of approval in the byline.