Phonics Phonics Grade 3 — Set 1
particular
PARTICULAR
establish
ESTABLISH
character
CHARACTER
evidence
EVIDENCE
determine
DETERMINE
experience
EXPERIENCE
individual
INDIVIDUAL
necessary
NECESSARY
possible
POSSIBLE
government
GOVERNMENT
recognize
RECOGNIZE
attention
ATTENTION
consider
CONSIDER
represent
REPRESENT
knowledge
KNOWLEDGE
opportunity
OPPORTUNITY
encourage
ENCOURAGE
accomplish
ACCOMPLISH
independent
INDEPENDENT
responsible
RESPONSIBLE
More About This Collection
Systematic Phonics Practice for Every Reader
Phonics is the code that unlocks reading. When students understand the relationship between letters and sounds, they can decode any new word they encounter. Our Phonics worksheets cover every major phonics concept from the simplest beginning sounds to complex vowel patterns and silent letters.
8 Phonics Exercise Types
- Rhyming Match — pair words that share the same rime (-at, -ight, -oon)
- Beginning and Ending Sounds — isolate initial and final phonemes
- Ending Sound Sort — group words by their final phoneme
- Blend Reading — practice two- and three-consonant initial and final blends
- Digraph Worksheets — master sh, ch, th, wh, ph, ng, and gh patterns
- Silent Letter Practice — learn knight, knife, gnome, lamb and other silent-letter patterns
- Vowel Pattern Sort — sort words by vowel spelling and sound pattern
- Phonetic Transcription — introduction to IPA symbols for dictionary use
Grade Level and Phonics Scope
PreK-K: beginning sounds and rhyme. Grade 1-2: all short vowels, blends, digraphs, silent letters, and basic long vowels. Grade 3-4: all vowel patterns, multisyllabic words, and morpheme patterns. Phonics scope and sequence follows the research-based continuum used in structured literacy programs.