What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (2024)

  • August 22, 2021

Have you heard of r-controlled vowels before? Or possibly r-influenced vowels? Maybe “Bossy R?” People use different terms, but they’re referring to the same thing!

So how did the letter “r” get labeled as being bossy, anyway?!

In this blog post, I’m going to explain r-controlled vowels, give some examples, and share how I teach r-controlled vowels to my first and second grade students!

What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (1)

What Are R-Controlled / R-Influenced Vowels?

R-Controlled vowels, sometimes referred to as r-influenced vowels, occur when a vowel is followed by the letter “r” AND the sound of r impacts the vowel sound. (That’s where the “bossy r” title comes from – the r is influencing the sound of the vowel.)

There is also an “r-controlled” syllable type! If you or your students need a refresher on all syllable types, I have a resource for that as well (check out that blog post here).

Here is a list of the different r-influenced vowels:

  • -ar: car, farm, art, hard, star
  • -or: fork, sort, north, born, storm
  • -ar_e: large, carve
  • -are: share, care, square
  • -air: fair, chair, stairs
  • -er: clerk, letter, serve
  • -ear: hear, dear, fearful
  • -eer: cheer, deer, steer
  • -ir: first, bird, stir, thirsty
  • -ire: fire, hire, tire, inspire
  • -ier: drier, flier
  • -ore: chore, store
  • -oar: roar, board
  • -ur: turn, burn, surf
  • -ure: sure, cure, picture
  • -ur_e: nurse, curve

Are you exhausted? The good news is that you do NOT have to teach these all at once! (Keep reading to see exactly when I teach the patterns.)

One important thing to note: the degree to which r influences the vowel sound can vary. For example, in “clerk,” the r drastically changes the sound of e. In “cheer,” the long e sound can still be heard relatively clearly.

When Do You Teach the R-Controlled Vowels?

As I mentioned, we do not have to tackle all these patterns at once!

Here’s what I do in my phonics program, From Sounds to Spelling:

1st grade: Toward the middle to end of the school year, we spend time working on “ar” and “or.”

According to research on developmental spelling (for example, in Bear, Invernizzi, Templeton, and Johnston’s 2016 edition ofWords Their Way: Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling Instruction), students master “ar” and “or” before they master the other r-controlled spelling patterns, including “ir,” “er,” and “ur.”

This makes sense: “ir,” “er,” and “ur” all typically represent the sound /er/. There is not one clear rule that tells students which one to use. Therefore, lots of practice is required to help students learn to spell words with “ir,” “er,” and “ur.”

I do, however, teach students how to DECODE words with “ir,” “er,” and “ur,” even if they aren’t learning to spell them yet.

When I introduce r-controlled vowels “ar” and “or” in 1st grade, I also introduce the r-controlled vowel syllable type.

2nd grade: I devote an entire unit to r-controlled vowels! During the unit, I review “ar” and “or” but I add in all of the other combinations listed above.

Mastery of these patterns takes time. Students will not master everything in just one week! They also need to learn specific, high-utility (common, useful) words with these patterns, as some memorization is required.

How Do You Teach R-Controlled Vowels?

When I first present r-controlled vowels, I explain that…

With r-controlled vowels, the sound of the r “controls” and changes the expected vowel sound.

Next, I’ll walk you through how I’d teach each pattern. Since the first r-controlled vowel I’d recommend teaching is “ar,” I’ll use that as an example. It’s one of the simpler r-controlled vowels AND the pirate sound connection makes it more fun!

STEP 1: If possible, introduce a sign or anchor chart that students can use and refer back to.

I have a “Welcome aboard the pirate ship!” sign that I hang up. I say something like “Arrr, mateys! Today we are going to board a pirate ship! Climb on in the ship with me!” Corny? Yes. But attention-getting? Yes!! ?‍☠️

What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (2)

STEP 2: Explicitly teach the actual sound that the r-controlled vowel makes.

I tell my students that “Pirates say /ar/ and so do these letters!” I have them say the sound a few times.

STEP 3: Point out a few words that have that particular r-controlled vowel sound.

“‘Ar’ says /ar/ like in ‘car,’ ‘far,’ or ‘sharp.”

STEP 4: Explain how this is different than the normal short/long vowel sound.

“Do you hear how this is different from the normal short or long sound of a? A usually says /ă/ or /ā/. This is a whole new sound! When a comes before r, the r usually starts bossing it around. Bossy r works with the a to say /ar/.”

STEP 5: Move into a blending activity so students can practice.

“Let’s practice blending words with ‘ar.’ Look at the first word. Let’s say the sounds. /p/ /ar/ /t/ –> ‘part’

STEP 6: Continue with other activities for more and more practice! Read on below for that list 🙂

What Are Some Activities for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels?

I love, love, love having students play games to get the practice they need! In my No-Prep Phonics Games Bundle, I do have a set specifically for 1st Grade R-Controlled Vowels and 2nd Grade R-Controlled Vowels. Make sure to take a peek at those!

Another great activity is to use decodable readers. This provides students tons of practice with one skill at a time. In this case for r-controlled vowels, I have a set on r-controlled vowels for 1st Grade and 2nd Grade.

Here are some of my favorite teaching activities for working with r-controlled vowels! Several come frommy phonics program,From Sounds to Spelling, but they can be incorporated into any program.

  • Circle, underline, or highlight words with the r-controlled vowel BEFORE reading a decodable text
  • Complete word sorts for words with short/long vowel sounds vs. r-controlled vowel sounds
  • Practice dividing r-controlled vowel words into their syllables to read them
  • Play games with r-controlled vowel words to increase fluency with reading them
What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (3)


In this “Treasure Hunt Race” game, students work to collect coins (just like a pirate!) as they read the /ar/ words. Students keep moving around the board and saying words until someone collects enough coins to be the winner!

Conclusion

I hope this information on r-controlled vowels is helpful to you!

For a completely free resource where students can get practice on sorting words with r-controlled vowels, click here for my freebie “Phonics Sorts for K-2 Students.”

If you need more resources to teach this or other phonics skills, check out my phonics program,From Sounds to Spelling.

This program contains complete lesson plans, lots of activities, picture and word sorts, decodable texts, phonics posters, and more!

What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (4)

Happy teaching!

What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (5)

Related Posts:

Alison

NextWhat Are the Hard and Soft G and C Sounds? What Are Some Ideas For Teaching the Hard and Soft G and C Sounds?Next

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Lori

2 years ago

I am have a question about r controlled and -or, such as for, which can also be written as four, fore.Then, there are also words like more, core.Does -or or in the case of more does -ore make 1 sound?For example, if you were to place the sounds in Elkonin boxes would the or be in 1 box.Thank you for any insight on this.

Last edited 2 years ago by Lori

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Learning At The Primary Pond Team

2 years ago

Reply to Lori

Hi Lori! Great question. Yes, I would teach “or,” “ore” and “our” making one sound (in one sound box) for those words!

Reply

WPG

1 year ago

Reply to Lori

It’s better to teach ‘or’ as two separate sounds unless it is representing the /er/ sound, as in the word “work”.

Reply

Julie

2 years ago

I am wondering if you have any suggestions for students with IEP for speech working on all the -r sounds. Would you do the same activities with them?

Reply

Author

Learning At The Primary Pond Team

2 years ago

Reply to Julie

Hi Julie! I’d say first focus on “ar” by itself. Once mastery is shown for that, add on ir/ur/er since they make the same sound. Repetition, repetition!

Reply

Brandon Farrar

2 years ago

I have taught early elementary for 20 years and R-controlled vowels are one of the toughest concepts to teach. I have used the R-controlled games and they are a huge hit with my 1st and 2nd-grade readers. I also like the idea of making an anchor chart.

Last edited 2 years ago by Brandon Farrar

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Author

Learning At The Primary Pond Team

2 years ago

Reply to Brandon Farrar

Hey Brandon! Glad the games have been a hit with your students!

Reply

WPG

1 year ago

Reply to Brandon Farrar

The reason that it is so hard to teach is that it is so often explained incorrectly, like it is the article above.

Reply

Author

Learning At The Primary Pond Team

1 year ago

Reply to WPG

Would love to hear more as to what your thoughts are on this?

Reply

Welcome!

What Are R-Controlled Vowels? What Are Some Ideas for Teaching R-Controlled Vowels? - Learning at the Primary Pond (12)

I’m Alison, a literacy specialist. I love getting kids excited about reading and writing – and sharing teaching ideas with other teachers!

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FAQs

What is a r-controlled vowel? ›

In American English, /r/-controlled vowels (also called /r/-colored vowels) are vowels that are affected by the “r” sound, /r/. Whenever you see a vowel followed by the letter “r” in the same syllable, the 2 letters are pronounced together as one sound. For example, the word “bird” /bɝd/ is made of 3 sounds: b + ɝ + d.

When should R controlled vowels be taught? ›

The importance of good phonemic awareness is vital. Children should know how to identify parts of words, including the common long and short vowel sounds, before introducing r-controlled vowels. Teach r-controlled vowels in first grade, and continue to solidify skills through second grade and beyond.

How do you teach R controlled vowels in speech therapy? ›

Use a 'Compare and Contrast' Strategy.

Have your students read CVC words containing short 'a', for example: 'can', 'cat', 'cab', and 'cap'. Tell the students that the consonant 'r' changes the sound of the vowel immediately before it and read the word 'car' for them.

Why are r controlled vowels difficult? ›

The /r/ sound is difficult for many children and adults to pronounce and spell because there are many types of /r/ sounds within the English language. There are at least eight variations of the /r/ sound, and they show up in many places within words!

How to teach grade r vowels? ›

Tips for teaching r-controlled vowels:

For example, starting with one syllable words, ask children to pronounce words without r, like can, cat, had, tad, and then ask them to pronounce similar words with r, like car, hard, tar. Then ask them if they notice the difference.

What to teach after R-controlled vowels? ›

Overall Order

Short vowels. R-controlled vowels OR and AR (can introduce ER, IR, UR, but do not expect mastery yet) Long vowels spelled with silent e. Long vowel teams.

What is the learning objective for R controlled vowels? ›

Objectives: Students will learn to recognize and spell sets of words with r-controlled vowels. Students will become familiar with r-controlled spelling patterns.

Is morning an R controlled vowel? ›

This word has the correct r-controlled vowel pattern. Try again. The correct spelling is "morning." The letters "or" form the r-controlled vowel pattern.

Are R controlled vowels open or closed? ›

Overview of R-Controlled Syllables

In closed syllables, or syllables where a consonant “closes” in the vowel, the vowel makes its short sound. However, if the vowel is followed by the letter r, the vowel does not make its expected sound.

What is the difference between vocalic R and R controlled vowels? ›

The six different vocalic combinations, [ar, air, ear, er, or, ire], are collectively called vocalic R, r-controlled vowels, or vowel R. If R comes before the vowel (prevocalic) it remains consistently consonantal (ribbon, race, ring, run, etc.).

What is an R controlled vowel or in phonics? ›

R-controlled vowels are vowels (except 'a' and 'o' in most cases) that change to the sound /er/ when followed immediately by an 'r'. While 'ar' and 'or' syllables do not always change to become /er/ sounds, they are still considered r-controlled rather than short or long.

How do you map R controlled vowels? ›

R-Controlled Vowels—vowel letter followed by r—are represented with two letters in one box for one sound. For the word cart, the letters are mapped with the r-controlled vowel / ar / in one box.

How do you know when to use er or ir or ur? ›

This is a less common spelling for the sound or phoneme ER, and it is usually found in the middle of words. A good way to remember when an IR should be used (rather than a UR) is that, if you hear an m, d, t, or th after the ER sound, the best choice for spelling is to use the IR, rather than the UR.

What are the rules for AR phonics? ›

ar usually says its first sound 'ah' at the end of one-syllable words. ar usually says its first sound 'ah' before one consonant. ar usually says its second sound 'air' before the letter e. ar usually says its third sound 'aw' after the letter w.

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