Victor Vampire’s Sound

Below you will find BONUS ACTIVITIES that come with your purchase of The Speech Sound Set Alphabet Cards.

Note that in this series, only lower-case non-cursive letters are included. Lower-case letters are certainly more difficult to write than capitals, but this resource is about exposing children to the look of the letters that they will be seeing in the sentences of their ‘readers’ (books) when they begin formal schooling.

Buy The Speech Sound Set Alphabet Cards

About the Sound

This sound is long and buzzy. It’s a loud sound. 

Sound Pair

A sound pair is another sound that is made in the same way – only one of the pairs is LOUD (uses voice) and the other is SOFT (uses no voice, is whispered).  Not all sounds have a pair.  When a sound is involved with a speech error, often (but not always) the Sound Pair will also be involved in the same speech error. 

The sounds of  Victor Vampire (loud)  and  Furry Fox (soft) are  Sound Pairs. 

When it develops

This sound starts to appear later in a child’s speech than its pair sound of /f/. It is usually used correctly in words between the ages of 4 and 4;11 years.  

How it is made.

Tuck your bottom lip under your top teeth and blow but also use your voice!   (Often in the production of this sound, the bottom lip is just pressed upwards again the top teeth, not tucked behind the teeth). 

Tips to Help 

Old speech therapy programs used to encourage children to stick their front teeth out over their bottom lip like a rabbit. The active movement is actually the BOTTOM lip doing the work.

Have the child push the bottom lip behind (or upwards towards the top teeth) using their finger.  As they hold the finger there,  have them blow air gently at their finger.  After getting the sound, try following on with a word…. E.g. ‘v…an!’  (van). 

Common Errors

Remember, some speech sound errors are perfectly NORMAL as a child progresses in their speech development.  

1)  A young speaker might produce a /b/ sound instead of a /v/ sound. (E.g. “bet”  “vet”). This error is called STOPPING because the long sound /v/ is “stopped” into a short sound.  This can be seen as part of normal speech development but naturally “disappears” by the age of 3 years. *Children who are “stopping”, will often “stop” the long /s/ sound also, producing it as a short /t/ or /d/ sound (saying “tun” or “dun” for “sun”). 

2) When children lose their central front baby teeth, they may have trouble making this sound for the period  until the new adult teeth are in place. This is a temporary error only. Usually children will have established correct production of this sound before they lose their front teeth. 

3) One feature of Aboriginal English is the /v/ sound being replaced by /b/ sound. Traditionally,  Victor Vampire’s /v/ sound did not occur in Aboriginal languages (nor did the sounds /th/) . 

About the Letter

The lower-case letter used in this set is the non-cursive letter v. Non-cursive is what is most often seen in text and in the world around a child, so we encourage all written text to be presented in non-cursive in the preschool setting.

The letter is the same shape as Victor Vampire’s green jawline and chin. 

The letter’s name is pronounced “vee”. This letter is acrophobic, meaning the letter’s name begins with the sound it represents. For this reason, the letter-sound link can be easier to learn. 

Activities

The Colour-In

1. Learners can be shown how to form the letter, starting at the star. If there are two possible ways the writer could head with their pencil (or crayon), they should head towards the smaller star next.  Try and give consistent instructions when you demonstrate letter formation.  E.g. ” This is how you do the letter v …. Down and back up”.  2. Children can practise again and again within the outline. Using different colours can make it more fun. Encourage a child to say the sound as they trace the letter (not the letter name).  3. Together look at the pictures, name each and LISTEN for the first sound of each word. It will begin with the target sound. 4. You can point to the first letter in each word. Name the letter. 

Picture Cards

Each picture begins with the target sound. You can print these out and make cards or just look at them on a device.

1) Cards can be used for  these for a range of games such as SNAP, BINGO or MEMORY.

2) Start a double-spread page in a scrapbook for each sound. Paste in the colour-in (above), practise writing the letter and cut out and paste the pictures on the pages.

3) Combine them with another set from a different sound and do a SORTING ACTIVITY.

4) Make a poster for each sound and paste on the corresponding pictures.

Find the Letter

View the download on a digital device and point to the target letters or print out and circle/ underline the letters.  Try and encourage scanning of left to right of each line while looking for letters. 

References

Crowe, K. and McLeod, S. (2020). Children’s English Consonant Acquisition In the United States: A Review. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 4(29), 2155-2169. https://doi.org/10.1044/2020_ajslp-19-00168

McLeod, S., & Singh, S. (2009). Speech sounds: A pictorial guide to typical and atypical speech. Plural Publishing.

Peña-Brooks, A., & Hegde, M. N. (2015). Assessment and Treatment of Speech Sound Disorders in Children: A Dual-Level Text. Austin, TX: PRO-ED.

Shipley, K. G., & McAfee, J. G. (2016). Assessment in speech-language pathology: A resource manual. Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.

Aboriginal English