Teaching the Six Syllable Types: Building Blocks for Reading Success

Teaching the Six Syllable Types: Building Blocks for Reading Success

Understanding the six syllable types is one of the most powerful tools teachers can give young readers. Research in the Science of Reading shows that explicit instruction in phonics and syllable division helps children become fluent, accurate readers. When students recognize syllable patterns, they can decode longer words, spell with greater accuracy, and gain the confidence needed to tackle complex texts.

In this article, we will examine each of the six syllable types, provide numerous examples, and explore practical strategies for teaching them in the classroom.

Why Teach the Six Syllable Types?

The National Reading Panel (2000) and subsequent literacy research highlight that systematic phonics instruction improves reading outcomes. Syllable instruction fits into this framework by giving students a predictable way to “crack the code” of English.

  • Decoding: Students can sound out unfamiliar multisyllabic words.
  • Spelling: Knowledge of syllable types supports accurate spelling choices.
  • Fluency: Breaking words into syllables improves pacing and expression.
  • Comprehension: When students spend less energy on decoding, they free up mental resources for understanding the text.

The Six Syllable Types Explained


1. Closed Syllable

A closed syllable has a single vowel followed by one or more consonants. The vowel is short.

Examples:

CVC words: cat, dog, sun, bed, map

Multisyllabic words: pic-nic, rab-bit, bas-ket, nap-kin

Teaching Tip: Start with CVC words and use letter tiles to show how adding a final consonant changes me (long vowel) to men (short vowel).

2. Open Syllable

An open syllable ends with a vowel, and the vowel is long.

Examples:

Single-syllable: me, go, hi, she, flu

Multisyllabic: ba-by, ti-ger, ro-bot, pa-per, mu-sic

Teaching Tip: Contrast open and closed syllables. Show how rob (closed) becomes ro-bot (open syllable first).

3. Silent-e (VCe) Syllable

Also called “magic e” or “bossy e,” this syllable has a vowel, a consonant, and a final silent e. The first vowel is long.

Examples:

cake, pine, rope, cube, theme

In multisyllabic words: com-plete, be-have, in-vite, sun-shine

Teaching Tip: Use word sorts to compare CVC and VCe pairs: cap/cape, pin/pine, hop/hope.

4. Vowel Team Syllable

A vowel team syllable has two or more letters working together to make one vowel sound. Sometimes the team is made up of two vowels, and sometimes it includes consonants like igh or ew.

Examples:

boat, rain, team, green, light, snow, night

Longer words: beau-ti-ful, play-ground, sea-son, re-peat

Teaching Tip: Introduce vowel teams gradually. Use anchor charts with the most common teams (ai, ee, oa, ou, ow, igh).

5. R-controlled Syllable

When a vowel is followed by r, it creates a sound that is neither long nor short. These are sometimes called “bossy r” syllables.

Examples:

car, bird, fur, corn, her

In multisyllabic words: har-bor, tur-tle, cir-cus, for-get, per-fect

Teaching Tip: Teach each r-controlled vowel separately (ar, er, ir, or, ur) with word lists and practice sentences.

6. Consonant-le Syllable

This syllable type occurs at the end of words. The final syllable is made up of a consonant followed by le.

Examples:

table, little, middle, puzzle, simple

Longer words: ap-ple, han-dle, cir-cle, sta-ple

Teaching Tip: Clap out syllables in words like ta-ble and show students that the le is always paired with the consonant before it.

Strategies for Teaching Syllable Types

Explicit Instruction
Teach one syllable type at a time. Begin with closed syllables and gradually introduce more complex types.

Multisensory Practice
Use movement, clapping, tapping, or letter tiles to make syllable division engaging and memorable.

Word Sorting
Provide mixed lists and ask students to sort words by syllable type. Sorting builds automatic recognition.

Anchor Charts
Post colorful syllable type charts in the classroom so students can reference them during reading and writing.

Application to Real Texts
Encourage students to divide multisyllabic words in science, social studies, and storybooks, not just phonics lessons.

Cumulative Review
Return to all six syllable types often. Dictation sentences and decoding passages ensure students retain the knowledge.

Sample Multisyllabic Word Practice

Here are examples of how syllable knowledge helps students decode challenging words:

Closed + Closed: nap-kin, bas-ket, rab-bit

Open + Closed: ti-ger, ro-bot, mu-sic

VCe + Closed: com-pete, sun-shine, in-vite

Vowel Team + Closed: play-ground, sea-son, rain-bow

R-controlled + Closed: har-bor, per-fect, tur-tle

Consonant-le: ta-ble, cir-cle, ap-ple

Final Thoughts: A Lasting Gift for Readers

Teaching the six syllable types is not simply a phonics exercise. It is a strategy that empowers students for a lifetime of reading. With these tools, children can approach unfamiliar words with confidence, decode longer texts with fluency, and deepen comprehension. For teachers, this instruction lays a strong foundation aligned with structured literacy and supported by decades of research.

The six syllable types are more than categories. They are keys that open the doors of literacy for every student.

MaryEllen Gibson Avatar
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MaryEllen Gibson – Texas Reading Teacher
MaryEllen Gibson is a dedicated Texas Reading Teacher with a strong foundation in both education and business. She earned her undergraduate degree from California State University Long Beach and received her Teaching Credential from Concordia University Irvine. She also holds an MBA with an emphasis in Marketing and is CLAD certified in California. MaryEllen is ELIC trained, a Reading Academy graduate, Reading by Design certified, Science of Teaching Reading certified, and Gifted and Talented certified through the Texas Education Agency.

With nearly three decades of experience in education, MaryEllen brings not only professional expertise but also a personal passion to her work. As a mother of two daughters—both of whom work in the Texas Senate—she understands the challenges many families face. Her youngest daughter struggled with reading early on, giving MaryEllen firsthand insight into the journey of supporting a child with reading difficulties. Today, she is proud to share that her daughter not only overcame those challenges but is also a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin. Hook ’em!

MaryEllen has been married to her husband Steve for 28 years and remains deeply committed to empowering young readers and supporting families through structured literacy and targeted intervention