44 Sounds of English Explained (HCMC Parent Guide)
“Why Does English Have 44 Sounds… But Only 26 Letters?”
The 44 Sounds of English Explained Simply for International School Parents in HCMC (Saigon)
This is where many parents feel confused.
Your child learns:
- A, B, C…
But when they start reading, suddenly:
👉 “A” doesn’t always sound the same
👉 Words don’t follow simple rules
👉 Pronunciation feels inconsistent
So what’s really going on?
The Key Idea Most People Miss
English is not based on letters.
👉 It is based on sounds
And there are:
👉 44 sounds (phonemes) in English
What Are the 44 Sounds?
A sound (phoneme) is the smallest unit of sound in a word.
For example:
dog = 3 sounds
/d/ /o/ /g/
Even though it has 3 letters, what matters is:
👉 how it sounds
Why This Matters for Your Child
Children who understand sounds can:
- read new words
- pronounce clearly
- spell more accurately
Children who don’t:
- guess words
- mispronounce
- struggle with reading
Breaking the 44 Sounds Into Simple Groups
To make it easier, we don’t teach all 44 at once.
We group them.
1. Short Vowel Sounds (5)
These are the first sounds children learn:
- /a/ → cat
- /e/ → bed
- /i/ → sit
- /o/ → hot
- /u/ → sun
2. Consonant Sounds (Most of the Alphabet)
These are more stable:
- /b/ → bat
- /m/ → man
- /t/ → top
👉 These are usually easier for children
3. Digraphs (2 Letters, 1 Sound)
This is where it gets interesting.
Examples:
- sh → ship
- ch → chair
- th → think / this
👉 Two letters, one sound
4. Long Vowel Sounds
These sound like the letter name:
- /ai/ → rain
- /ee/ → tree
- /oa/ → boat
5. Tricky Sounds (Where Most Problems Happen)
These include:
- /igh/ → night
- /ow/ → now
- /oo/ → book/moon
👉 Same letters, different sounds
Why English Feels So Confusing
Because:
👉 26 letters
👉 44 sounds
And:
👉 One sound can have many spellings
Example:
The /ee/ sound can be:
- ee → tree
- ea → sea
- y → happy
This Is Why Memorization Fails
If children only memorize words:
- They cannot read new ones
- they rely on guessing
But if they understand sounds:
👉 they can decode anything
A Simple Real-Life Example
Word: light
A child without phonics:
👉 guesses
A child with phonics:
- l /igh/ t
👉 reads it correctly
Q&A Moment (What Parents Often Ask)
“Do children really need to learn all 44 sounds?”
Not all at once. But over time, yes—this is what builds real reading ability.
“My child already reads some words. Is this still important?”
Yes. Recognizing words is not the same as decoding new ones.
Why This Is Critical in International School English Vietnam
In international schools:
- reading is constant
- Vocabulary grows fast
- Independence is expected
Without sound knowledge:
👉 students fall behind quietly
How Spark Uses the 44 Sounds Differently
At Spark English Center Vietnam, the 44 sounds are not taught randomly.
They are:
👉 structured
👉 sequenced
👉 applied immediately
What This Looks Like
Spark acts as a bridge between:
- early English exposure
- academic English demands
Through:
- phonics + structured literacy
- ESL support for international school students
- small classes (maximum 6 students)
Spark provides a premium English learning experience for families across HCMC (Saigon), helping children build real reading and pronunciation skills.
The Long-Term Impact
When children understand the 44 sounds:
- Reading becomes easier
- pronunciation improves
- confidence grows
👉 Because English finally “makes sense”
FAQs
Why are there 44 sounds but only 26 letters?
English uses letter combinations to represent different sounds.
Does my child need to memorize all 44 sounds?
Not memorize—but learn them gradually through structured phonics.
What happens if children don’t learn these sounds?
They rely on guessing, which limits reading and pronunciation development.
Is this important for older children, too?
Yes. Many older students benefit from learning sounds properly if gaps exist.
How long does it take to learn the 44 sounds?
It depends on the child, but with consistent teaching, progress can be seen within weeks.
Can this improve pronunciation as well?
Yes. Understanding sounds directly improves how children speak.
Why is this not always taught clearly in schools?
Some systems focus more on exposure and comprehension, assuming reading will develop naturally.
Final Thought
👉 English is not confusing
👉 It’s just sound-based
And once children understand the sounds:
👉 everything becomes easier
If you’re unsure whether your child understands English sounds properly, the best step is to check early.
At Spark English Center Vietnam, the free assessment evaluates:
- phonics knowledge
- sound recognition
- reading accuracy
- pronunciation clarity
This helps you see:
👉 what your child understands now
👉 and what they need next
👉 Book your free assessment here:
https://www.sparkvn.com/Assessment
Serving international school families in HCMC (Saigon), Spark English Center Vietnam provides structured, phonics-based English support that builds strong reading, pronunciation, and long-term academic success.

















































