Learn letters and sounds
50 ABC Letters and Sounds Games • Kids Activities Blog
Today we have a whole bunch of alphabet fun with letter and sounds learning games and activities for toddlers and preschoolers to help you young students prepare to read with fun pre-reading playful learning ideas.
ABC Games & Alphabet Sounds
Many parents have kids that are soon to enter kindergarten for the first time and are wondering what their kids should know before they head out to school on their own.
As a mom who once taught Kindergarten, I always wanted to make sure my kids are well-prepared and ready to begin their school career with a bit of an advantage by knowing their letters and sounds.
Related: Grab our free Kindergarten readiness checklist as a guide
I have seen the value in children knowing their letters early.
That said, I also recognize that kids are kids, and I want to make sure they have time to play – both independently and with me.
Let’s learn our alphabet through playing games!Learning Through Alphabet Games
Children acquire knowledge through play, so learning letters at our house is rarely a sit down structured time.
It’s a time of play and games!
The kids have fun and don’t even realize they are learning at the same time. I don’t believe we should leave teaching up to the schools. You get the great honor of being an educator of your child, and you can supplement what is happening at school by engaging your child in enjoyable yet educational ways.
Related: Check out our huge abc letters resource that has letter activities, letter crafts, letter printables and more for every letter of the alphabet!
I hope these resources help you feel equipped to take the reins in your own child’s education.
This article contains affiliate links.
Let’s play a hands on letter game!Hands On Letter Games
1. Letter Toss Game
Muffin Tin Learning – Want to make learning fun? This game involving throwing pennies and will keep your kids engaged. They will barely know that this is actually a lesson.
2. Growing Letters Game
Alphabet Flower Garden – This garden is full of letters and learning opportunities. It is definitely a great way to explore and grow in alphabet knowledge.
3. Unlimited ABC Games for Kids
ABC Mouse – This site gives kids tons of alphabet and phonics practice through interactive games and printables.
4. Matching Letter Game
Magnetic Alphabet Board – This letter matching activity is self-contained and is a tool to get kids to match up letters and help with identification.
5. Touch and Feel the Alphabet Game
Play Dough and Magnet Letters – Letting kids explore using their senses is a great way to learn. Play Dough is a tactile way to watch this happen.
–>Need a Set of Alphabet Magnets? I like this Magnetic Letters Alphabet Fridge Magnets Set that comes in a handy carrying tub.
6. The Great Alphabet Race
Race the Alphabet – Do you have race tracks and a child that loves playing with cars? This activity is for you! If you don’t have your own track, here’s another version.
Let’s have some fun with preschool learning games & our ABC’s.Preschool Alphabet Games
7. Fishing for Letters
Magnet Letter Fishing – Take your magnet letters and make a simple fishing pole. With a pond full of letters, your kids will have a lot of fun casting their line for another catch.
8. Pirate Vowel Game
Gold Coin Vowel Sound Drop – Your little pirate will have fun learning his or her vowels be playing this game.
9. Letter Stacking Game
ABC Letter Stack Game – Stacking up letters has never been so fun. They get to stack and stack until they fall, which I am sure will become the favorite part.
Related: Use these with our playful preschool homeschool curriculum
10. It Begins With…
Initial Sounds Blackout Game – Want kids to be able to identify the beginning sounds of words? This fun game will help them do exactly that.
–>Need a Wooden Alphabet Set with Flashcards? I really love the cuteness of this Tangame Wooden Magnetic Letters Alphabet Refrigerator Magnet Flash Cards for Preschool Kids that comes in a magnetic tin.
11. Letter Scavenger Hunt
Architecture Letter Scavenger Hunt – Have you seen those photos that find letters in architecture? Your kids get to go on their own letter scavenger hunt with this fun activity.
Let’s play a creative alphabet game!Creative Letter Games for Alphabet Sounds
12. Interactive Alphabet Learning Games
A-Z Letter Learning Activities – This post brings you over 90 activities for each and every letter of the alphabet. What a great resource!
13. Climb the Word Ladder
Word Ladder – Kids get to “climb” to the top of the ladder as they successfully identify letters and sounds. They don’t need to worry if they “fall,” they have the opportunity to try again.
14. Flashlight Alphabet Game
Flashlight Alphabet Game – My kids are obsessed with flashlights. I know my preschooler would love this game!
–>Need Foam Alphabet Letters for Practice? This Gamenote Classroom Magnetic Alphabet Letters Kit comes in a plastic organization case and magnet board and would be great for home too.
15. Make a Letter Game
Letter Formation Activity – Using materials you probably have at home, your kids will have a lot of fun forming their letters.
16. Hungry Hungry Letters Game
Alphabet Monster – This hungry monster will only eat letters if you can say the name or sound of a letter. What a fun craft to make that also turns a great letter learning opportunity.
Let’s play a game that helps us learn letters!ABC Games that Help Kids Learn Letters and Sounds
17. Let’s Host a Reading Hop
Reading Hop – This letter learning game will keep your kids active and hopping all around. If you are looking for a way to take learning outdoors, you have found it.
18. Alphabet I Spy
Alphabet “I Spy” – Take the classic and beloved game of “I Spy” and turn it into an alphabet search activity. Brilliant!
19. Can You Catch the Letters Game?
Runaway Letters Game – Your child gets a chance to grab letters and runaway while you creativity beacon the letter’s return. This is a great way for moms, dads or teachers to interact with their kids during the educational process.
–>Need a Fun ABC Game? I love this ABC Cookies Game from Goodie Games that is a fun alphabet learning game for toddlers and preschoolers.
20. LEGO Spelling
Lego Spelling – If you add letters to duplex legos, you have a great way to work on sounds and words.
21. Letters Inside of Letters Activity
Making Letters with Letters – Learning letters will be reinforced over and over again as your kids use letters from magazines to create their own larger letters.
Fun Pre-K Learning games for kids!ABC Games for Pre-K
22. Letter Swat Game
Spider Letter Swat – Kids will enjoy learning their letters as they swat away at the flies in this entertaining game.
23. Letter Squirt Game
Squirt the Letter – This is a game I know my son, especially, would love. He loves anything squirt gun and anything water. Squirting the correct letter is right up his alley.
24. Letter Lacing Activity
Letter Lacing – This letter lacing, quiet bag activity works on fine motor skills while also developing the skills needed to develop in reading.
–>Need Letter Lacing Cards? I like this wooden set from Melissa & Doug that has both animals and letters on the sturdy lacing cards.
25. Alphabet Sounds Race
Letter Sounds Race – Get your kids moving with this letter sounds race. This is a great learning opportunity for your active kids! More alphabet sound learning activities are fun too!
26. Disappearing Letters Game
Disappearing Letters – Kids will learn to love to trace their letters as they see the trick to making them disappear.
Let’s play ABC Learning Games!Alphabet Games for Learning
27. The Game of Bang
Bang – Bang is a letter identification game that will be a lot of fun for the little gamers in your life.
28. Letter Chomp Game
Mr. Shark Alphabet Chomper Game – I love the idea to make a shark out of an envelope in general. Add the learning aspect of having the shark chomp letters, and you have a great game.
29. Letter Tiles Activity
DIY Bananagrams Letter Tiles – Here’s a really smart way to make letter tiles. You can turn them into magnets or play the classic Bananagram game with your creation.
–>Need a Bananagram Game? Here is the original Bananagram game for kids.
30. Make Pretzel Letters
Soft Pretzel Letters – Kids can learn their letters as they have fun making pretzel dough. Through using both the sense of touch and taste, this becomes a fun activity for all.
31. Travel Alphabet Game
Alphabet Words Game – This is a learning game that can be taken anywhere. Keep your kids occupied working on their letters at restaurants, home, car rides and more.
Let’s play letter and sound games!ABC Games for Letters and Sounds
32.
Touchy Feely LettersSensory Bins with Letters – Sometimes the best way to help kids learn is to let them explore. This sensory bin will help kids do just that.
33. Alphabet Seek & Find
Seek-N-Find Alphabet – This letter game is like an eye spy for letters. It involves a plastic tube (easily substituted by a water bottle), and will keep your kids searching for their letters for quite some time.
34. Letter Formation Fun
Tactile Writing – Kids learn to write letters as they use rice and paint to feel their way through the process or writing.
–>Need a Wooden Letter Matching Set? I like this durable Alphabet flash cards and wooden letter puzzle set from LiKee Alphabet.
35. Homemade Domino Letter Fun
Craft Stick Dominos – These craft stick dominos are an easy, homemade version of a domino game with a focus on learning letters and matching symbols. What a fun idea.
36. Flashcard Games
ABC Flashcards – Flashcards can be used by a variety of games and activities like flashcard basketball. These ones are free. And so are these kids alphabet cards you can download & print instantly.
Related: Here are a bunch of ideas for flash card games for kids
Let’s play some more abc games!How to Help a Child Learn Letters and Sounds Through Play
37. Make a Sun-Powered Letter Puzzle
Make a DIY shape puzzle using the sun with alphabet letters for a really fun matching game you can play inside or out. Or use this method without the sun to make this fun abc matching game for kids.
38. Collect Alphabet Treasures
Use these free alphabet labels to create small containers for each letter of the alphabet for a special letter collection activity!
39. Make Easy Alphabet Crackers
Making alphabet crackers has never been easier or more fun!
–>Need an Alphabet Snack? I like these Happy Tot Organics ABC Multi-Grain Cookies…yum!
40. Play Alphabet Zipline!
Use these alphabet printable letters to create your own alphabet zipline in your living room. It is really fun.
41. Play a Silly Letters Game
Try these alphabet games for preschool that are full of fun and a little silly…
42. Make Pipecleaner Letters!
Try to do some fun abc formation with pasta and pipe cleaners which is a fun way to explore letter shapes.
43. Make Bathtub Alphabet Soup
Use bath letters for a big big big batch of bubblebath alphabet soup {giggle}.
44. Color a Letter Coloring Page
- Letter A Coloring Page
- Letter B Coloring Page
- Letter C Coloring Page
- Letter D Coloring Page
- Letter E Coloring Page
- Letter F Coloring Page
- Letter G Coloring Page
- Letter H Coloring Page
- Letter I Coloring Page
- Letter J Coloring Page
- Letter K Coloring Page
- Letter L Coloring Page
- Letter M Coloring Page
- Letter N Coloring Page
- Letter O Coloring Page
- Letter P Coloring Page
- Letter Q Coloring Page
- Letter R Coloring Page
- Letter S Coloring Page
- Letter T Coloring Page
- Letter U Coloring Page
- Letter V Coloring Page
- Letter W Coloring Page
- Letter X Coloring Page
- Letter Y Coloring Page
- Letter Z Coloring Page
45.
Let’s Play with Playdough!These playdough pre writing activities are both fun and super hands-on learning.
Let’s make a yummy…I mean gummy…alphabet!46. Make Gummy Letters
This sour gummy recipe makes the cutest alphabet letters to learn and eat!
47. Try a Fun Alphabet Activity Book
There are so many quality workbooks for kids on the market right now so we narrowed it down to some of our favorites that just might fit your kid.
Let’s find the letters and make pictures with crayons!48. Color by Letter Activities for Letter Recognition Fun
We have a whole bunch of color by letter printable pages for kids that help them recognize letters while playing a game:
- Color by letter – A-E
- Color by letter worksheets – F-J
- Coloring by letters – K-O
- Color with letters – P-T
- Preschool color by letter – U-Z
49. Play the Missing Letter Game
Use one of our favorite preschool games, What is Missing? and use either letter flashcards or abc fridge magnet sets to create sequencing of the alphabet and then remove a letter or two.
Let’s have fun with letter recognition!50. Play Alphabet Beach Ball Toss
Modify our fun sight word game with letters instead of sight words. Your beach ball can be covered with the letters of the alphabet for throwing and catching learning fun.
Games for ABC Sounds
51. Learn and sing the ABC sounds song
I love this fun song from Rock ‘N Learn that goes through the entire alphabet with sounds for each of the letters.
52. Play an online ABC sounds game
Monster Mansion is a free online alphabet match game that kids can learn the abc sounds and match them with the proper letter on the proper monster!
53. Print & Play a letter sounds game
Preschool Play and Learn has a really colorful and fun letter sounds board game you can print and play at home or in the preschool classroom. Each player will pick up a card and identify the letter and /or say the sound that the letter makes.
More Learning Games from Kids Activities Blog
- Now that we learned out letters, don’t miss out on our number activities for preschoolers!
- When your child is ready, we have a big giant list of sight word activities that are fun too!
- We have some really fun games teaching kids how to read a clock.
- My favorite massive resource of fun is our kids science games here at Kids Activities Blog.
- It doesn’t have to be October to play some frightful Halloween games.
- Let’s play math games for kids!
- If you need to work out the wiggles, we have the best indoor games for kids.
What was your favorite abc game? Did we miss some alphabet activities that you do with your kids?
Tips for Teaching Letters and Letter Sounds
Welcome to Part 1 of Teaching the Alphabet! I receive several emails a week, asking for advice on how to teach letters and/or letter sounds to children from Pre-K through 1st grades.
So, today I’m going to share a few ideas for teaching kids in this age-range. If you have a younger child (toddler age), I share more tips about teaching toddlers the alphabet in this post.
Note that I’m going to explore some hot topics in regards to letters and letter sounds. You may completely agree or disagree with my teaching tips. Ultimately, you have to find what works best for your child and stick with it.
*This post contains affiliate links.
Letters OR Letter Sounds?
So which is it? Should we teach letters or letter sounds? There is a widely-used teaching approach which teaches letter sounds first and letter names next. It is believed that letter sounds are more helpful and useful to pre-readers than letter names and therefore, should be taught first. As you’ve probably guessed from the title of my post, I respectfully disagree. And before I go too much further, please hear me say this: if teaching your child her letter sounds first is working, GO FOR IT!
I believe, after reading the reading research out there (such as Ehri, Invernizzi, Cunningham, Calkins, and McBride-Chang), that BOTH letters and letter sounds are highly useful for teaching kids to read and write.
Just three of many reasons I believe this (I would probably bore you with all my reasons):
1- The majority of letter names give the child a huge clue as to the sound (or one of the sounds) they make. For example, the letter D has the /d/ sound at the beginning and the letter F has the /f/ sound at the end. W, Y, and H are the only three exceptions.
2- Letter names make great labels for letters, as many of the letter sounds are harder to make in isolation. For example, b’s sound in isolation tends to sound more like /buh/, which can make blending it with other letter sounds difficult for beginning readers.
3- Letter sounds are more abstract and aren’t as consistent as letter names. Take for example the A in Target. In my experience, it seems more consistent to say, “Oh, I see the letter A in Target,” than “I see an /a/ (short a sound) in Target…but it doesn’t make the /a/ sound. It makes the /r/ sound.” Huh?
No matter what you believe in regards to letters and letter names, “research has established that children who know the names of letters learn letter-sound associations more readily than those without letter-name knowledge.” (Words their Way for PreK-K, 2014)
Upper or Lower Case Letters?
Again, you’re going to hear me say BOTH! Kids need both upper and lowercase letter instruction. While lower case letters are more common in reading and writing, both are needed. If you’re teaching young children, I suggest starting with uppercase letters. Why?
Two reasons:
1- Uppercase letters are easier to visually distinguish than lowercase letters (take for example- the uppercase B and D versus the lowercase b and d)
2- Uppercase letters are easier for beginning writers (for example, E versus e). Even when instructed with lower case letters, I’ve noticed over and over again that young children naturally prefer uppercase.
But please hear me say that while I may start instruction with uppercase letters when working with young children, I believe it’s important to expose young children to all kinds of letters, even different kinds of fonts. Pointing out and talking about the kinds of letters you find while reading together, also known as print awareness, is a GREAT way to integrate this into what you’re already doing (both for younger and older children).
Letter Confusion
While some may teach letters in alphabetical order, I believe there is a more developmentally appropriate way than starting with a and ending with z. I like to introduce letters and letter sounds in a different order, which can help to minimize confusion.
Visual Similarities
Some letters look very much the same (such as b, d, p, and q or W, V, Y). And kids confuse these often, even older kids. I encourage you to separate these letters and teach them at different times to minimize confusion.
The Point of Articulation
While this may sound fancy, it’s just a way of saying that some letters, while they look very different, have sounds that are produced in the same part of the mouth. Take for example g and k. Both sounds are guttural (produced in the back of the throat). If you say a /g/ sound without using your voice, you get the /k/ sound. Other letter sounds to avoid teaching together are t and d, f and v, or b and p.
Speech Delays
Some kids (I have two of my own) have difficulty with the production of certain letter sounds. These letters may include f, j, l, r, s, v, y, or z. While I am not an expert in this field, I do know that speech delays can delay letter sound learning, spelling, and reading. Two of my favorite resources for helping kids with articulation issues has been Katie of Playing with Words 365 and Reading with TLC’s Lively Letters.
Letter of the Week?
Letter of the Week has gotten a bad rap. I’ve even advocated against it at times. My thoughts are still mixed on the topic. And I’ll share why.
- Letter of the Week can be an effective way to make sure your phonics instruction is meaningful, playful, and systematic. Many kids need systematic phonics instruction, especially kids who are struggling to grasp their letters and sounds, BUT…
- Letter of the Week should not limit your phonics instruction to only that letter, especially as your child develops into the late Preschool and Kindergarten years. If we only focus on one letter a week, it takes 26 weeks to get through them all…much too long of a time for kids to have the ability to take letters and use them for meaningful spelling, reading, and writing. Kids need to have purposeful exposure to letters (all of them) each day. Letters need to be pointed out and used during reading time, when you’re playing with letter blocks, when you’re writing their name on their art. Letters (all letters) are important, not just the letter of the week.
- If you need something systematic in the Pre-K and K years, I propose starting with two to three letters a week. Pick letters that are visually and phonetically different, as we’ve discussed above, like T and F. Sort them by their sounds. Sort toys that begin with those sounds. We can get through the letters at a much faster pace (if the child is ready) if we focus on more than one letter a week.
- Sometimes kids already know a handful of letters and their sounds. If you think this is the case for your child, there’s no need to spend an entire week on letters they already know. To find out what your child knows/doesn’t know, pull out an abc puzzle and assess her, like I show in this post {free printable assessment chart included}. Once you have a grasp on what your child does or does not know, you have a clearer vision on which letters to teach.
Letter Order
In what order should we teach letters? The first place I always start is with the child’s name. A child’s name carries great meaning to them and a sense of identity. After that, I teach letters OUT OF ORDER. The order in which I teach them depends on the age of the child. Most kids can sing the ABC song by the age of 2 or 3. They already know the order. By teaching the letters out of order, you are ensuring that kids know them out of the context of that song. When asking kids, “What’s this letter?”, we want children who do not need to sing the ABC Song to figure it out (I’ve seen lots of kids do this, even in Kindergarten).
With Reading the Alphabet, I decided to pick letters that were visually and phonetically different, but were also easier to write first. I also chose to add vowel instruction in early so that kids could begin to form words with the letters, like you see in Lesson 7 (AT Family). While each week features one letter, you will see that we studied more than that letter every week, sometimes sorting multiple letters and sounds at one time. But, no matter the order you choose, you want to choose letter combinations for teaching that will minimize confusion.
More Resources on Teaching Letters and Their Sounds:
- Words Their Way: Letter and Picture Sorts for Emergent Spellers
- Words Their Way for PreK and K (Johnston, et. al)
- Reading the Alphabet – FREE curriculum (taking it a step deeper after kids know their ABC’s)
- Letter Order Teaching {Living Montessori Now}
- Teaching the Alphabet to Preschoolers {The Measured Mom}
- Letting Go of the Letter of the Week {Pre-K Pages}
- Teaching the Alphabet {PreKinders}
You can find all the post in this 4-part series by clicking here or on the image above.
~Becky
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Learning letters and sounds with children
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Before teaching a child to read, parents are advised to first teach the child to recognize and distinguish sounds. Some children understand the difference between letters and sounds after the first explanation, while others do not. And then the mother has to connect her imagination and all her pedagogical abilities in order to first understand herself, and then explain to the child why to distinguish between sounds and letters and how to do it.
It is necessary to understand the following pattern: there are many more sounds than letters, sounds are more important than letters, letters in themselves do not mean anything, and all qualities, for example: sonority, softness, etc., are related to sounds. One letter can represent several sounds. Therefore, we begin to learn to speak and read precisely with sounds.
Tell a kid a story:
“People lived in ancient times. They already knew how to speak and therefore loved to tell each other fairy tales and sing songs. But everything they told was quickly forgotten, because people did not know how to write. Fairy tales and songs were so interesting that a person wanted to remember them for a long time. And then people came up with special letter icons. The letters denoted the sounds that people uttered when telling a fairy tale. So the ancient man began to write down his fairy tales with the help of letters. Therefore, letters-icons now live in books, but they are always silent until you want to read them aloud. And as soon as you want to read a letter, sound will immediately appear. Sound and letter are the closest friends and cannot live without each other. A letter without a sound is silent, and a sound without a letter immediately disappears.
There will be 33 houses in the city, because there are 33 letters in the alphabet. A river will flow through the city, which will divide it into three parts. One coast is called "Vowers", the second - "Consonants", and empty houses are built on the third coast. However, houses will be built in the city not only on the shore, but also on the river. Floating houses are special. They can be painted in two colors, and empty houses in one gray color.
Houses in the city are divided into three types: with two tenants, with one and empty houses.
On the bank of vowels there will be 6 single houses: a, i, o, u, s, e.
Houses were built on the bank of consonants, where 2 sounds live at once - hard and soft: b-b, v-v, g-g, d-d, z-z, k-k, l-l, m-m, n -n, p-p, r-r, s-s, t-t, f-f, x-x, and single houses: f, c, w, d, h, u. In total, 21 houses were built on the bank of the consonants.
Suitcase houses will live on the river, there are only 4 of them. Two sounds Y-E live in the house E, sounds Y-O live in the house YO, in the house Yu - Y-U, in the house I - Y-A. These houses were built on the river because vowels and consonants coexist in them.
There are empty houses on the third bank: b sign and b sign. Nobody lives in these houses. Therefore, these letters do not have sounds. They are only for writing.
Play with the drawn map.
Discuss with your child in the following sequence: the letter B is the house of two friends: a large and hard sound B and a small and soft sound b. Compare how the letter B sounds, for example, in the words Bom and Bim. (In the word Bom we hear a hard sound B, in the word Bim - a soft sound b).
When examining a book, ask: “Where is the letter M in the word BEAR? And what sounds live in the house-letter M?" The child must remember the map or directly examine it with you at this moment and show with a finger that sounds live in this house: big and hard M and small and soft m.
When studying consonants, call them by the sound they denote, i.e. not "me" or "em", but "m". Otherwise, later it will be very difficult for the child to learn how to combine letters into syllables and words.
The ratio of sounds and letters is a rather abstract thing for kids. And it will be easier for them to understand it if they are guided by the picture and create images in their imagination.
The Razumeikin website will help your child learn letters in the "Letters and Reading" section and get acquainted with the characteristics of sounds in the "Preparing for Literacy" section - educational videos and interactive tasks will turn learning to read into an exciting game!
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Online classes on the Razumeikin website:
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develop attention, memory, thinking, speech - namely, this is the basis for successful schooling;
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help to learn letters and numbers, learn to read, count, solve examples and problems, get acquainted with the basics of the world around;
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provide quality preparation of the child for school;
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allow primary school students to master and consolidate the most important and complex topics of the school curriculum;
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broaden the horizons of children and in an accessible form introduce them to the basics of various sciences (biology, geography, physics, chemistry).
Teaching children to read. Learn letters and sounds.
There are different opinions about whether or not to teach a child to read at an early age. You can often see such a picture on the street. Mom asks the baby, pointing to any letter of the sign on the house: "What is this letter?" The kid happily answers: "PE!", Or "EM!", Or "ES!". Dear adults! If this is how you call letters to children, then how will your little student read the syllable "MA"? Imagine, he will most likely get "EMA"! And he will be right: EM + A = EMA. And the word "MA-MA" in this case will be read as "EMA-EMA"!
How many times does a child need to say a letter to remember it? There is no answer to this question: everything will depend on the individual characteristics of the child, his age, the frequency of classes with him. First, the adult shows and names the letters (in primers, on special posters, in split alphabets, on the street), then the child learns to find the letter on the instructions of the adult (“Find and show the letter B in this word!”), And only after that he independently recognize and name a letter. The expediency of teaching a child to write letters depends on the age and capabilities of the child. Learning to read and type at the same time is optional. If your child is still insecure about using a pencil, drawing geometric shapes and simple shapes with difficulty, typing letters will become difficult and uninteresting for him, which may also affect learning to read. You should not teach children written letters: the teacher in the first grade will do it competently and at the right time for the child!
Undoubtedly, it is useful to memorize letters by laying them out of sticks, cubes, mosaics, buttons, peas, pebbles, modeling a letter from plasticine (from sausages / flagella) or wire, tracing and coloring three-dimensional letters, and hatching them. From all this arsenal of exercises related to the development of fine motor skills, there is sure to be one that will be exciting for your child.
Some manuals offer to rely on images when memorizing letters, compare letters with various non-alphabetic images, on the pages of such manuals you can find subject pictures in which letters are "inscribed".
N.S. Zhukova's primer is not entertaining or entertaining, its task is to provide the child with the fastest mastery of reading technique, which should bring joy and pleasure to children as a reward for their work. We hope that our children, having mastered reading without much difficulty, will pick up a book as an instrument of culture and a source of knowledge.
If you want to teach your child to read before he goes to school, the Primer is the best assistant in this matter. To avoid the sad consequences of illiterate learning, treat all our advice, guidelines and notes with attention and understanding.
It is necessary to form the reading skill gradually and sequentially , starting with the sound analysis of the word, and then moving on to reading syllables, words, sentences and texts.
Acquaintance with sounds - the initial stage of teaching a child to read . By the time of entering school, the child must correctly and clearly pronounce all the sounds of his native language. The kid should have an idea about vowels and consonants, distinguish between hard and soft, voiced and deaf consonants.
The next stage of learning to read is the formation of a basic skill - the ability to read syllables. It is important that the baby does not name the letters separately, but read the syllable at once, smoothly singing it like a song.
Having mastered the skill of reading open and closed syllables, the child proceeds to reading words - first simple, and then more complex. If the child reads words well, one should proceed to reading sentences .
The child should know that a sentence can consist of one or more words, and the first word is always capitalized. A well-formed word and sentence reading skill allows you to move on to reading short texts.
TIP ONE: Start learning to read only if your child's oral language is sufficiently developed.
TWO TIP: do not memorize all the letters of the alphabet with your children at once!!!
TIP THREE: Do not call consonants with vowel sounds, such as se or re.