Lower case letters game
Lowercase Letters Games for Kids Online
There are no two ways that toddlers, preschoolers, and primary class students learn and retain more of any concept, except when explained in an interactive and fun manner. No child will stay attentive for a long time if the teacher or parent cannot grab their attention. Teach every significant concept to your child by making use of appealing learning games available at SplashLearn.
Can You Find the Lowercase Letter?The games available for all the lowercase letters help children learn the skill of identifying a specific lowercase letter from different options that come on screen. The audiovisual game starts with a carnival theme where the player is asked to roam around and look for a specific lowercase letter such as a, b, c, etc.
The player will walk around and tap on the hidden alphabets looking for one specific alphabet. Kids can play the game independently without any instructions, as several hints are given throughout the game. It helps build a child’s understanding of different alphabets and helps them separate them from each other. The game also boosts your child’s confidence as several words of appreciation are said at each step of the game.
Learn the LettersThe games are a unique way of teaching little kids the significance of different alphabets and helping them learn the sounds of these alphabets. The colorful graphics of this game keeps the child glued onto and ensures learning of concepts alongside. The game starts with a white screen flashed on the screen followed by instructions given to the player to splash some color on the screen using the mouse and discovering hidden letters.
After the letters are discovered, the player has to choose the correct alphabets and place them in the available space. It helps build the knowledge of little kids regarding identifying different alphabets and separating alphabets from each other.
Practice the LettersAfter learning how to identify different letters and distinguish them from other alphabets, the next step involves a thorough practice to boost your child’s knowledge of the same. The game consists of searching for a specific alphabet and words that start with that particular alphabet. The player has to splash color on the screen and reveal different alphabets and some colorful images of other words.
The child has to place the specific alphabet and the picture of the word that starts with the alphabet in the given space to earn appreciation. If the game is about “a,” the player will select the letter and a picture of the specific word from the options to put it in the box.
ConclusionLearning new concepts should never be something that the children lose interest in or find monotonous. A perfect combination of educational games and learning is what can liven up the environment of a classroom. SplashLearn provides an array of exceptional learning games that can trigger the attention of kids. Join the online community of learning today and keep your kid at par with all that’s going around.
Is there something we missed out? Write to us at help@splashlearn. com with your feedback and comments. We love to hear from you and improve the learning experience for your kids.
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Upper and Lowercase Letters on the App Store
iPad Screenshots
Description
Teach young learners (ages 3-8) the uppercase and lowercase letters of the alphabet with this simple and clever matching system!
Developed for your iPad, this easy game will teach and reinforce the uppercase and lowercase letters of the alphabet. Game play is based on the popular pocket charts used in classrooms around the world. Uppercase and Lowercase Letter Matching requires 3-5 minutes for a young learner to complete, making this iPad app ideal for students with short attention spans or those requiring highly visual or tactile learning experiences. Additionally, the activities have been uniquely designed to lock and play only in the portrait mode to simplify game play and eliminate an orientation switch if young learners jostle the iPad while playing.
Good Neighbor Press has specialized in the development, illustration, design, and production of educational material since 1991. High quality, developmentally-appropriate educational material with clean, charming instructional design is our specialty. For additional information on our activity book series, downloadable worksheet units, or student planners please visit www.hellopress.net.
Look for Beginning Letter Sounds and Long and Short Vowel Sounds in the App Store today!
Good Neighbor Press, Inc. is a member of Moms with Apps, a collaborative group of family-friendly developers seeking to promote quality apps for kids and families.
Recommended Ages: 1-3, 4-7
Categories: Early Learning, Matching, Letters, Reading, Spelling
"A Must Buy! All these apps are terrific. I currently use them with my six year old, and he loves them! This is just the right tool for any homeschooler learning the basic phonics, and recognition of letters and numbers. The graphics and encouraging sounds along with the charming animations cater to what appeal to all little ones; making this one of those must have apps for any parent who wants to supplement or reenforce their child's education. "
Version 5.0
This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon.
Bug fixes.
Ratings and Reviews
3 Ratings
Good app, but...
I teach kindergarten and this is a great app for my students. However, it would get 5 stars if there was an option to play with the letters out of sequence. Most students don't get any challenge playing it in alphabetical order. I love educational apps that can be differentiated to meet the needs of all the academic levels in my class. This app works well for early kindergarteners and my struggling students only. Please add the option to randomize the letter sequence!
Hi, Canada in the US Mom! There is now an option to shuffle the game play! I hope that helps!
Doesn't say letter names
This app doesn't say the name of the letters. They can match uppercase to lowercase but still not know what letter they just paired.
Hello, Calmommy! Turn Voice Prompts ON. When using the app, touch each uppercase letter and the uppercase letter is named. The lowercase letters are not named as that would give the answer away. You can also choose to "Shuffle Game Play" from the home screen so the sequence differs each time the game is played. Thank you for using my app!
A must buy
All these apps are terrific. I currently use them with my six year old, and he loves them! This is just the right tool for any homeschooler learning the basic phonics, and recognition of letters and numbers. The graphics and encouraging sounds along with the charming animations cater to what appeal to all little ones; making this one of those must have apps for any parent who wants to supplement or reenforce their child's education.
The developer, Good Neighbor Press, Inc, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.
No Details Provided
The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.
Information
- Seller
- Good Neighbor Press, Inc.
- Size
- 5.1 MB
- Category
- Education
- Age Rating
- 4+, Made for Ages 6–8
- Copyright
- © Copyright 2013-2015. Good Neighbor Press, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- Price
- $0.99
- Developer Website
- App Support
- Privacy Policy
Supports
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Memory recipe.
Print and play - tavika.ruAnother version of the memory game. The rules are absolutely classic: we open the cards in turn and find paired ones. But! This game pursues not only the goal of developing the memory and attention of the child. By playing this game, the kid learns to look for matching pairs. In this case, matches uppercase and lowercase letters .
The fact is that children learn to read in printed letters. In the future, they have to face the fact that in books letters are sometimes written in a font different from the standard one. For example, the letter "d" in different print fonts may differ from the usual spelling. Compare "d" in Arial and "9"0007 d ” written in the same font, but in italics. This is all clear to us, but for a small reader, such transformations of a familiar letter cause certain difficulties.
And what can we say about written letters, many of which are completely different from printed ones!
Katya is now in the period when written letters are of great interest to her. Without any reason on my part, she suddenly began to ask me to show her how these letters are read - she is very interested in what we write in our notes, which she is not able to read.
In order to consolidate the knowledge of written letters and better remember their style (after all, capital letters here differ significantly from lowercase letters), and I made this version of the memory game.
Memory cards |
The goal of the game is to find pairs of a capital written letter and its corresponding slender letter.
Since there are quite a lot of letters in the alphabet (even without “e”, “b”, “b”, “d”, “s” it turned out 54 cards), then for a start it is better to give the child not all pairs. And start with about 20 pieces. And only then, as you master the game, add new pairs of letters.
Memory game with capital letters |
Below I post the cards prepared for printing. Do not be surprised that the letters are not arranged alphabetically - I grouped them according to their meaning: on the first sheet are those letters that are most difficult to recognize. Then those that are simpler. And on the last sheet were those letters that are written the same way in both uppercase and lowercase.
To make such a memorial for yourself, you need to save the image to your computer (by right-clicking on the picture and selecting “Save Image” from the menu - it will be in the size you need for printing) , print and cut them out.
For better safety, it is better to laminate the cards (or do as we do - paste over both sides with adhesive tape). In addition, check to see if a letter will appear on the back of the card after printing. In this case, the cards will have to stick on some kind of substrate. To avoid this, we printed the cards on fairly dark colored paper.
Here you can see other versions of our memory games: “Memory money”, “Memory” from shells, “Memory” from acorns, “Memory” from brochures.
I'm adding these cards to Natalia Chistokletova's project “Game with a bang”, where “memory” was the theme of last month. Better late than never 🙂
Text case change
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You can change the case of selected text in a document by clicking the Change case button on the Home tab .
Note: For autocapitalization rules, see Set up AutoCorrect: Capitalization, Spelling, and Symbols.
Case change
To change the case of selected text in a document:
-
Select the text whose case you want to change.
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Navigate to home > change .
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Do one of the following:
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To capitalize the first letter of the application and leave the rest in lowercase, select As in sentences .
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To make all letters lowercase, select all lowercase .
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To make all letters capitalized, select ALL CAPITALS .
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To capitalize the first letter of each word and lowercase the rest, select Start In Uppercase .
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To reverse case (for example, switch from Start CAPS to START LOCK mode), select CHANGE CASE .
Tips:
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To apply small caps to text, select the text, and then on the 9 tab0049 Main in the group Font click the arrow in the lower right corner. In the Font dialog box, under Variation , select the small caps check box.
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To undo a case change, press CTRL+Z.
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To use keyboard shortcuts to change case, uppercase and uppercase in each word, select the text and press SHIFT+F3 until the correct case is applied.
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See also
Insert a drop cap
AutoCorrect Setting: Capitalization
Case change
To change the case of selected text in a document:
-
Select the text whose case you want to change.
-
Navigate to home > change .
-
Do one of the following:
-
To capitalize the first letter of the application and leave the rest in lowercase, select As in sentences .
-
To make all letters lowercase, select all lowercase .
-
To make all letters capitalized, select ALL CAPITALS .
-
To capitalize the first letter of each word and lowercase the rest, select option Start with Uppercase .
-
To reverse case (for example, switch from Start CAPS to START LOCK mode), select CHANGE CASE .
Tips:
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To apply small letters to text, you select the text, and then on the Format menu, choose Font , and then in the Font dialog box, in the Effects area, select the Small Letters box.
Small Caps shortcut key : ⌘ +SHIFT+K
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To undo a case change, press ⌘ +Z.
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To use keyboard shortcuts to change the case, uppercase, and case of each word, select the text and press FN+SHIFT+F3 until the desired style is applied.
-
See also
Insert a drop cap
AutoCorrect Setting: Capitalization
PowerPoint for the web supports dossier editing.