Literacy Activities

These activities help students improve their oral language and phonemic skills by encouraging them to listen carefully, pronounce sounds clearly, and practice using words in fun and interactive ways. You can find these activities and more on https://www.readingrockets.org/

"I Spy” Blending

Directions:

  • While out on a walk or in the car, play a game by saying, "I spy something that sounds like s-t-o-p." Your child then blends the individual sounds together to guess the word ("stop").
  • Start with simple words and gradually increase the difficulty as your child gets more comfortable with blending.

Benefits:

This activity helps children practice blending sounds together to form words, which is essential for reading. It encourages them to focus on the sounds rather than the letters, improving their phonemic awareness.

B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.1.F.1.2 – This standard involves segmenting and blending phonemes in spoken words.


Jump, Skip, Hop!

Materials:

  • Simple picture cards (you can make these yourself or cut them out of magazines)
  • Open space to move

Directions:

  • Show your child a picture and ask them to say the word.
  • For each sound in the word (e.g., "cat" = /k/ /a/ /t/), have them perform a physical action like a jump, skip, or hop.
  • After completing the word, celebrate with a high-five! This can also be done outdoors by simply calling out words.

Benefits:
This fun and active game helps with phonemic awareness by helping children identify and break down sounds in words. It also incorporates movement, making learning more engaging.

B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.1.F.1.2 – Encourages children to segment phonemes (smallest sounds in a word ex:
cat = /k/ /a/ /t/ ) in spoken words.


Snail Talk

Directions:

  • Tell your child that you’re going to play "Snail Talk," where you stretch out a word slowly by its sounds (e.g., /fffflllaaaag/ for "flag").
  • Your child has to guess the word you're saying.
  • After a few rounds, switch roles so your child can stretch out words for you to guess.

Benefits:
This activity encourages children to listen carefully to sounds and understand how words are made up of individual phonemes. Stretching the sounds helps reinforce their understanding of sound blending.

B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.1.F.1.2 – Focuses on blending phonemes in spoken words.


First Sounds

Materials:

  • A picture book

Directions:
While reading with your child, pick a word from the book and emphasize the first sound (e.g., "ssssun"). Find another word with a different beginning sound (e.g., "mmmmoon"). Ask your child t

Benefits:
This activity develops children’s ability to recognize initial sounds in words, which is a key component of phonemic awareness. It helps them differentiate between sounds and improves their listening skills.

B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.1.F.1.2 – Supports the identification and manipulation of initial sounds in spoken words.

Source for all activities:

Reading Rockets. (2024). Phonological and Phonemic Awareness: Activities for Your First Grader | Reading Rockets. Www.readingrockets.org. https://www.readingrockets.org/literacy-home/reading-101-guide-parents/your-first-grader/phonological-and-phonemic-awareness

Home Learning Activities for struggling readers - Kindergarten Level

Rhyming game - Fly to the Hive
This engaging and interactive game helps children identify rhyming words. It is free to print and features a set of numbered picture cards. Players take turns selecting a card and saying the word aloud. If the word rhymes with the one they chose, they move up on the left side of the board to the "Happy Face." If it doesn’t rhyme, they move up to the "Sad Face." The first player to reach the hive wins the game. Each player uses their own colored marker to track their progress.
https://cdn.thisreadingmama.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/PPRG-TRM.pdf 

Rhyme-Time-Bingo!
This engaging and interactive game helps children identify rhyming words. To play Rhyme Time Bingo, each player receives a bingo card filled with pictures or words that represent various rhyming pairs, along with markers to cover the squares. The game leader draws calling cards from a pile and calls out the word or shows the picture, prompting players to listen for rhyming pairs on their cards. When a player finds a rhyming word, they cover that square with a marker. The game continues until someone marks five squares in a row—horizontally, vertically, or diagonally—and shouts, “Bingo!”
print for free: https://cdn.thisreadingmama.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/RhymeTimeGameBoards.pdf 

Pass the Rhyme

Pass the rhyme is a fun and easy activity to do a home for and does not require any materials. The first person says a word out loud. The next person says a word that rhymes with that word. Use a bean bag or ball to make it more fun!

This is a fun activity for students and is a great way to expose them to more words and give them ample opportunities to practice listening for those same ending sounds.
https://www.theprintableprincess.com/rhyming-activities-for-kindergarten/

Syllables

Segmenting Syllables (counting how many parts there are in a word)
Dividing Words Into Syllables by drumming - Practice at home with family by using small drums to break words apart.Use an upside-down bucket with a stick, a wood block with a stick, or use two rhythm sticks.
https://earlylearningideas.com/syllable-activities-for-kids/ 

Blending Syllables (slowly saying each part of the word and have the child blend them together)

Story Time - Integrate syllable awareness into your story time. For example, pause to clap the syllables in a character’s name or in a new vocabulary word discovered in the picture book when reading aloud.
https://www.myteachingcupboard.com/blog/teaching-syllables-and-phonological-awareness 

Smashing Playdough - Tell the child how many balls of play dough to make. Then, they will use their fist to smash each play dough ball as they say the sounds. You can have students roll the balls together as they blend the word.
https://natalielynnkindergarten.com/segmenting-and-blending-activities/

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