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365 Phonics Activities
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Elizabeth C. Stull holds a doctorate in early and middle childhood education specializing in curriculum and supervision. She is a visiting assistant professor at Ohio State University-Marion campus, where she teaches language and literacy and children’s literature in the master of education program. Dr. Stull has written numerous activity books for teachers, including Alligators to Zebras: Whole Language Activities for the Primary Grades, Kindergarten Teachers Survival Guide, and Multicultural Learning Activities: K-6. Sandra Fisher holds a master of education and is assistant professor of elementary education at Kutztown University (PA). She is coordinator of the university's Early Learning Center, a nationally aceredited campus laboratory school. She has more than 25 years of classroom experience and fas served. as vice president of the National Organization of Campus Development Laboratory Schools and as editor of the NOCDLS Bulletin. Carole Palmer holds a master of arts in reading. Previously a first-grade teacher, she currently writes educational material for children, including curriculum for reading programs, spelling series, and phonics projects. Susan Bloom is a writer and editor with Creative Services Associates, Inc,, a publisher of educational materials. She holds a master of arts in English from the University of California-Los Angeles. Joyce Stirniman is a writer and editor for Creative Services Associates, Inc. She served as field manager for the National Assessment of Education Progress— The Nation's Report Card. Copyright © 1998 Publications Intemational, Ltd. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced or quoted in whole or in part by any means whatsoever without written permission from: Louis Weber, C.E.0. Publications International, Ltd. 7373 North Cicero Avenue Lincolnwood, Il. 60646 Permission is never granted for commercial purposes. Manufactured in U.S.A. 87654321 ISBN: 0-7853-2875-0 CONTENTS Introduction 4 Chapter |: Sounds Like Fun 8 Chapter Z: A B See 46 Chapter 3: Eye To Hand 86 Chapter +: Word Sense IZ Chapter 5: Alphabet Cooking |44 Chapter 6: Alphabet Arts + Crafts \68 Chapter #: Alphabet Adventures ZO| Appendix 234 Index 2374 © INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION Reading is a skill, and pethaps the most} younger important skill a child can learn. Although and older there are a number of methods used for can benefit teaching reading, the phonics method is from the one of the most effective. With the phonics } book's method, the child learns that sounds activities as correspond to alphabet letter symbols. well. Using these letter sounds, words can be “decoded” and read. To stimulate the child’s interest in reading, you must provide a print-rich, environment filled with books, magazines, and newspapers. It is important that the child sees you reading and that you read to the child for pleasure 365 Fun Phonics Activities provides fun ways for children to learn letters and the corresponding letter sounds, Children are active learners, Therefore, these phonics activities are designed so the child will be learning by “doing,” by using senses, and by asking questions, Oral communication is also important for language development. Listen to what the child is saying. Talk with him or her as much as possible. With you as a role model, the child will develop good listening and speaking patterns and an interest in learning and reading. The book is intended for preschoolers, ages three to six, but children slightly 365 Fun Phonics Activities is divided into seven chapters. Each chapter has activities designated as “easy” (one handprint), “medium” (two handprints), or “challenging” (three handprints). These activity levels are built on the hierarchy of language and reading development. wu 8 ae o easy medium challenging The “easy” level lays the foundation for basic skills; children manipulate objects and call attention to beginning sounds of words. On the “medium” level, the child begins to associate letter symbols and letter sounds through listening skills, letter recognition, and te activities on the “challenging” level require applying letter symbols to letter sounds and using fine motor tile experiences. The skills. Children learn at different rates. Therefore, you may find that the child needs an easier or more challenging activity from one chapter to another. INTRODUCTION © 5 As you preview these activities, remember that they need not be done in a sequential manner, You should alternate activities, skipping from chapter to chapter, so that the child will have experiences that range from art to cooking to manipulating objects. Read all the materials, the directions, and words of tion for every activity. Some of the activities require direct adult supervision because of the materials used (such as scissors) or the nature of the activity (for example, cooking). As you and the child select an activity, discuss what you are going to do. Talk with the child while he or she is working on a particular project. Be patient, and praise the child as he or she is doing an activity You may also find it helpful to repeat an activity from time to time. The projects are designed so that they can be enjoyed again and again. Chapter 1 “Sounds Like With6 © INTRODUCTION writing tools, including pipe cleaners, string, and pens. Chapter 4; “Word Sense.” With these activities, many of which are challenging, children apply their knowledge of letter sounds and recognition to beginning reading. They unscramble letters to form words, observe and read road signs while traveling, and find and read labels at the grocery store. j Te activities, children reinforce their command of beginning letter sounds and listening skills. Rhymes, riddles, and puzzles provide ways to master letter-sound Chapter 5: “Alphabet Cooking.” With the activities in this chapter, children will learn letter sounds while doing two of their favorite things—cooking and eating. recognition. Chapter 2: “A B See.” Here, the child learns to recognize printed letters. The forms of print used are newspapers, magazines, menus, maps, and alphabet noodles. The activity “Tactile Alphabet” provides an opportunity for the child to create an alphabet book. Chapter 3: “Eye to Hand.” With these activities, the child learns letter recognition and also develops the small muscle coordination necessary for writing. The child manipulates objects, materials, and INTRODUCTION @ to the home. With these exciting activities, the child learns letters and sounds through an outdoor scavenger hunt, a trip to the in the park, and more. z00, a picn Most of all, have fun with the activities. The more enjoyable the phonics activities are for children, the more they'll want to do them—and the faster they'll learn to Chapter 6: “Alphabet Arts and Crafts.” Here, the child uses art materials to explore sounds and letters. Finger painting, bubble blowing, puppet making, and necklace making are among the creative projects Chapter 7: “Alphabet Adventures.” Phonics activities don’t have to be confined8 © SOUNDS LIKE FUN SOUNDS LIKE FUN B is for beginning, and identifying beginning sounds is a big step in learning to read. In Chapter 1 activities, children take that giant step as they listen for the sounds that begin words. Sometimes, as in “Tongue Twister Time,” children tell which words begin alike. In other activities, children find objects or think of words beginning with a particular sound. Meanwhile, children do some of their favorite things: mail letters, play cards—even help fold laundry! ALPHABET TRAIN yy a6 See 8 Se See = -O lg Get on the right track with the alphabet train. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Boxes of various sizes and shapes, yarn, objects beginning with the different letters of the alphabet If possible, collect 26 small boxes and one larger box. Leave the open side of each box facing up. Line up the boxes end to end, like the boxcars of a train, then punch a hole in the center of the front and back of each “car.” Use yarn to thread through the holes to connect the boxes. Make a knot on each end of the piece of yarn so that the yarn will not slip out. When all 26 “cars” and one “engine” (the bigger box) are hooked together, write the alphabet on each of the small boxes—one letter per box in alphabetical order. When the train is assembled, ask the child to find some object that begins with each letter and place it in the appropriate “car.” Variation: If you can’t find enough boxes, you can assign two or more letters per box. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © 9 TONGUE TWISTER TIME 9 Shu, oe eee cccccvevcce o00e Ol Kids are never too tired to tell tall tongue-twister tales. ww Many children have tried the tongue twister “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.” In this activity, let the child have fun with alliteration and develop a new tongue twister. It can be challenging to think of a sentence (or phrase) with words that all have the same be sound. ABC books, poetry books, and picture books that focus on alliteration can be read to the child. This is an enjoyable exercise and serves as a model. After the child has developed his or her own tongue twister, see how fast it can be said by both the child and you. Then, test it with the rest of the family. wu FINGER FUN Ms gs ree ae cy eg cse centre Pointing to pictures helps kids practice their letter sounds. WHAT YOULL NEED: Index cards, old magazines, blunt scissors, glue or clear tape Play a picture game to help children learn the beginning sound of the letter F. Using pictures cut from old magazines, make several picture cards that show objects whose names begin the same as the word finger, such as fence, fox, fish, and fountain, Make additional picture cards using objects that begin with other letters of the alphabet, such as a cat, toaster, bicycle, and so on. Mix the cards, Point to a picture with your finger. If the picture name begins like the word finger, the child should say, “You put your finger on a____,” naming the pictured item. If the picture name does not begin like finger, the child should say, “No fingers here.10 © SOUNDS LIKE FUN SILLY WILLY we wee wee ee eH OY Have fun with nonsense rhymes, See how many rhyming words you can use. Young children get enjoyment from listening to and {making up nonsense rhymes. JY __ Begin by giving the child a word, such as tall. Ask him or her to think of a rhyming word, such as ball. Continue alternating back and forth with the silly rhyming. Even though the word pairs you create may not always make sense, it is important that the child recognizes and responds to the rhyming concept. ABC—WHAT DO YOU SEE? Children need to be observant to play th game successfully. Children enjoy solving riddles, and this activity will help a child to become aware of objects in the environment through riddles. This game may be played in the home or anywhere. Begin by saying: “ABC, what do you see? I see something beginning with 7." Have the child solve the riddle by saying something that he or she sees beginning with the letter T (for example, table, teaspoon, tree). You can give additional clues as needed, such as color, size, shape, function, or location. You can also ask the child to touch the object that he or she identifies. Reverse roles, and have the child choose a letter and start the riddle. SOUNDS LIKE FUN ¢ 11 wa, HARD C/SOFT C —————————————— Js it hard or is it soft? How many C words can you think of? WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Objects (or pictures of objects) that begin witha C Some of the letters make a variety of different sounds, so it is important that the child be exposed to them. Collect objects (or pictures of things) that begin with the letter C. The purpose of this activity is for the child to divide these materials into two groups: those with a hard C sound, as in cake, and ones with a soft C sound, as in celery. (Sample objects: cup, cookies, ceiling, carrot, circle.) GD... LISTEN CAREFULLY yy gosh RT RE Masih gl One word ina group is not like the others. Which is it? Select a letter of the alphabet, and think of some words that begin with the sound of that same letter. Tell the child that you will be saying three words—two words that begin with the same sound and one word that is different. Say the three words—for example, cat, ball, bird. Have the child listen carefully and then tell you which word begins with the different letter sound. Variation: To make this activity more challenging, say four or five words with the same beginning letter sound and one that is different. You can also reverse roles and have the child think of words that begin similarly and differently12 © — SOUNDS LIKE FUN HEART PUZZLE ly ee eee el ee ene Take time to solve this puzzle, and mend a broken heart. WHAT YOULL NEED: Lightweight cardboard, marker, blunt scissors Make a big heart shape on lightweight cardboard, and write the letters H and hr on it in as large a size as possible. Cut the heart into several puzzle-shaped pieces. The child takes the puzzle pieces and puts the puzzle together so that a heart is formed and the letters H and h are formed. The letters assist the child in assembling the heart puzzle and also in associating the H sound with the word heart. awe SUITCASE SPECIALS OG —— Packing for a trip? These suitcase specials are a must. WHAT YOULL NEED: Suitcase, objects that begin with the letter Planning and going on a trip is an enjoyable experience for most children. The task in this activity is for the child to find things in the home that begin with the letter S that he or she could pack in a suitcase, Items might include socks, sandals, soap, a swimsuit, or a sweater. See what items the child selects. You may have forgotten one of those items on your list. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © = 13 PICTURE DICTIONARY we ee ccecccccccccens cece ccees OF Make a special book for a special person. WHAT YOULL NEED: Old magazines, 26 sheets of 81” < 11” construction paper of various colors, blunt scissors, glue or clear tape, marker, hole puncher, yarn Have the child design a “picture dictionary” filled with pictures of things that are of interest to him or her. For example, if the child likes sports, use several old sports magazines for this project. Write both the capital and lowercase form of one letter of the alphabet in the upper right corner of each of the 26 sheets of construction paper. Give the child an old magazine and blunt scissors, and ask him or her to look for and cut out pictures of things that begin with each letter of the alphabet. Help the child glue or tape a picture on the correct letter page. When all or most of the pages have pictures on them, help the child make a front and back cover. Punch holes on the left side of each page, then bind the pages with yarn. PHONICS FUN FACT SUC Cp mt Mtoe Resco Ure Ce ea14 © SOUNDS LIKE FUN BUBBLE BABBLE aye — ee ee ee ee Blow some bubbles, and practice the B sound. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Liquid soap, water, large plastic container, drinking straw )) Use bubble-blowing to help the child practice beginning sounds, = Make a bubble solution by pouring soap and water into the container, using % cup of soap to one quart of water. Invite the child to blow bubbles with the straw. Each time he or she blows a bubble, say a word. Have the child say a word that begins with the same sound. we LET THE SUN SHINE AQ vrevvvvvvvvvvVvVV VV VV YY VV VV YY VV YY YY YY Follow the winding path, and review the letter S. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, pen, crayons or markers, 2 blunt scissors, glue, poster board, die and markers from board game \‘ TAS Construct your own board game to practice the beginning sound of the letter S. —— Draw 10 to 15 circles, each with a diameter of about 114’, on construction paper. Ask the child to decorate these “suns” with crayons or markers. Cut them out and paste them on a y a piece of poster board to form an S-shaped path. PT —~. Play a game by taking turns moving markers along the path / 7 S according to the roll of the die. Each player must say a word that begins like the word sun in order to leave his or her marker on a circle. The game ends when one player reaches the end of the path. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © = 15 SNAP LETTERS iar Instead of using those clothespins on a clothesline, try snapping them on pictures. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Eight magazine pictures, lightweight cardboard, compass, glue or clear tape, eight clothespins, blunt scissors, felt-tip pen This activity reinforces eight different beginning sounds Take a piece of lightweight cardboard and, using a compass, draw and cut out a circle approximately 8" wide. Use the pen to divide the circle into eight equal sections, as if it were a pie. Next, cut out pictures of familiar objects from a magazine (for example, ball, pen, fish, dog, carrot, hat, shoe, apple). Make sure that each picture is small enough to fit into one section of the circle and that no two objects begin with the same letter, Glue or tape the pictures in place. On the opening end of each snap clothespin, write a letter that matches the first letter of the object in each picture (in our example, the letters B, P, FD, C, H,S, and A). Ask the child to take each lettered clothespin and snap it onto the section of the circle that has an object whose first letter begins with the same letter. Continue until all the letter matches are made. If the child has difficulty with certain letters, focus on those letters the next time you do this activity. (Hint: You can use the back of the circle to repeat this activity with a new set of letters.)LOOK AT ME eevee Watch what happens when you talk into a mirror. WHAT YOULL NEED: Mirror Mirrors are fascinating to children. This activity allows them to see what lip and mouth movements occur when different words are spoken. Tell the child various words and have him or her repeat them while looking in a mirror (for example, dog for a D sound, button for a B sound, milk for an M sound, tooth for a T sound, pat for a P sound, and so on). As each word is said, ask the child if his or her lips touched (as when saying words that begin with B, M, and P). And where was “Mr. Tongue?” Was he touching the front teeth, on the roof of the mouth, or hiding inside? Ask the child to think of other words that begin with a particular letter and say them to the mirror, seeing if his or her mouth formations are the same for each letter sound. | SPY eV —_— Spy an object, and see who can “detect” it. Play an “I Spy” game by giving clues that include beginning sounds. For example: “I spy something white; it is in the kitchen; it begins like the word rabbit.” After the child answers correctly (refrigerator), give clues for another object. SOUNDS LIKE FUN ¢ TF wu LETTER RIDDLES VV VV VV VV VV VV VY VV VV YY VV YY VY YY a letter-riddle game. Just a few minutes to spare? Try While traveling, shopping, or during spare time, play a riddle game that begins, for example, by saying: “I am thinking of the letter that has the beginning sound of bail. What letter is it?” This activity provides many opportunities for riddles. A more challenging approach to the riddle concept that begins with a B.” Allow the child to guess the answer between each successive clue Continue with more clues: “Iam thinking of something that is round; I am thinking of something that goes up very high and may be different colors; | am thinking of something that bounces.” to present a series of clues. For example: “I am thinking of something Keep giving clues until the child guesses the object in mind. For a further variation, reverse roles and have the child give the clues. This activity helps develop the child’s thinking skills as you progress from general to specific clues. 4 MAIL CALL eee ee eee ew eR HH OG All the mail starts with the letter M in this make-believe mailbox activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Shoe box, old magazines, blunt scissors Help the child practice recognizing the beginning sound of the letter M. Print a large M for mailbox on the shoe box. Then invite the child to look through magazines for pictures of objects whose names begin with M. Help the them by putting them into the M box. d cut out the pictures and “mail”168 ¢ SOUNDS LIKE FUN APRON OR APPLE Way og Here isa challenge to determine ifA words are long Ye or short sounds. = WHAT YOULL NEED: Old catalog, blunt scissors, apron, apple Old catalogs are good sources for pictures of specific objects. Find some that the child can use for this activity. Give the child an apron. Ask what it is and what beginning apple and ask what beginning sound is heard when saying apple (the short A sound). Give the child a catalog to find things that have long A sounds (for example, alien, ape, angel) and short A sounds (ant, ax, animal). If the object has a long A sound, place it by the apron, and if it has a short A sound, Place it by the apple. BOUNCING WORDS SBCs ectretr ee eh etees Try bouncing words. It can be more fun than using a ball. Whenever you have a few minutes, whether you're at home or traveling in the car, try this quick activity involving “bouncing” words from one to another. Say a word, such as bail. The child then says a word that begins with the same first letter, such as bat. Continue bouncing new words back and forth to each other until neither of you can think of any more words. Then try a new letter. You can also have someone keep count to see how many words you come up with for each letter. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © = 19 : ALPHABET SONG ily @ =a] ee ee = An old song is a great way to begin the day— and learn the alphabet. Teach the child the “Alphabet Song": “A,B,C, D,E, 5G, H,1,J, K, L, M,N, 0, B, QR,s, TU,V, W,X, Y, and Z. Now I know my ABCs, Tell me what you think of me.” ing sounds and the sounds of the letters, at By singing this song, the child learns rhyn the same time developing a frame of reference for alphabetical order. For a variation, write the letters of the alphabet on a sheet of paper, and ask the child to point to each letter while singing. You can also record the child singing on a cassette tape that can be played again and again. For a second verse, replace the last line above with: “Won't you come and sing with me?” RIDDLE TINE eT ere Coc RTT Once in a blue moon, Yet never in one hundred years? (The letter M)20 © ~— SOUNDS LIKE FUN
apple, ball, feather, ribbon, and sock), and have the child say what Ue os the objects are. After the objects are properly identified, cut a hole FY in the box that is large enough for the child’s hand to fit through. Place the objects inside the box. Then ask the child to reach inside, Ny BFasp an object, and describe what he or she is holding while saying what the beginning letter sound of the object is. Variation: Place five objects in the box without showing them to the child. Then ask him. or her to feel, describe, name, and identify the beginning letter sound of the object. WASH-DAY WORDS we By — . oo : ee e e -@ Kids can learn beginning sounds by folding towels and T-shirts, WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Clean laundry Make helping out around the house a game of matching beginning sounds. As you and the child fold and sort clean laundry, have the child name each item and then say another word that begins with the same sound: socks/sun, jeans/jump, towel/toy.SHOW TIME VVVVVV VV VV VV VV VV YY VV ¥ Television is not just for couch potatoes. The TV can be a tool for sharpening listening skills. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Television, videocassette of children’s movie or TV show (optional) Encourage the child to watch television with a phonics purpose: listening for beginning sounds. Before the child watches a program or video, ask him or her to listen for words that begin with a particular sound. For example, while watching The Lion King, the child might listen for words that begin like lion. Encourage the child to say each L word aloud. WIGGLE WORMS pie My eeccce eeccee cece ee Oy Worms can do wonders when you want to try the letter W sound. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pipe cleaner, pencil This art activity can be used to draw attention to the beginning sound of the letter W. Show the child how to make a “worm” by winding a pipe cleaner around a pencil. Slide the “worm” off the pencil, and invite the child to make the worm crawl around as you count to 10. Before you reach 10, the child must say a word that begins like worm. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © = 31 PILLOWCASE PICKS We a, ee es ee A prize awaits the participant when the pillowcase is filled. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pillowcase, objects that begin with the letter P- In addition to a pillow, have the child find other objects in your home that begin with the letter P. Show the child a pillowcase. Ask what goes inside a pillowcase. The child should respond with “pillow.” Ask the child to make the oe sound of the P in the word pillowcase. Give the child the ——) GaP pillowcase and have him or her find and place different objects that begin with the letter P inside it (for example, pen, pencil, piece of popcorn, paintbrush). When the child has collected every item he or she could identif and review the items. As you are talking with the child, use as r conversation as you can. When you are finished, give the child a prize of a Popsicle, peanuts, or a pear (or anything else that begins with the letter P) for the successful completion of this activity. put them on the table y P words in your wu DRESS FOR SUCCESS SOY Clothes make the child—or at least the child’s phonics knowledge—in this start-the-day activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Several items of clothing As the child gets dressed in the morning, play a b least three items of his or her clothing ning-sound guessing game using at Start this way: “Now it’s time to put on something that begins like the word party.” (Answer: pants.) Have the child guess each piece of clothing before putting it on. This game can also be played at bedtime using a nightgown, pajamas, robe, and slippers32 © SOUNDS LIKE FUN PICK A PUMPKIN Oe ae ee ee You don’t have to wait for autumn to create an educational pumpkin patch. WHAT YOULL NEED: Orange construction paper, pencil, blunt scissors Make learning the sound of the letter P fun by creating a pumpkin patch Help the child draw and cut out several pumpkins from orange construction paper. Place the pumpkins around the room, Ask the child to gather pumpkins from the “patch” by saying a word that begins like pumpkin each time he or she picks up a pumpkin. eeeeeeeserreseee eeecsesececese ™! Simon says that the words listening and learning start alike. SIMON SAYS SOUND ALIKE By a) Play a version of “Simon Says” that focuses on beginning sounds in words. If “Simon” makes a correct statement, the child should follow the given directions, If “Simon” makes an incorrect statement, the child should not. For example, if you say, “Simon says finger and football begin alike; wiggle your finger,” the child should follow the directions and wiggle his or her finger. However, if you say, “Simon says tongue and nose begin alike; stick out your tongue,” the child should not follow the directions because the statement is incorrect SOUNDS LIKE FUN © 33 wu, TONGUE TWISTER TOUGHIES 4 ee ee ee ee ee Kids can catch on to consonants while considering catchy quips. Tongue twisters are ideal for recognizing words that begin with the same sound. Say one of the following tongue twisters slowly, and repeat it several times. Ask the child to repeat the words that begin with the same sound. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. Silly Sara sang a song at sunset Rubber baby buggy bumpers. A big black bug bit a big brown bear, The wild wolf wanders the wintry woods. Round and round the rugged rocks, the ragged rascal ran. IN- BASKET SLE “Oy VVGVV IV VE VV ICV VUV TIT IV IV TV VT TY e A-tisket, a-tasket—here’s a beginning-sound basket! WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Index cards, marker or pen, small basket Here’s an “office” activity that encourages children to practice letter sounds Make letter cards by writing a large letter (for example, B, D, G, instance, the letter B) and have him or her say a word that begins with the same letter (such as bed). After giving a word with the correct beginning sound, the child drops the card into the “in-basket.” If the child’s word does not have the correct first-letter sound, put the card aside and continue with the other cards.SOUNDS LIKE FUN 4, _BALL-TOSS RHYMES O.. ee cccccccscccccs oes Test a child’s verbal skills with a bouncing rubber ball. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Rubber ball Rhyming words are an effective way for a child to /; develop listening skills and acquire the ability to } make new words. 4) MR Think of a simple rhyming word, such as hat, As you throw, bounce, or roll the ball to the child, say the word hat. The child, after receiving the r ball, is to say a rhyming word (for example, cat, » fat, mat, sat, rat, pat) before he or she returns > the ball to you. Repeat transferring the ball back and forth and saying a rhyming word. If the child cannot think of a new word, have him or her say hat. Then it’s up to you to givea thyming word. TELL ME A STORY us vrvvvvvvvvyvvvvyvyvryvyvryyyyryryy ~6 | Here’s one way to get applause whenever you tell a story. Wy Use verbal storytelling to practice listening for beginning sounds. Ask the child to listen for words that begin with a particular sound (such as the B sound) as you tell a simple story. For example: “I went outside and took my bat. | picked up a ball. 1 ran around the bases.” Have the child clap each time he or she hears a word that begins with the chosen sound and then repeat the word. SOUNDS LIKE FUN @ 35 BATTER UP ye e ily woe ee ee ee ~ See if students of beginning sounds can hit a home run. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Index cards, old magazines, glue or clear tape, blunt scissors Sports lovers can play baseball as they learn beginning sounds. Make picture cards by gluing or taping pictures of simple objects onto index cards. Place the pictures around the room or yard in a baseball-diamond pattem. Have the child walk or run from home plate to first base. At first base, ask him or her to name the object on the picture card and say a word that has the same beginning sound. If the child's word has the correct beginning sound, he or she goes on to the next base Let the child continue until he or she reaches home plate and scores a “home run.” Play the game again using new picture cards, or actual sports items. we HELLO/GOOD-BYE @ ——_—_ = Hello, horse; good-bye goat! In this activity, )) and H. Say a series of words that begin with H and G, such as hat, girl, head, horse, gate, garden, hand, each time you say a word that be ins with G the child is asked to recognize the beginning sounds G pat, and house. Have the child say “hello” with H and “good-bye” each time you say a word that be;36 = © ~— SOUNDS LIKE FUN Wyy_ RED RAKES, PURPLE Plas at sea Here's a colorful way to learn beginning letter sounds. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, old magazines, blunt scissors, crayons or colored markers Use children’s knowledge of colors to help them learn beginning sounds. First, help the child make a color wheel. Draw a circle and divide it into six sections, like a pie. Color the sections in this order: red, purple, blue, green, yellow, orange. Make picture cards by cutting out a picture whose name has the same beginning sound as each color word—for example, a rake for red, a pig for purple, a blanket for blue, grass for green, yarn for yellow, and an orchestra for orange. Ask the child to name each color on the wheel and then place the picture with the same beginning sound next to it. Children who are more advanced can find their own matching pictures. JACK-IN-THE- BOX eeecee eecceee Children will jump for joy when they learn the letter J. ee Play an active game that emphasizes the beginning sound J. Ask the child to demonstrate the action of a jack-in-the- box. Say the words jump and jack. Have the child say additional words that begin with the J sound. Explain that you will say a word. If it begins with the / sound, like jack-in-the-box, the child jumps up. If it does not begin with the / sound, the child stays “in the box.” Begin with the words jar, sand, tree, jet, jelly, box, je SOUNDS LIKE FUN & = 37 LETTER LONDON BRIDGE 331, SS ee London Bridge is falling down—unless kids can identify beginning sounds. * WHAT YOULL NEED: Index cards, old magazines, blunt scissors, glu Here’s a new slant on an old singing game that will help children practice letter sounds. or clear tape Make picture cards by cutting out pictures of simple objects and pasting or taping them onto index cards. To play the game, sing “London Bridge Is Falling Do n” with a small group of children. The players walk one by one through the bridge formed by two other players. When the song ends, the player inside the bridge is “caught.” In order to be “released,” he or she looks at a picture card, identifies it, and then gives a word with the same first-letter sound as the object in the picture38 = ©@ SOUNDS LIKE FUN T PARTY ee ee es ee ~S This activity will definitely put the T into tea party. WHAT YOULL NEED: Dishes, table, tablecloth, teacups, teaspoons, straws or Popsicle sticks, clay, small flowerpot or bowl, construction paper, marker or pen, blunt scissors, glue Hold a real or “pretend” tea party that includes many foods and objects whose names have the beginning sound T. With the child’s help, identify tea-party items whose names begin with the T sound. Discuss each step with the child: Set the table with a tablecloth, dishes, teacups, and teaspoons. Have the child create a centerpiece by putting a letter T made out of drinking straws or Popsicle sticks in a piece of clay placed ina small flowerpot or bowl. Next, make “tulips” by drawing tulip-blossom shapes on various colors of construction paper, cutting them out, and gluing them to the Popsicle sticks or straws. Ask the child to help create the menu and serve some of the following real or pretend foods: tea, toast, tuna, and tarts. RIDDLE TIME What happens when ghosts fall dow (They get boo-boos.) SOUNDS LIKE FUN @ = 39 ALPHABET BOUQUET Ai eeevce eoeeeeceee eeeeoe A] What could be more beautiful? A bouquet with a flower for each letter of the alphabet. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Flowers—one each of as many different varieties as Z possible From a garden or flower market, such as the one at a grocery store, let the child choose and pick (or buy) one each of several different types of flowers, such as a rose, carnation, daisy, tulip, daffodil, and lily. As the child chooses a flower, name it. The child then has to say a word with the same beginning sound as the flower’s name. Continue identifying flower names and words with the same beginning sounds as you take the bouquet home and while you arrange the flowers for display. Do so until the child can identify each flower name, as well as other words with the same beginning sound. wy WASH, RINSE, DRY Rea ene eee pene ece er eee er aeereveas eer Here’s an alphabet game to make those tiresome bath time tasks lots of fun. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Bathtub, water, washcloth, soap, towel At bath time, try this beginning-sound chanting game. Start with the word wash. As the child washes each arm, each leg, torso, and face with soap and cloth, he or she chants, “w-w-wash my arms, w-w-wash my legs,” and so on for each body part. Repeat the activity with the word rinse ("r-r-rinse") as the child rinses each body part. Finally, use the word dry ("“d-d-dry”) as the child dries each body part.40 © = SOUNDS LIKE FUN Sy THE MISSING D’S eS Become a detective and find the missing D’s. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Magnifying glass, household items that begin with the letter D Role-playing is an important way for a child to learn, and pretending to be a detective can be challenging and exciting. Give the child a magnifying glass. The “detective” searches the home for things that begin with the letter D. Have the child collect the D things in a dishpan. (Hints: doll, stuffed dog, dime, dish, dice, domino, drum, diaper.) If the child has a yellow rain slicker, it could be used as an additional prop to make him or her look like detective Dick Tracy. DISH-WASHING TIME wy eoccccce ecoce eocce aoe wf Discuss D words while you do the dishes. WHAT YOULL NEED: New kitchen sponges, blunt scissors, gy glue, construction paper, dirty dishes The child will learn all about the letter D in this kitchen activity. Cut up a new kitchen sponge into strips about one inch wide. Help the child glue them onto construction paper to make three-dimensional, versions of the letters D and d. Display the letters in the kitchen near the sink. Emphasize the D sound as the child helps you wash dishes. Discuss the process using a variety of D words: dirty dishes, draining, drying, dishwasher, dishrag, and dish towel. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © “41 57 GL Tell kids to go fly a kite—and learn about the letter K. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Kraft paper, blunt scissors, crayons, tissue paper or crepe paper, glue or clear tape, string ‘This activity helps children become familiar with K, a rarely used beginning letter. Cut a circle with a diameter of about 12” to 18" from the kraft paper. Ask the child to write the upper- and lowercase letter K on the paper circle, then identify three things that begin with the K sound—for example, a kangaroo, key, and kettle. Make eight or 10 streamers, approximately 1” x 18”, out of colorful tissue paper or crepe paper. Help the child glue or tape the ends of the streamers around the edge of the paper circle. Next, punch two small holes in the center of the kite, then put a string approximately 24” long through the holes, tying it so that the string is on the opposite side of the kite from the streamers. As the child runs outside, pulling the kite with the string, the streamers will float behind. RIDDLE TIME ‘What two letters did Mother Hubbard PUBeosen ee Eek eel42 = © SOUNDS LIKE FUN LITTER PATROL a Kids can be good citizens while they learn about the letter L. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Empty cereal box, blunt scissors, hole puncher, Cera) yarn or cord, piece of felt, marker or pen, gardening gloves — AL Children can spruce up the neighborhood and learn the letter ANY] at the same time. Make a litter collector by cutting the top off an empty cereal box. Punch a hole in each side of the box near the top, then put the yam or cord through the holes. Tie the two ends together to form a loop. On a piece of felt, draw a two-dimensional capital letter L, Z Cut out the letter and paste it on the litter collector. Explain to the child that £ stands for the word litter. As you walk through the neighborhood or a park, have the child put on gardening gloves and pick up paper, wrappers, and other litter that you find along the way, putting them in the litter collector. Dispose of this in a proper container to show the child where litter belongs. we NURSERY RHYMES AS vevvvvyvvvy YY YY YY YY YY YY YY VY YYYYYY Where did Jack and Jill go, and what happened to Humpty Dumpty? Fill in the rhyming words. Simple nursery rhymes help a child acquire rhyming and listening skills. Read or say a nursery rhyme to the child. Repeat the rhyme. However, this time do not say the rhyming word. Have the child add the missing word. Ask him or her which words sounded alike and if he or she can think of any other words that sound like those words. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © = 43 WW as, SMELLS GOOD! Cae eee ee ee ee Let kids’ noses lead them through this initial-letter activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Variety of foods and other items with identifiable smells (as described below), scarf or blindfold Children put their noses to work in this beginning-sound activity. Collect several foods and other items with interesting smells, such as a slice of apple sprinkled with cinnamon, a lemon, an orange slice, a bar of soap, a bottle of perfume, toothpaste, a sprig of mint, a tea bag, an onion slice, and a banana. Blindfold the child and let him or her smell an item and try to R identify it. Then the child must say another word that begins with the same sound. For an added challenge, ask the child to write the letter that begins the name of the item. RUN, WALK, JUMP, AND HOP ty By Hop for happiness and jump for joy in this beginning-sound activity. Play an active game that focuses on the beginning sounds H, R, W, and J. Say the word hand and ask the child to demonstrate hopping. Point out that the words hand and hop begin with the same sound Tell the child that you will say words that begin like hop and also some that begin like run, walk, and jump. He or she should perform the activity (hop, run, walk, or jump) whose name has the same beginning sound as the word you say. Words to use might Include rope, wet, jar, head, win, jet, red, and hat.SOUNDS LIKE FUN BIG BROWN BAG yy see eee ee ee OS Better be bright-eyed for this big bag of B's. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Brown shopping bag Give the child a big brown bag, and pretend that he or she is going shopping in the home to find things that begin with the letter B. (You may specify a certain number of items if desired.) As the child finds an object, he or she should place it inside the bag. When the “shopping” is completed, ask him or her to tell you what was found and . then discuss the objects, emphasizing the B sound. (Hints: ball, balloon, basket, bathrobe, bag.) TASTE, TOUCH, SMELL GGd co cccccrcccccsccccccsccccesccces Learning the S sound can be “sweet,” “soft,” and “silky.” Play a sensory game that emphasizes the beginning sound S. First, help the child name the five senses: sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell. Begin by asking a sense-related question that uses an $ word. For example: “What can you find that feels soft?” Have the child find or name things in the house that answer the question. Then continue with other sense-related questions that contain $ words, such as silky, soapy, sour, sticky, sweet, or salty. SOUNDS LIKE FUN © © 45 WHAT IS MISSING? wu by ce es ee ONG Now you see it, now you don’t. What could be missing? WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Tray of items with different beginning sounds ‘Try this activity to enhance a child's visual awareness and beginning sound recognition. On a tray, place a collection of various items, each beginning with a different letter (for example, boat, pencil, apple, cup, and sock). Begin with five items, Show the child the tray of items, and name them. Then ask the child to turn around so he or she cannot see the tray, Remove one of the items, and place it behind your back. Have the child turn around. Ask the child to identify the missing item. Give a clue by telling the child that the missing item begins with a certain letter (for example, 5). To make this activity more challenging, you can start with more objects; for younger children, you can start with as few as three objects. Reverse roles, and have the child remove an item from the tray, Ask him or her to give you a clue by telling you the beginning letter of the missing item. £17 22 Bs oti Nf OO BIB UES Ota aiid Ra“% ¢ AB SEE : A B SEE In this chapter, children get the “Alphabet Nitty Gritty” as they “Jump for J” and “Snap to It.” These fun activities introduce children to printed letters. The skills practiced range from matching letter shapes to recognizing and naming specific letters. ‘The chapter includes board games such as “Spider Man” and “ARC Concentration” as well as ideas to keep even the most active children interested as they walk down “Alphabet Avenue” or have fun “Bowling for Scholars.” GD... LE LETTERS Start your day off right with a bowl of alphabet cereal. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Alphabet cereal Letters are found in many places, and food is no exception. Buy a box of alphabet cereal, and pour some in a dish. Ask the child to sort through the cereal to find the letters 4 that make his or her name. The child can arrange these Ob letters on the table. Say each letter as it is placed to emphasize letter awareness. After this activity, enjoy a bowl of cereal. AbpSrE © 4F NAMES IN THE NEWS we ut wee ee ee ee HH OY Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Your name is in the news. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Old newspapers, blunt scissors, blank paper D Ask the child to search through an old newspaper to find one set of the letters that make up his or her first name. When the letters are found, have the child cut them out and arrange them to spell out the name on a blank piece of paper. Remember that the first letter needs to be a capital letter. Variation: For an extra challenge, ask the child to find the letters of his or her middle and last names as well. This activity may be repeated by searching for and using different types, sizes, and colors of print 1B QHECKING_LICENSE PLATES_ @p Search for license plate letters while you travel by car. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, pencil To pass the time when traveling in the car, give the child a sheet of paper with the alphabet printed on it in capital letters. Have the child call out the letters that he or she sees on the license plates of other cars and then cross off those letters on the sheet of paper. Travel time will go by more quickly when the child is involved with this activity, and he or she will be exposed to re of letters and numbers. Jing mixed combinati4 ¢ =6AB SEE STEPPING STONES vi JG ccccese Take these “steps” to learn letters and sounds. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: 26 sheets of paper, markers Let the child explore the many possibilities of this activity. Write a capital A on one side of a sheet of paper and a lowercase a on the other side. Do the same for each letter of the alphabet. Spread the sheets of paper on the floor like stones, and see how the child uses these materials. He or she can arrange them in alphabetical order, or make a long path and say each letter as it is stepped on. TELEPHONE DIRECTORY = {iy ee ee Find names beginning with different letters using a ery recycled phone directory. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Old telephone directory, blunt scissors, envelope Another source where many letters are found is a telephone directory. Show the child an old telephone directory, and look through it together. Explain what is in a telephone directory. A good introduction to the directory is to look for and cut out the child’s last name or a friend’s name. Using blunt scissors, the child can also cut out names beginning with each letter of the alphabet. (You can use boldfaced names for easier cutting and viewing—or cut out groups of five or more consecutive names.) Have the child recognize that names always begin with a capital letter, that a telephone directory lists last names first, and that the book is arranged in alphabetical order. After the names are cut out and every letter has been found, place these cuttings in an envelope, saving them for the activity entitled “Telephone Directory II.” Apsrr © 49 Siu TELEPHONE DIRECTORY II ee SS Forgot a telephone number? This directory can help. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Names cut out for “Telephone Directory” activity, sheet of paper, glue or clear tape Have the child use the names in the envelope that were cut out for “Telephone Directory.” The object now is for the child to organize these names in alphabetical order. (It may be easier for the child to spread all the names on the floor or table.) When the names are arranged in alphabetical order, have the child begin with the A name, and glue or tape it onto the paper. Proceed through the alphabet. The names can be arranged as in a real telephone directory—in columns, proceeding from top to bottom and left to right. VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VVN NY WHAT IS THE LETTER? Wy, Re Give a child a “feel” for the letters of the alphabet. Another way for a child to experience letters is for you tc tracing it with your finger. Capital letters are probably the easiest to identify. Ask the child to guess the letter. He or she will have to concentrate on your motions and strokes to determine the correct letter, write” a letter on the child's back by slowly For an advanced child, spell out simple, three-letter words. Have the child guess the three letters and, if possible, determine the word50 e 6A B SE wy 1, WORD LETTER MATCH CY eee nee eee Look for clues to solve this game, matching capital and lowercase letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Index cards, pen or marker Knowledge of lowercase letters is necessary for reading printed materials. This activity helps the child recognize letters in lowercase form. On index cards, write simple words, such as cat, ball, fish, mat, and cake, in capital letters. Write the same words on a second set of cards in lowercase letters. Have the child sound out the words and match the cards with the same word. WORDS LIKE MY NAME a, ee ee ee ee Help a child find words that begin with the same first letter as his or her name. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Old magazines, blunt scissors, sheet of paper, glue or clear tape Have the child become aware of words that begin with the same letter as his or her first and/or last name. Give the child blunt scissors and some old magazines (those with a lot of advertisements and big print will work best). Talk about the first letter in his or her name, and begin the search for words in the magazine beginning with that same letter. After the words are found and cut out, they may be pasted on paper. Read the words that were chosen aloud. Keep emphasizing that the words also have the same beginning sound as the child's name. LETTER SEARCH MW vs, woccccccccccece Have fun looking at pictures to find special hidden letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pictures from a magazine or travel brochure, pen or marker nd then make a word out of them This activity allows a child to look for hidden letters Take a picture from a magazine or travel brochure. Using a pen or marker, hide some letters in the photograph by blending all or parts of them into the lines, curves, and shapes of objects in the picture, Ideally, the letters must be written so that they are visible, yet thin enough so that the child's search will be somewhat challenging. One way to start is to use the letters in the child’s name. Try capital letters first and then lowercase letters. Give the child the picture and have him or her search for the letters in his or her name. When the letters are found, ask the child to say each one and show where it is NURSERY RHYME Lucy Locket lost her pocket, Res roiom craig Nese rerun eum uta Desi btsse 8 AB SEE NEWSPAPER LETTERS wu, ee ee ee Use a newspaper to set up this letter-search activity. WHAT YOULL NEED: Marker, newspaper page This activity exposes the child to a newspaper, a medium in which letters and words are important. Give the child a page from a newspaper, and ask him or her to search it for a particular letter. Every time that letter is found, have the child put a circle around it with a marker. You may limit this to capital or lowercase letters, or search for both. Try different letters, and have the child note the frequency of some letters (such as F) compared to others (for example, X). sly Ya FITTING LETTERS O'S Ce ccecccccccocccesovcceeocece Matching capital and lowercase letters will be fun with these puzzles. WHAT YOULL NEED: Index cards, marker or pen, blunt scissors Using index cards positioned horizontally, you can make several (or all 26) letter cards. Write a capital letter on the left half of each card and the corresponding lowercase letter on. the right half. Randomly cut the cards between the letters (using notches, angles, zig-zags, and curved cuts), then mix them up ina single pile. The object of this activity is for the child to match the capital letter to its lowercase partner. The child will know that he or she made a correct match when the two halves fit together. You can begin this activity with only a few letters and eventually work to mixing and matching the entire alphabet. Abstr ¢ 99 wy SMALL, TALL, OR TAIL SQ VV VV VV VV VV V VV VV VV YY VY VY YYY Did you know that all lowercase letters can be grouped into one of three categories? WHAT YOULL NEED: 26 alphabet cards, each showing one lowercase letter of the alphabet (and lined to show where the letter sits in relation to its baseline) Categorizing lowercase letters will help the child learn and recall these letters. Spread the lowercase alphabet cards on the floor or table. Pick out an example of a “small” letter (such as a), a “tall” letter (such as b), and a “tail” letter (one that goes below the baseline, such as g). Use these letters to start three piles. Have the child place all of the other letters into one of those three piles. When the child is finished, the “small” pile should contain the letters a © 6 i, m,n, 0,15, ¥, w, x, and z, The “tall” pile should contain the letters b,d. fh, k |, and t. The “tail” pile should have the letters g, j, p, q, and y. fi CLOSER LOOK wy — eee 8s Try this activity after you finish reading a story to a child. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Storybook You can never read to a child too often. A child will develop a love of reading by your reading aloud to him or her. This also helps develop the child’s vocabulary, letter recognition, letter sounds, intonation and inflections, and comprehension. After reading a book to the child, ask him or her to point to a certain letter on the page and to identify it (for example, capital T, lowercase w).5st @ AB SEE ROLLING THE DIE Woy VVVV VV VV VV e A simple roll of the die leads to learning Jetters—and words. <= > WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Cube-shaped wooden block or box, six pieces of paper small enough to be taped to the sides of the cube, clear tape, pen or marker Find a cube-shaped wooden block or box. Choose any six letters of the alphabet, write them down on individual pieces of paper, Z << SS and tape them to the cube (one letter on each side). Roll the cube as you would a die, then have the child call out the letter that appears on the top and say a word that begins with that letter. Change the letters periodically to reinforce the recognition of other letters and sounds. PIZZA PUZZLE Q — .— = ss se ee ee 3 There are many ways to cut a pizza—and to learn the alphabet. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pizza pan, construction paper cut in a circle to fit in the bottom of the pan, blunt scissors, marker or pen Here’s a puzzle to help children practice identifying letters. Cut the paper circle into several pieces of varying shapes and sizes. Write a letter of the alphabet on each piece. Invite the child to put the puzzle together in the pan, naming the letter on each piece he or she uses, Begin with a puzzle that has only a few pieces, and work up to more complex puczzles. ABSEF © 55 &p JUMP FOR J We a, wee ee ee ee 8 Recognizing the letter) is fun when you get to jump for it. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: At least 57 index cards (or cards made from poster board), marker You can use letter cards for a variety of fun phonics activities. Make one set of 26 alphabet cards in capital letters—one letter per card, Make another set of 26 cards using the lowercase letters—again, one letter per card, Make at least five extra cards for the letter J, some uppercase, some lowercase. Show the letter J cards to the child, pointing out that in this activity the letter stands for the word jump. Shuffle the cards, and have the child crouch down as you show him or her the cards one by one. The child has to jump up each time you display a letter J. Encourage the child to call out every letter that he or she recognizes. aay tye WHERE IS IT? MOG) owe cceeccceceee ec cccccccccce How many objects can you find in your home starting with a particular letter of the alphabet? WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Alphabet cards An important step in learning to read s to be able to match a letter to its letter sound and to objects whose names have such sounds, Hand the child an alphabet card (for example, the letter D). Ask him or her to look around the home for an object beginning with that letter (for example, a doll). Have the child say the letter and name the object to verify the match.Soe «6A B SEE DON’T LOOK NOW eevee eeccvcceccccce Pin the tail on the . . . alphabet? WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Poster board or butcher paper, scarf to be used as a blindfold, marker, tape Here's a twist on an old party favorite, “Pin the Tail on the Donkey.” Use a marker to print the letters of the alphabet in random order on the poster board or butcher paper. Tape this letter chart to the back of a door. Cover the child's eyes with the scarf, and turn him or her around two or three times. Tell the child to locate and puta finger on the chart. Take off the blindfold, and have the child identify the letter he or she is touching. Repeat until several different letters have been identified. TONGUE TWISTER Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers PO roams yet R a ene eatoe on ae rece Neyicesulnasnte
toy’s name in order to keep the card. Continue until all the objects are found and the beginning sounds of their names are identified. This is a good game for a group of children. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Objects to hide, letter cards Children love finding hidden objects. In this & C IS FOR COLOR Le Bees tect ttemceria ea aissee Sud OU The only thing more fun than matching letters is making lots of noise when you're finished! WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Crayons, two sheets of wax paper, two sheets of regular paper, small pencil sharpener, iron Here's a creative, colorful way to learn the letter C. Use new or old crayons. Tear off two sheets of wax paper measuring approximately 84 x 11", Draw a large letter C on a sheet of paper, and tell the child that it stands for the beginning sound in the word color. Have the child sharpen several crayons in a portable pencil sharpener, forming the shavings into the shape of a large C on one sheet of wax paper. When the letter is finished, put the other sheet of wax paper on top to cover it. Next, put another sheet of paper on top of the wax paper, and press the top sheet briefly with a warm iron. The shavings will melt to form a multicolored letter. Have the child display the picture and think of other words that begin with the C sound. PHONICS FUN FACT Pan eN rl aS oR nee TUE ey eee Retest] SCM rns tose re Ses Nas Chom Contr Lae erreurs tes me toate ere eet od Porro etn ee euratTswo @ AB SEE TACTILE ALPHABET WS yy eeece eocccce eoeoee sue Make an alphabet book containing textured letters. WHAT YOULL NEED: 26 sheets of construction paper, glue, marker, textured materials found around the house (see below), O-rings, hole puncher There are some things that children can learn just by using their sense of touch. In this activity, the child will make a “tactile” alphabet book. For each letter of the alphabet, write the capital and its matching lowercase letter on a sheet of construction paper. Make the letters reasonably large. Outline the letters in glue—spread wide is best. Help the child place any textured material that begins with the same letter (such as glitter for G or peanut shells for P) on the glue-outlined letters. Do one letter at a time so the glue will not dry before you can finish. Additional suggestions for textured materials you can use for specific letters (feel free to use substitutes) are: * apple seeds for the letter A * buttons for the letter B * cotton for C ¢ dots (left over from paper puncher) for D © eggshells for E * feathers for F * granola for G * hay for H ink for! * “jewels” from old costume jewelry for | * old keys for K ® lace for L ABSEE ¢ 13 © magnetic strips for M © nutshells for N ® oatmeal for O * peanuts for P * bendable Q-tips for Q © rubber bands for R © sand for 5 * tape for T * uncooked noodles for U e velvet for V wallpaper for W alphabet cereal X’s for X * yarn for Y a> + zippers for Z When all 26 textured letters are made, punch holes on the left sides of each sheet of paper and connect the p completed, ask the child to trace and feel the letters, was used to make the letters. Help the child design a cover for the book. ges with O-rings. When the book is ne the letters, and then tell you what74 8 =6AB SEE SALT AND PEPPER Kids who practice this game can become seasoned players. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper (various colors, but \. including one sheet each of white, red, and black), white crayon, black crayon Children can learn letters by associating them with everyday items. Make a deck of 20 construction-paper cards that has 10 cards of various colors, plus five white cards and five black cards. Have both players use sheets of red paper to make scorecards, writing 5 in white crayon and P in black crayon at the top of the page. Shuffle the 20 cards, and then take turns choosing one. Each player should write an Sin the S (for sa/t) column in white when a white card is chosen, or the letter P in the P (for pepper) column in black when a black card is chosen. Continue until one player has written five of either letter, going through the cards again if necessary. uy TWO OF A kIND AGB VVVVVVVVV YY VY YY VY VV VV VV VV VV VY VV VYY Have you noticed that the letter B looks like two Iblerigis Gna GHER? WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, pen Here's a simple activity that helps children practice seeing likenesses and differences between letters but does not require letter identification Write a row of letters on a sheet of paper. For example: C, E, C, D. Point to each letter and ask the child to describe it. When you point to the letter C, the child might say, “It looks like a circle with an opening.” Then have the child point to the two letters that are alike. ABSEE ©@ 15 wy LETTERS ON-LINE It never too early to join the computer age. Kids can do just that while they learn letters in this simple activity. WHAT YOULL NEED: Computer This activity can be done at home or school, if there’s a computer available. Otherwise, try the library. Even the library's on-line catalog computer would work for this exercise. Have the child type any letter on the keyboard, When it appears on the screen, ask the child to name it. If possible, use larger type and decorative fonts to keep the child’s interest. For a more advanced child, you name the letter and ask the child to find it on the keyboard and type it in. KNOCK-KNOCK JOKE ith Knock, knock Who's there? (a Seat hares% © ABSEE LETTER RATTLES pe se as ee ee ee ee The only thing more fun than matching letters is making lots of noise when you're finished! WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Masking tape or adhesive labels, marker or pen, five or six empty coffee cans with plastic lids, set of alphabet blocks Children will compare uppercase and lowercase versions of letters in this activity. Choose any five letters of the alphabet. Write the capital letter version on one piece of masking tape (or label) and the matching lowercase letter form on another, Put the capital letters on the empty cans and the lowercase letters on the detached lids, which should be placed nearby. Lay out the blocks. Ask the child to find the blocks with the letters indicated on each of the cans, then put them inside the containers. Next, have the child find the lids with the matching lowercase letters and put them on the appropriate cans. Note that cans with blocks in them can be used as rhythm instruments. RIDDLE TIME One UNS Ginna ora eem yt ea Cece Cato) What is another name for a sweet rabbit? (a honey bunny) What do you call dog spaghetti? (noodles for poodles) ALPHABET HUNT —— ee Using a clipboard will add to kids’ fun as they conduct this official alphabet search. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Letter cards, legal pad or clipboard, marker or pen Here’s a great way to brush up on all of the letters in the alphabet. Remove any one letter card from a complete set of letter cards representing the entire alphabet. Place the remaining 25 cards around a room in plain sight, but in random order, then help the child write the letters of the alphabet in proper order down the page on a legal pad. Instruct the child to go around the room and put a check mark on the pad beside the appropriate letter as he or she finds each card. When the child has finished this task, ask him or her to identify the letter on the pad that does not have a check mark. For beginners, use only the first 10 letters of the alphabet. wy MUSICAL ALPHABET =) wu a cece eccce woos Here’: a letter-recognition game that will be music to kids’ ears. WHAT YOULL NEED: 26 index cards, marker or pen, radio (or cassette or CD player) The child's listening skills will get a workout in this activity. Make a letter card for each letter of the alphabet. Lay the cards in a big circle on the floor, spaced about one child’s step apart. Tell the child to walk around the outside of the circle, one step per letter, when the music starts playing. When the music stops, the child must stop and name a word that begins with the sound represented by the letter he or she is standing next to. Repeat until many different letters have been used.we 8 AB SEE SNAP TO IT Use clothespins to avoid “hang-ups” when practicing the alphabet. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Large cardboard box, alphabet cards, plastic clothespins In this activity, children find and display the letters of the alphabet. Place the alphabet cards in a stack or spread them out on a table. Put the box on the floor or on a table with the open side up. Name a letter. Have the child find the card with the letter you named and attach it to the edge of the box with a clothespin. Continue with other letters. You might use the entire alphabet or choose only a few cards, depending on the child’s skill level. As a variation, make one set of cards with only capital letters and another with only lowercase letters. Have the child find and match the letter pairs and clip them together on the edge of the box. we va ALPHABET BRACELET ee eee Children will find this initial-letter search charming. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, blunt scissors, masking tape, household objects Here's an opportunity for children to wear the alphabet on their wrists. Cut out the letters A through F approximately 114" high, from various colors of construction paper. (Older children may use blunt scissors to cut letters drawn by adults.) Put masking tape loosely around the child's wrist with the sticky side out. Choose one of the construction-paper letters. Have the child find an object in the house that begins with that letter. When the object is found, the letter may be put on the bracelet. Continue until all of the letters are on the bracelet. Variations: Search for objects outside, or use a different group of letters. VVVVVVVVVVVVYVVVVVVVVVVYYYYYVVYVY ~ of Make a keepsake album of a special field trip. ‘ MEMORIES By WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Camera, photographs, paper, glue or clear tape, pen, hole puncher, string A field trip can be a rewarding experience for a child. In this activity, a lesson on language can be incorporated into the experience Select a special place to visit with the child—for example, a zoo, a farm, or a circus. While on this trip, have the child take photographs. (Your assistance may be needed with the camera.) After the film has been developed, the child can paste or tape the photos on paper. Allow space for captions. Have the child dictate a sentence to describe what happened in each photo. Write this description below each photo so the child sees the process of sounding out letters and putting them in written (printed) form. Punch holes in each page and, using string, tie the pages together to form a book. Save a special photo for the cover, then decide on a title for the book and write it on the cover. The child now has a special book about a special trip.80 © AB SEE CATS AND DOGS aide we ecccce eocce ecccce Follow a four-legged friend in this simple board game. lie and markers from board WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pictures of a cat and a dog, poster board, game, marker or pen Here's a board game that teaches children the letters C and D. Make a board game with two paths of 12 squares each. Put a picture of a cat at the end of one path and a picture of a dog at the end of the other, Write the letter C in several squares of the path to the cat and other letters in the rest of the squares. Write the letter D TOI in several squares of the path to the dog, using other letters in the rest of the squares. ‘Two players take turns rolling adie and moving markers along their paths. If a player on the cat path lands on a C, he or she continues. If not, the player loses a turn. The player on the dog path continues only if he or she lands on a D, Play until one player reaches the end of a path. PHONICS FUN FACT Fifteen capital letters are called stick letters and are made with horizontal, vertical, or diagonal lines—A, E, F, H, I, K, L, M, N uF GU WA Oo Sosa eie LOM OAr ilk On ABSEE ¢@ 86 We SCRAMBLED LETTERS ee ee ee Even kids who don't like ¢ this “egg-citing” s will have fun with activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, blunt scissors, three egg cartons, marker Sorting letters into egg cartons is one way to recognize letter likenesses and differences. Cut off the tops of the egg cartons so that you have three bottoms with 12 hollow sections each. With a marker, print a letter on the bottom of each section, with A to I in the first carton, J to R in the second carton, and S to Zin the third carton. Using construction paper, cut out 26 circles approximately one inch in diameter and print one letter of the alphabet on each one. Put the letter discs in a small container and mix them. Have the child take the discs out one at a time and put each into its matching egg-carton section RED LETTER DAY SU, VVVVVVVVYVVVVVVYVVYYV YY YY VY YY YY “Oey Teach a child the alphabet in less than one month, WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Red pen or pencil, paper Devoting a day to one letter helps focus a child’s learning. At the beginning of the day, assign a letter to look for. Write the letter in red, and display it in the kitchen. Ask the child to look for it in the home—on cans and boxes in the kitchen, in magazines and newspapers, on television. Each time the child finds the letter, he or she writes it in red on a sheet of paper.You, NATURAL LETTERS eg ————————————— Your environment is a source for many letter shapes. How many can you find? Many letters of the alphabet can be seen if one looks closely at different objects. Inside the house, is the letter H visible if you look at the legs of a chair? Do you see a Y when looking at the branches of a plant? Outdoors, can you see an L by looking at the side of the steps? Can you see an A in the frame of your swing set? See how many letters you can find in your environment. ALPHABET ACTIVITY BOOk 32 we RENAN SNA NATIT YENCYY CAN SYANT eae C is for creating. Make an alphabet book filled 2 with activity ideas. ‘ WHAT YOULL NEED: Letter cards for the entire alphabet, hole puncher, 18” of yarn Help the child create an alphabet book. Begin by punching one or two holes in each letter card and using the yarn to tie the cards together in order. Go through the letter book and have the child suggest ; for example, A (ask a \ question), B (bat a ball), C (cook a meal), D (dig a hole). Suggest that the child draw and color a picture to illustrate each activity. Later, the child can choose a page and perform the activity. ABSEE ¢ 6&3 ft » _ RED LIGHT, GREEN LIGHT 6 = ee eee eee Follow the tra: ic signals on the road to higher learning. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Set of letter cards, red and green construction paper, blunt scissors, glue This simple game utilizes children’s understanding of traffic signals Cut red and green dots out of construction paper and glue them at the top of each letter card. Make about a third of the dots red and the rest green. Shuffle the cards. Have the child go through the cards one at a time and identify the letter on each card that has a green “light” (dot). When the child comes to a card with a red “light,” his or her turn is over. Players can continue taking turns in this manner. Variation: Play the game with letter cards made of red and green circles cut from construction paper. By cee STL SEARCH ED wee Where can you visit today? Search the map for a clue. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: State map, marker or pen Write the letters of the alphabet at the top of a large map of your state of residence. Locate the town cy tier you live and place an X there. Have the child search for cities or towns that begin with different letters of the alphabet, and circle those locations when he or she finds them. At the top of the map, where the alphabet is written, cross off letters that represent towns or cities that have been located.Ln 4 LETTERS IN THE MAIL Pec ccccccccccccccsoes Open your own post office to reinforce letter recognition. WHAT YOULL NEED: Letter cards, six blank envelopes, six shoe boxes, drawing paper, crayon or marker Children can lear letters and increase their dexterity by creating their own “mail.” Hold up a letter card. Have the child use a crayon or marker to write the letter on an envelope and on the side of one of the shoe boxes. Ask the child to draw a picture of an object whose name begins with the letter on the envelope. Show the child how to fold the drawing, put it into the envelope, and seal the envelope (or put the flap inside the envelope). Follow the same procedure until you have six different drawings in six envelopes, each one representing a different letter, and six shoe boxes, each one with a matching letter on its side. Shuffle the six “letters” and have the child “mail” each one in the appropriate shoe box. The next day, the child can receive his or her mail, further reinforcing letter recognition skills. Pepe cera [eram atom aoe tec w antorm Co iiaD) TONGUE TWISTERS Pee unm alsa eecccce ABSEE © 65 ABC FLIPS vi ee ee ee ~ Flip the letter card. This activity is self-correcting. vi WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Index cards, marker, lowercase alphabet cards Capital letters are the first set of letters that a child learns, Next come the lowercase letters. Capital letters serve as the point of reference in this activity, which is intended to help the child learn lowercase letters. To make a flip card, take a 3” x $" index card and fold it in half so the card stands up. On the exposed surface, write a capital letter. Write the matching lowercase letter on the half covered by the capital letter flap. Stand up the flip cards so the child can see all of the capital letters. Give the child the lowercase alphabet cards one letter at a time, and have him or her place each card by the matching capital letter on the flip card. The child can lift the flap to see if the lowercase letter matches the one that he or she selected. We ABC CONCENTRATION ¢ =f VVVVVVV VY YY YY VY VY VV VV YY VV VV VV VV VY Alike or different? Let kids decide in this game. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Ten letter cards Recognizing whether two letters are alike or different is an important reading skill. Shuffle 10 letter cards (five pairs of matching letters), and lay them out face up in two rows. Invite the child to put the five pairs of matching letters together. Variation: Make one set of matching letters uppercase, the other set lowercase. You can also increase the number of cards used0 © EYE TO HAND EYE TO HAND ' Children need to develop both small-muscle coordination and eye-hand coordination as they learn to read and write. Chapter 3 activities provide fun ways to do both. Manipulating small objects, as in “Macaroni Letters,” is a great way to help children improve small-muscle coordination. In other activities, children put together snake puzzles, pretend to read books, and twist pipe cleaners into letters—all important ways to work on eye-hand coordination. REPTILE FAMILY Yay Even squeamish kids will like these colorful snake puzzles. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, pen or marker, blunt scissors, plastic container Here’s a personalized puzzle that helps children recognize several ¢ kinds of likenesses and differences. Make several snakes by drawing and cutting out squiggly snake shapes from different colors of construction paper. Along each snake, write the name of a family member or friend in large letters with space between the letters, Cut each snake into pieces with a letter on each piece. Put all the pieces into a container and mix them. Have the child put each snake back together by matching colors, letters, and edges. EYETOHAND @ 8F WALKING THE TIGHTROPE we VVVYVYVYVYYYVYYYYYYVYYYYYYYYYYYY YY TTY io Keeping one’s balance is necessary to walk the letter tightrope. Be careful. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Rope cut in lengths of 4° The challenge of walking a tightrope is exciting to a child. The motor skills necessary for balancing have to be used in this activity. Take a piece (or pieces) of rope, and outline a very large letter (capital or lowercase) on the floor. The goal of this activity is for the child to tightrope-walk” this letter. Make sure that, as the child is walking this letter, he or she is moving in the way that the letter is properly formed (top to bottom and left to right). Also, arms can be extended sideways to simulate the moves of a tightrope walker. Variation: For an additional challenge, the child can walk sideways, moving on one foot next to the other; of, the child can be asked to cross one foot over the other. ST STRING LETTERS OY ee ee ee String ‘em up! Use common string to form letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pieces of string, paper and pen (optional) Manipulating string requires the child to use muscles necessary for fine motor coordination Using different thicknesses and lengths of string, a child can form letters of the alphabet For example, the string can be swirled into the letter S, or it can be zig-zagged to form a Z Iry to describe each letter the child makes using a word that begins with that letter. For example, point out the swirling S, the zig-zagged Z, and the curved C. For youn; it may be helpful to begin with sheets of paper that have letters drawn on them already r children,66 = EYE TO HAND oo eee Children who master this game won't be puzzled about alphabetical order. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, marker or pen, blunt scissors ‘This activity helps children practice putting letters in alphabetical order. Draw lines on a sheet of construction paper to divide it into four horizontal strips. Have the child write the letters 4, B, C, and D—one on each strip. Cut the strips apart, and shuffle them, Then ask the child to put the strips back together in the correct order. Make other puzzles using other sets of four letters in alphabetical order, DIGIT LETTERS We a What letters can you make with your fingers? Making letters with your fingers can be fun, yet challenging. It can also help a child who is having difficulty distinguishing between similar letters—lowercase b and d, for example. With your left hand, use the middle finger, pointer finger, and thumb to form what will look like the signal for “okay”: The pointer finger and thumb form a circle, with the rest of the fingers lining up straight in a single row. When you have done that, a lowercase b has been made. Do the same finger formations with your right hand to make a lowercase d. If you place these two letter formations side by side, they kind of look like a bed with two pillows. Seeing this, the child can then associate the beginning sound b and the ending sound of din the word bed. This helps him or her remember the differences between the two letters, and it reinforces the process of reading from leit to right. See how many other finger letters the child can make EYETOHAND @ 69 iy PICTURE THIS OO, ee Look carefully at a picture and you'll see all kinds of things. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Detailed “action” picture at Asa child leams to read, interpreting pictures Sots awry ‘0 becomes a big part of the language process. es In this activity, the child is asked to look very closely at a detailed action picture and describe what he or she sees. A child who cannot read will name specific objects that are seen—for example, a ball, a girl, a flower. A beginning reader is often able to describe what he or she sees with greater detail. As the child is telling you what object he or she sees, ask him or her what the beginning letter is Then write the word down for the child to see. CHANGE IT} Cocccccccccccsccccseseccsees Sneaky things can happen in this alphabet memory game. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Set of letter cards Memory games can help children develop the visualization skills essential to reading Shuffle the cards and lay down three cards in a row face-up. Have the child study the cards so that he or she will remember them. Ask the child to turn around, then add one card or take one away. Ask him or her to tum back around and tell you what has changed. As the child becomes more adept at the game, make more complex changes, such as replacing one card with another.EYE TO HAND READ TO ME wy —_ ee ee For a change of pace, ask a child to read you a story. WHAT YOULL NEED: Children’s picture books Pretending to read helps children prepare to do the real thing. Ask the child to read you a book. Read the title together, Then show the child how to turn the pages from the beginning to the end of the book. Encourage the child to tell you the story in the book by looking at the pictures. Ask him or her to find two words that look alike. Say the two words to the child, pointing out letters that are the same. MWe FINGERPRINT LETTERS 2 =e eee eee eee Paint with your fingers, and discover the curves and lines in letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Tempera paint, white construction paper, clean Styrofoam meat tray In this activity, the child uses paint and his or her finger to create letters. Place some tempera paint on a clean Styrofoam meat tray. Have the child select one of his or her fingers (the pointer finger is probably best) and lay it down lengthwise on the paint. Ask the child to press the painted finger against the construction paper, making a fingerprint. Next, help the child form a letter of the alphabet out of a series of fingerprints. Let him or her dip the selected finger back into the paint as needed. When the letter is dry, examine it together. Point out the different types of curved lines that appear in fingerprints. EYETOHAND © 91 ABC STAR eeercvecccccvccccces Follow the letter dots and see what shines. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Follow-the-dot picture, pencil, tissue paper, regular paper To help a child learn the sequence of the alphabet, ask him or her to connect a series of dots to form a picture. The child will have to draw a line from letters A to B, B to G, and so on until an object appears. As the child masters the alphabet, the pictures can be made more complex. Start by drawing (or tracing) a simple, easily recognizable object on a sheet of tissue paper. ‘Transfer this image by placing the tissue paper on top of a regular sheet of paper and pressing dots along the object's outline at regular intervals. Mark these dots on the paper with a sequence of letters beginning with A, and have the child connect the dots by following the sequence of the alphabet @ te PHONICS FUN FACT NOR ea Ce enh eey ral eRt TCC Se tT’ POs Rees SAU MOU ee low—how, paid—said, break—speak, five- Se A ee omer Tee92 © EYE TO HAND TOM TURKEY wy alolotelalelela’elelole clatals'stelcfelclotclclelsie'e eae Kids don’t have to wait till Thanksgiving to make and display this fine feathered friend. s WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pencil, different-colored sheets of construction paper, blunt scissors, glue, clear tape, paper plate, pipe cleaners Teach a child to make a turkey—and master the letter T. First, ask the child to identify the beginning sound in the words Tom Turkey and then name other words with the same beginning sound. Next, draw a pattern for a feather on a sheet of construction paper, and cut it out with blunt scissors. Have the child trace the pattern onto several different-colored 4 sheets of construction paper, cutting them out as you did. Help the child glue or tape the feathers to a paper 4 plate (the turkey’s body) so that their tips extend past the outer edge of the plate and fan out next to each other, like the feathers of a real turkey. Tape a pipe cleaner to the other side of the plate, extending it beyond the top (feathered) edge to form the turkey’s neck. Bend and twist two more pipe cleaners, taping them to the bottom of the plate to make feet. Finally, cut out a round piece of construction paper for the head, gluing or taping it to the end of the neck. Have the child write the capital letter T twice (for Tom Turkey) on the turkey’s “body.” EYETOHAND © 93 GIVE ME A RING al ee This ring-toss game makes it fun to practice one of the more difficult letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Poster board, blunt scissors, 12” to 24” pole, paper, pen Active children can prepare to write by playing all kinds of physical games. - To make a ring toss game, cut several rings from poster board or cardboard. Make the hole of each ring about 6 SS —- in diameter, Put the pole in clay or sand to hold it os upright. Invite the child to throw the rings around the pole, Each time he or she succeeds, have the child say the word ring and write the letter R on a scorecard. jue until the child has scored at least five rings. TACTILE LETTERS ‘ 2mm ee ee eee ee Here is a “sense-ational” way to learn letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Lightweight cardboard, burlap, blunt scissors, alphabet stencils, glue Children learn by using their senses, and touching is part of such learning. This activity is very good for young child Cut out 26 pieces of burlap measuring approximately 5” x 5. Make alphabet stencils and transfer the letters onto the burlap squares. Cut out the burlap letters. Glue them onto square pieces of cardboard. Make a set of capital or lowercase letters—or both. The object is for the child to close his or her eyes and feel the burlap letters, tracing the letter formations. Have the child tell you which letter it is. Variation: Put the letters in a bag and have the child reach inside and fee! the letter. Then have the child tell you what the letter is before pulling it out to see if the answer is correct94 © EYE TO HAND BUSY BEES wy vevvvvvvvvvvvvvvvyyvyvvYyYyyyvyyy = 6 Paper bumblebees hold a meeting in this letter- recognition game. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, blunt scissors, marker or pen In this activity, children can learn to identify letters by manipulating paper cutouts. Draw and cut out five construction-paper bumblebees with the child. Write the letters A through E, one letter on each bee. Ask the child to perform actions with the bees as you give instructions. For example: Put bees C and D together; have bees A and E fly away together; have bees B, C, and E hold a meeting. i ahd WACKY WEEK Baas ee ee ee eee Kids can “fry fish on Friday” and “sell socks on Saturday” in this silly song activity. Use song and pantomime to practice beginning sounds in words. Sing an “action” song about the days of the week to the tune of “Here We Go ‘Round the Mulberry Bush.” For example: This is the way we wash our windows, Wash our windows, wash our windows, This is the way we wash our windows So early Wednesday morning. Have the child think of an action using words that begin with the same letter as the name of each day of the week. For example, “munch our meat on Monday” and “tickle a tiger on Tuesday.” Encourage the child to pantomime each action as he or she sings the song. EYETOHAND © 95 SIDEWALK STEP Ce erecccccceecccssevocececccce A letter patch helps teach alphabetical order one step ata time. WHAT YOULL NEED: Chalk, 12 letter cards (two each with letters A through F), butcher paper ‘or wrapping paper (optional) Draw a path of six blocks on the sidewalk. If you wish to play indoors, make the path on a long sheet of butcher paper or the blank side of a roll of wrapping paper. Write the letters A through F in order on the path spaces Shuffle the letter cards and ask the child to take the first one. If the card says A, the child steps into the first space and puts the card on the space. If not, the child must keep drawing until he or she picks an A, putting unused cards at the bottom of the pile. Repeat the activity with the letters B through F, You can also repeat the game using other sets of letter cards. PENCIL, CRAYON, MARKER 24 11. we ee Here’s an activity that exercises hands and minds. WHAT YOULL NEED: Paper, pencil, crayon, marker Writing with three different instruments will give children plenty of hand exercise. Ina row at the top of a sheet of paper, draw a small pencil, a crayon, and a marker. Write the letter P next to the pencil, C next to the crayon, and M next to the marker. Make up a sentence that contains a word that begins with P. C, or M. For example, you might say, “I went to the store and | saw potatoes (or crackers or milk).” Ask the child to use the writing tool whose name has the same beginning letter as the word to write that letter in the correct column.ABC CUPS meets tl A It sort of satisfying to put objects into their very own letter cups. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Marker, masking tape, three plastic drinking cups, small objects as described below What seems like a simple sorting exercise reinforces a child’s vocabulary and the ability to identify letters. Mark three plastic drinking cups with the letters A, B, and C (one letter per cup) using a permanent marker and masking tape labels. Collect several small objects whose names begin with each of these letters, such as an animal cracker, toy airplane, and an acorn for the letter 4; a ball, bandage, and bean for the letter B; and a playing card, piece of candy, and a cotton ball for the letter C. Put the items in random order on a table, and ask the child to put each object in the cup with its beginning letter on it. Discuss the names of the objects as the child completes the - Repeat the activity using other letters and objects. Ep... LETTER PATTERNS. oy Cut out paper letters, and help set a pattern for learning. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Poster board, paper, blunt scissors, marker or crayon. Using patterns to create letters will improve a child's dexterity. Draw and cut out several letter shapes from poster board, such as 4, P. and T. Ona sheet of paper, write a word that can be formed from the letters, for example, PAT or TAP. Have the child arrange the letter shapes that will form the word and then trace around them with a crayon or marker to write the word. EYETOHAND © 9F WHAT WILL IT BE? yy VV VIII VV al Follow directions to discover the mystery object. 44¢ WHAT YOULL NEED: Paper, crayons This drawing task involves giving directions to the child and seeing if he or she can follow the directions to form an object. The concepts of left to right, top to bottom, straight, and down will be reinforced. Think of an object and give step-by-step directions to the child to create it. For example, here is how you might give directions to draw a rectangle: 1. Draw a straight line on the left side of your paper. 2. Draw a straight line on the right side of your paper. 3, Draw a straight line on the top of the paper, connecting the top of the line on the left to the top of the line on the right. 4, Draw a straight line on the bottom of the paper, connecting the bottom of the line on the left to the bottom of the line on the right After the child follows these directions, ask him or her what has been made. As the child’s ability to follow directions grows, increase the complexity of the object to be drawn. See if you can direct the child to draw letters of the alphabet without naming them in advance. TONGUE TWISTERS ose CeCe ces eee NRO STERN er TR er Noah knows Noah's nose.98 © EYE TO HAND - CLOUD PICTURES eccce eoccee eeccoe Find a cat or a car in a cumulus cloud. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: White chalk or crayon, blue construction paper Looking for images in cloud formations is a great nae creative exercise. With a little extra effort, you can also turn it into a lesson in beginning letters. Ce Ona day with many clouds in the sky, go outside with the child and talk about them, noting how they sometimes look like animals or objects. Take turns pointing out clouds and saying what you think they resemble. While outside, or when you get back inside, ask the child to re-create some of the cloud objects he or she saw by drawing them with white chalk or crayon on blue construction paper. Encourage the child to describe the cloud drawings to you, then print the beginning letter of the object that the cloud resembles in the upper-right corner of the page. PHONICS FUN FACT Of the 20,000 common words containing the consonant f, only in the word of is the f pronounced irregularly (that is, like av instead of an f). We LINES AND DOTS ee eee Here’s a game that adds a touch of competition to a simple connect-the-dots activity, WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Marker or pen, sheet of paper, colored pencils or crayons (a different color for each player) In this activity, children practice making the kind of precise strokes that are necessary to “draw” letters, Make a grid of dots approximately one inch apart on a sheet of paper. Taking turns, each player draws a single line from one dot to another using the writing utensil with his or her assigned color. ‘The goal for each player is to complete a square. Take turns drawing lines and making squares until no more squares are possible. At the end of the game, use the different colors to count up how many squares each player completed. LETTER SCULPTURES wy a eee ee ee ee ee ee ee The artistic shapes of the alphabet are just around the bend in this activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Clay, pipe cleaners Simple sculpting becomes a hands-on learning, experience in this engaging activity. Help the child make a long, flat base, measuring about 3 x 12", out of clay. When that’s done, ask him or her to make letter shapes out of the pipe cleaners, spelling his or her name by standing the shapes in the clay100 @ EYE TO HAND HOLE-PUNCHED LETTERS BY au: VVVVVYVVYVVVVYYVVYVVYVVY VY YY VV OD Oy Here’s a creative way of writing letters that’s a hole Jot of fun. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Blunt scissors, two sheets of white paper, marker or pen, hole puncher, one sheet of construction paper (pick a dark or bright color), glue Here's an activity that engages children’s hands while help- ing them match beginning sounds with letters and objects. Cut the following shapes from a sheet of regular white paper: a cup, a fish, and a boat. Write the letters C, F and B on a separate sheet of paper, and ask the child to tell you which letter stands for the beginning sound in each shape’s name. Show the child how to use a hole puncher to make holes in a sheet of paper, then instruct the child to use the hole puncher to make the letter for the beginning sound of each object’s name directly on the cup, fish, and boat shapes. Paste each shape with its hole-punched letter on a sheet of colored construction paper. MACARONI LETTERS 2° @eeoeeses eeeeeseeoeeeesece There's no cheese, but lots of pasta, in this recipe for hand-eye coordination. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: 18” length of yarn, uncooked macaroni Tasks such as threading pieces of macaroni on a string can help a child improve hand-eye coordination, which is necessary for learning to read and write. Tie a knot at the end of a length of yam and show the child how to string macaroni on it. When the string of macaroni is complete, tie a knot at the other end. Ask the child to make different letters by laying the string of macaroni on a tabletop and forming letter shapes. EYETOHAND © 101 ae MYSTERY MAZE eee Go through a mystery maze to find and learn the lowercase m. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, pen, pencil The child learns several reading skills in this fun activity. Design and draw a maze with a pen on a piece of paper, as illustrated in the accompanying drawing. Place a capital M at the start and a lowercase m at the end of the maze. Ask the child to take a pencil and begin at the capital M and follow a path to reach the lowercase m at the end The purpose of the maze is for the child to learn the lowercase m and to relate the letter to its sound, as in the word maze. In addition, by using those beginning and ending points, m the child will be working through the maze going from left to right, reinforcing the directions used in the reading and writing process. M102 @ =~ BYE TO HAND: ON_AGAIN, OFF AGAIN uy, me ee eee eee oe Here’s a way children can learn to recognize two important words. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper plates (one for game board and one for each player), paper fastener, small piece of poster board, pen or marker, six construction-paper or plastic board- game markers for each player Play a game that teaches simple word recognition. For the game board, draw six sections ‘on a paper plate, Write on or off in each section, alternating the words, Fasten a long spinner made out of poster board to the center of the plate with a paper fastener. To play the game, write each player’s name on a paper plate. Have the players take turns spinning the spinner. If the spinner stops at on, the player puts a marker on his or her plate. If the spinner stops at off, he or she does not get a marker. Continue until one player has six markers on his or her plate. ALPHABET MEASURING Mix one measure of counting with two measures of letter identification. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Measuring spoon, small container of sand (or flour), three plastic drinking cups (marked A, B, and C) Following your specific instructions, a child can master measuring skills while learning to recognize letters. Show the child how to dip the measuring spoon into the sand (or flour), level it, and pour it into a cup. Have the child follow your directions and put specific amounts of sand in the letter cups. For example, you might say, “Put two tablespoons of sand in the B cup,” or, “Put three tablespoons of sand in the C cu For an added challenge, add more letter cups. EYETOHAND © 103 wy RAINBOW MAKER ae Kids won't care what’s over the rainbow when they create this colorful arc out of clay. 4 f WHAT YOULL NEED: Picture of a rainbow (or crayons and paper to draw x one), clay or “play dough” in several different colors Introduce a child to one of nature’s wonders while contemplating the letter R. Discuss rainbows with the child. Talk about a time when you saw a rainbow in the sky. Find a picture of a rainbow in a magazine or picture book, or ask the child to draw a picture of one. Ask the child to identify the beginning sound in the word rainbow and say some other words with the same beginning sound. Help the child make several long Gmecciisciciies “play dough” in several different colo how the child how to put the coils close together in arcs to make a rainbow. RIDDLE TIME AIEEE ety omer tern eure oto Reet) CISC ena ae reg104 © EYE TO HAND COMPUTER COPYCAT eoccce eoecece eoccce E is for e-mail and O is for on-line when you're a child of the computer age. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Computer, pencil, sheet of paper Expose a child to a device he or she will have to master some day—the computer keyboard—while he or she practices identifying and copying letters. Show the child where letters are located on a computer keyboard. Press the “caps lock” key so that only capital letters will be displayed. Tell the child to press any letter key, then have him or her copy the letter with a pencil on a sheet of paper. Continue by having the child press as many as five letter keys, copying the series of letters on paper. More advanced children can be directed to press specific letters to spell a word they know. PIPE CLEANER LETTERS By —— ee ee Twisting, bending, and shaping letters is easy when you use pipe cleaners. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pipe cleaners Children love to twist and bend pipe cleaners. The challenge in this acti capital and lowercase letters with them. Initially, give the child four pipe cleaners. The child will need to think of the type and number of lines that are needed to make a particular letter. For example, the letter M has four straight lines (two vertical and two diagonal), while the letter 5 is one continuous curved line. Have fun and see if the child can spell his or her name using pipe cleaners ity is to make Variation: For a challenge, see if the child can use only one pipe cleaner to make a letter. EYETOHAND @ 105 wey, ABC GO! 3 @ VVVVVVVVVYY YY VV VY VV VV VY YY VV YY YY VY Kids need quick hands and sharp eyes to play this fast-paced game. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pad of self-adhesive notes, marker or pen This activity is designed to sharpen a child’s letter- and word-recognition skills. Start with eight notes. Select four simple words, writing each one on two separate notes, Words to start with are car, big, top, and nut. Give the attaches one note to the front of each hand and one note to the back of each hand. Begin with the players putting their hands at their sides. One player says, “ABC Go!” and then each player displays the front or back of his or her right or left hand. The child looks at the words displayed by each player and decides whether they match. If they do, the words are removed. If they do not, the game is repeated. hild one set of words and keep the other set. Each player Play until all notes have been paired and removed. Then new words can be written Children with more highly developed coordination can put notes on index fingers and thumbs.106 © EYE TOHAND we WOOD SANDING Keep young hands busy going around and around, up and down, and side to side sanding wood. WHAT YOULL NEED: Wood, sandpaper Need some help with a refinishing project? Ask the child to help you and at the same time develop the small muscles necessary for writing. Select a piece of wood. Give the child a piece of coarse sandpaper. Show the child how to sand the furniture by using different motions—circular, up and down, and back and forth. Describe these motions as they are being done. ‘These are the same motions that are used when writing letters. CHAIN OF LETTERS VIVUVYV VY VYYVYVYVYYVYUYYYYYYYYVVY AED oy Make a paper chain, and practice forming letters. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper, blunt scissors, glue, letter cards In this activity, the child creates a long paper chain, which he or she can use to form any of the alphabet’s letters. Cut several strips of paper approximately 6” long. Help the child make a paper chain by gluing the first strip into a circle and then linking and gluing the strips inside one another to make a chain, When the chain is about 24” long, ask the child to lay the chain down in the shapes of letters that he or she copies from letter cards. EYETOHAND © 107 ALPHABET QUILT a) ee teen et eden ee eee ee ee eer No sewing is necessary in this quilting bee. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Marker or pen, two sheets of poster board, sheet of paper, blunt scissors, crayons or colored pencils Because making an alphabet quilt takes time, finishing one gives a child a real sense of accomplishment. Besides reinforcing letter recognition, this activity gives a child a strong introduction to two-dimensional letters. Draw lines to divide one sheet of poster board into 30 squares. Then write the letter Q and the word quilt on a sheet of paper. Explain that a real quilt is made of cloth; display one if available, or find a picture of one in a book or magazine. Point out that quilts have interesting patterns that are sewn on. Tell the child that he or she will make an alphabet pattern on paper that can be used to make a cloth quilt. On another poster board, draw and cut out a pattern for each letter of the alphabet sized to fit inside the quilt squares. (Since the alphabet has only 26 letters, repeat any four letters to fill the extra squares.) Instruct the child to trace the letter patterns within the quilt squares and then color them. This can be an ongoing project if you do a few letters each day. RIDDLE TIME ANE OR Coreen econ nm a ree CRU Ret}106 © = EYE TO HAND bY - © LETTER WINDOWS Open your window and pull in a letter. ‘ wy ‘e = Ss WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Poster board, light-colored construction paper, blunt scissors, g letter cards, pencil Children can improve their small-muscle coordination by helping cut and paste the pieces for this activity. Have the child help you make a house by gluing a sheet of light-colored construction paper to the poster board. Make a triangular roof out of another sheet of construction paper and glue it on top of the house shape. Draw three rows of square windows on the house, with three windows in each row. From another sheet of construction paper, cut squares the size of the house windows plus a %" flap on top. Put glue on the flaps and glue one over each window. With a pencil, write a letter on each window (not each flap). After the child has studied the letters on the windows, cover each one with its flap. Remove the letter cards for the nine letters you wrote on. the windows and shuffle the nine cards. Have the child pick a card and then try to choose the window with the matching letter. If the child chooses correctly, he or she puts the letter card aside. If not, the child puts the card at the bottom of the card pile and goes on to the next letter card. Continue until all the letters have = been correctly chosen. To play again, erase the letters on the windows and write new ones. ue, EYETOHAND © 109 FOLDING ALPHABET ee vccccccccceceecsceceecccecs Folding fans is a fabulous way to form flexible fingers. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Blunt scissors, construction paper of various colors, large piece of poster board, glue Working with colorful strips of paper can make learning letter shapes a lot more fun. Cut construction paper into 10 strips measuring approximately 1” x 12” and 10 strips measuring approximately 1" x 6". Use a variety of different paper colors. Show the child how to fold the strips like a fan, making folds about one inch apart. After the child has folded several strips of each size, have him or her arrange them in the shape of letters on the poster board. The child may make random letters, specific names, or begin the alphabet. The strips can be attached to the poster board with a few spots of glue. Cut more strips if the child wants to make the whole alphabet wu T PICTURE 50 ee oe oe el ee “© kids can cross their T's with lots of different materials in this letter collage. \WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Two drinking straws, two pieces of uncooked spaghetti, two pretzel sticks, two pipe cleaners, two Q-tips, two Popsicle sticks, glue, sheet of poster board Common items found around the house can be arranged to make letter forms—and a work of art. Have the child arrange each pair of objects—drinking straws, spaghetti, pretzel sticks, pipe cleaners, Q-tips, and Popsicle sticks—to make a capital or lowercase T: Then help the child glue each T onto a sheet of poster board using glue. Find a place to put your T picture on display. This activity can be repeated with other capital letters that have straight lines—tor example, A, E, F, H, and so on.we ay LETTER FEELINGS WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Magnetic or wooden capital and/or lowercase letters, bag This activity focuses the child’s attention on the formation of letters, which is necessary for letter recognition. Place all the capital or lowercase letters in a bag. Have the child reach inside the bag, feel a letter, and describe it so that you can guess what letter it is (for example, the letter A might be described as two long diagonal lines with a smaller line connecting them). Then reverse roles. You pick and describe a letter, and the child tries to guess its identity. ROCK, SCISSORS, PAPER wu Rock crushes scissors, scissors cut paper—but kids are the big winners in this activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Marker or pen, three index cards, small rock, sheet of paper, blunt scissors Teach a child to distinguish between the letters R, S, and P using a classic hand game. Write the letter R on one index card, § on another, and P on the third. Hold up a rock, and ask the child to identify the beginning letter in its name. Do the same with the paper and scissors. Show the child how to play “Rock, Scissors, Paper” with your hands: Make a fist for the rock, hold up the first two fingers for the scissors, and hold the hand flat for the paper. Tell the child you will hold up a card with a letter on it. The child should respond by making the hand signal for rock, scissors, or paper, depending on which of those words begins with that letter. EYE TOHAND © fft DIALING FINGERS aN, eee eee eee eee OY Little fingers that are itching to use the phone like grown- ups will be satisfied with this pretend activity. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Pen or pencil, paper, toy telephone with push buttons containing letters Here's a spelling exercise that introduces a child to one of the wonders of modern technology—the telephone. Explain to the child that, with real telephones, people must use specific numbers when they want to call someone. Tell the child that you will play a game in which he or she pretends to call friends and relatives by pressing the letters in their names instead of telephone numbers. Ask the child to name someone, such as “David,” who he or she will pretend to phone. Print the name on a piece of paper. Have the child say the letter that stands for the beginning sound in the name and then press the button on the phone that has that letter. See if he or she can finish spelling the name this way. If not, you can help by saying the letter and having the child find and press the correct button on the telephone PHONICS FUN FACT Since 1972 Perret the Supplement to the Oxford English Deer ete Barer ean os12 @ WORD SENSE WORD SENSE Apple, ball, cat. Chapter 4 activities focus on simple word recognition, beginning with words for things children experience every day: foods, toys, pets, and household ‘objects. Children can begin by visually matching words on dominoes and progress to building new words with letters and word parts printed on cards. With the activities “Rhymin’ Simon” and “Rhymes from A to Z,” children experiment with rhyme—word play that is also a valuable teaching aid. WORDS ON THE GO VVYVVVVYYVYYYYYVYVYYYYY YY YY YY YY Try this travel word game, and make your trip a productive one. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, pencil Reading takes place not only at home and school, but also elsewhere within one’s environment. Make a long trip seem shorter by giving the child a piece of paper and a pencil. Whenever the child sees a word or sign that he or she can read, have him or her say the word and write it down on the paper. For example: stop, do, not, gas, turn, go. At the end of the trip, tally how many words were recognized. Ask the child to read the list of words aloud. WORD SENSE © = =113 SUN/RAIN My weiss sieiale eeccccccees Meteorologists need not apply. This activity focuses on the simple pleasures of the day’s weather, ecccccce WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, crayons or coloring pencils Here’s an activity that helps a child learn and compare two simple words whose meanings—and spellings—couldn’t be more different Take the child for a walk on a sunny day, and talk about what ~ you see. When you come in, print the word sun on a sheet of paper. Have the child draw a picture of the sunny day. Ask the child to think of other words that begin like sun. Repeat the activity on a rainy day, writing the word rair on a sheet of paper, Display the two pictures together, and discuss how they are alike and different Ww PHONE FUN CY ve it or not, talking on the phone can be educational. g'\___ WHAT YOULL NEED: Telephone, word cards aie a Children will feel grown up making a telephone call to share their word skills with a friend or relative. Review a set of word cards that the child has learned. Help the child call a favorite adult friend or relative on the telephone and read the words that he or she knows. Prepare the adult ahead of time so that he or she offers plenty of praise and encouragement.vue Use the letters in your name to describe yourself. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, marker or pen EY do cole This activity helps to expand a child’s vocabulary and grasp of Cc A ae beginning word sounds. < Ask the child to think of a word beginning with each letter of his or her first name. Tell the child that each word should be one that describes him or her. Using the name Cathi as an example, the child might pick the words Cute, Adorable, Terrific, Happy, and Interesting. It can be entertaining to hear the words a child will use to describe himself or herself. QUESTION DAY Nai = ee ee ee ee ee Have fun asking who, what, where, when, why, and how. Se WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Paper, pencil Children are naturally curious and ask a lot of questions. Take time out and help the child write a list of questions to which he or she would like to know the answers: “When is dinner?” “Why is it raining?” “Where does a turtle live?” Title the list “Questions | Have.” Call attention to the beginning letter of the word question, Explain to the child that the letter Q will always be followed by the letter U. When all the questions are written down, show him or her what is at the end of each question (a question mark). Ask the child to make a question mark. Next, point out the words that are used for asking a question (who, what, where, why, when, how). Have the child underline these “question words.” Review the Q sound in the word question. WORD SENSE @ = 115 ey, WEATHER CHART OG eeccee eecccecccccccoce This chart will help you keep a record of your local weather. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Construction paper of various colors to make weather symbols (for ex- ample, yellow to make a sun, white to make clouds, blue for raindrops), blunt scissors, monthly calendar (with the days of the week spelled out) Children are curious about the weather: What makes it rain? Why is it sunny? Help the child to make an assortment of weather symbols—a sun clouds, raindrops, etc. Each day, he or she can place the appropriate weather symbol on the calendar square for that day. Have the child go outside or look out the window and observe the weather conditions. Is it sunny, cloudy, or rainy? Discuss the weather each day, then let the child select the appropriate weather symbol By using a calendar every day, the child will learn to f} recognize and read the days of the week. He or she will also learn how symbols represent words. COLOR CLUES vevvvevvvrry Color your world a color names. vv WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Index cards, markers of various colors In this activity, the child learns to read the names of colors. Print a color word (red, biue, green) on an index card using a marker of that color (in other words, use a red marker for red, blue marker for blue, etc.). After the child has mastered associating the words with the matching colors, make another set of word cards. This time use a black marker, See if the child can match these word cards with the appropriate color marker.Every child likes to act like an animal sometimes, and this game actively encourages it. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Sheet of paper, marker or pen Children’s natural love of animals can be channeled into wordplay that helps develop reading skills. On a sheet of paper, print the word ZOO in capital letters. Ask the child to identify the fee se of the word. Say the word together several tee Talk with the child about trips to the 200, or zoos he or she may have seen on TV or in movies, and encourage the child to think about some of the animals he or she saw there. Whenever the child mentions a specific animal, ask him or her to identify the beginning letter of the animal's name. Make a list of all the animals the child names, then show him or her the list and say, “Can you find the __?” Read one of the animal names on the list, and see if the child can find that word. Variation: Take turns acting like zoo animals, such as an elephant, monkey, gorilla, lion, and ———— bear, as the other player guesses the animal’s identity and identifies the word on the list. WORD SENSE © = ITF GD LABELING FRUIT ee: Here’s an appealing activity using some of e our favorite foods. WHAT YOU'LL NEED: Seed catalogs, paper, glue or clear tape, blunt scissors, fruit name cards, pen or pencil In this activity, children learn to read the names of assorted fruit with the help of their corresponding pictures. Ask the child to find pictures of different kinds of fruit in old seed catalogs, and let him or her cut them out with blunt scissors. Glue or tape these fruit pictures in a column on the left side of a sheet of paper. Make cards on which you print the names of the selected fruits, one fruit per card. Spread ‘out the cards, and ask the child to place the correct card next to the picture of that fruit. Encourage the child to match the printed word to its picture by sounding out the beginning letter of the fruit word and the fruit picture, Wu BUILDING WORD STEPS NG cccccccccccccvcccccsccceccees sy = See how many words you can use to describe J a single object. A child’s vocabulary and use of descriptive phrases can be enhanced with this activity. “777s, Ask the child to say a letter (for example, B) and then think of an animal or object beginning with that letter (for example, ball). For the Oo next step, have the child add a word that begins with B to further describe the ball (for example, big bail), Add a third step with yet another B word (for example, big blue ball). Continue with as many steps as the child is capable of making.
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