5. Counting, Matching, and Naming Letters
G
F
What You Need
•Set of plastic alphabet letters-preferable capital letters
•Mat that you make on an 11” x 17” piece of firm paper. Trace the plastic letters and fill them in, in an arc
shape, so that the plastic letters will fit over the letters written on the arc. The arc should extend from the
lower left to the lower right corner.
•What You Do
•Ask you child to count how many letters there are.
•Then ask your child to place the plastic letters on the matching letters on the arc of the mat.
•Teach her the name of each letter, introducing about four new letters per day. For example, “This is the
letter A.”
•After she can differentiate the letter shapes and has been taught the names of each letter, ask her to say
the name of the letter as she places it in the position on the arc.
•Repeat often, until your child can recognize each letter, place it over the corresponding symbol on the arc on
the mat, and say the name of each letter. Generally, it takes several weeks for a child to master all the letters.
6. Learning The Sequence of the Alphabet
A
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ F
C
X
E
What You Need
C
Set of plastic alphabet letters
A slightly different mat made on an 11” x 17” piece of firm paper. List the letters in order in a straight line
across the top to provide a reference for the child. This time, instead of the letters composing the arc, draw
a line to form the arc. Then provide three “anchors” by writing the letter A at the lower left corner of the
arc, the letter Z at the lower right, and M and N at the midway point at the top of the arc.
What You Do
Ask your child to take the plastic letters out of the container and place them right side up in the center of
the arc.
Then ask her to find the A and place it.
Next find the Z and place it, followed by the M and N.
The child then begins with B, Then C, and so on, placing all the letters in order along the arc.
When your child has finished sequencing the letters, ask her to check it by touching and naming each letter,
starting with A and moving to Z. The alphabet across the top of the mat can serve as an additional reminder.
Repeat this activity frequently until the child can place all the letters in the proper order within two minutes.
Generally, it takes several weeks for a child to master this task.
7. Guess the Letter
What You Need
Two sets of plastic alphabet letters-preferably capital letters
Two 11” c 17” mats with or without the letters filled in on the arc
Two brown paper bags, or cloth bags, big enough to hold the letters
What You Do
This is a game that two children can play together or you can play with your child. The object is to
try to correctly identify and name the letters based on felling them without looking. The winner is
the first player to fill in all the letters on her arc.
The first player reaches into a brown paper bag and feels a plastic letter without looking at it. If
she can correctly name it, then she gets to place it on the arc on her mat and choose another letter.
She continues choosing letters until she makes a mistake.
Once a mistake is made, the turn rotates to the next player
The player who successfully identifies and places all the letters on her arc is the winner.
8. Snaky Letters
What You Need
Modeling clay or cookie dough
What You Do
Roll the pieces of clay or dough into
snake-shaped pieces for your child to use.
Help your child form the pieces into the shapes of letters.
If you cookie dough, make sure the letters with enclosed
circles (i.e., o, b, d, q) have plenty of space inside the circle
before baking. This will assure that the circles will not
close up when baked.
13. PHONEMIC
AWARENESS
in Young Children
Marilyn Jager Adams
Barbara R. Foorman
Ingvar Lundberg
Terri Beeler
14. Bringing
Words
Isabel L. Beck
To
Margaret G. McKeown
Linda Kucan Life
15. Books for a First-Grade Student
Beginning Reader-First Stage
Author Title
Brown, Laura Krasny •Rex and Lilly: Playtime
•Rex and Lilly :Family Time
Eastman, P.D. Go, Dog Go!
Seuss, Dr. Hop on Pop
Ziefert, Harriet •Cat Games
•Harry Goes to Fun Land
•A New House for Mole and
Mouse
16. Picture Books to Read Aloud to an Infant or Toddler
AUTHOR TITLE
Ahlberg, Janet & Allen Each Peach Pear Plum
Arnold, Tedd No Jumping on the Bed
Barton, Byron Trucks
Brown, Margaret Wise Goodnight Moon
Bruna, Dick Miffy
Carlstrom, Nancy White Jesse Bear, What Will You Wear
Gibbons, Gail Trains
Hill, Eric Where’s Spot?
Martin, Bill Jr., & John Archambault Chicka Chicka Boom Boom
Martin, Bill, Jr., & Eric Carle Brown, Brown Bear, What Do You
See?
Numeroff, Laura Joffe If you Give a Mouse a Cookie
Oxenbury, Helen Tom and Pippo Make a Friend
17. Other Books
Beginning to Read: Thinking and Learning about Print- A
Summary
by Marilyn Jager Adams
Help Me Help My Child: A Sourcebook for Parents of
Learning Disabled Children
by Jill Bloom
Your Child’s Growing Mind: A Practical Guide to Brain
Development and Learning from Birth to Adolescence
by Jane M. Healy, PhD.
About Dyslexia: Unraveling the Myth
by Priscilla L. Vail
The Educated Child
by Bennett, Finn, & Cribb
Notas del editor
This is one of several effective interventions for phonemic awareness and phonics..very inexpensive. Lessons do not have to be done in order but can be pulled out to respond to specifically identified skills children need.