This guided lesson in sight words can help boost first grade reading fluency. Sight words are common words that are not easily pronounced by early readers, such as people and great, which is what makes practicing these words so crucial. Kids will get the exposure to sight words that they need to take their reading comprehension to the next level.
Help your child build fine motor skills putting together and playing games. Then she can toss a coin, ride a roller coaster and even hunt for bugs, while using her logic, patterning and math skills.
Segmenting is a reading technique to help first graders break apart the sounds in new words. One example of this would be segmenting the sound units in the word black (b/l/a/k). This can help early readers tackle new words on their own, boosting reading confidence. This guided lesson teaches kids how to segment words in order to improve overall reading fluency.
Help your kindergartener get ready to read and write with memory games, word tracing and word searches. This workbook covers common sight words for your child to memorize.
Help your child broaden his vocabulary to become a better reader and writer. This book covers comprehension strategies hands-on, like categorizing, finding differences and matching words to pictures.
Find the words that begin with the letters B, C, D, and E in the alphabet word search. First graders will learn to read words beginning with these letters.
This final installment of our Second Grade Fall Review Packet offers five more days of engaging activities that will prepare incoming second graders for a new year of learning.
Week 2 of our First Grade Fall Review Packet features another full week of learning opportunities designed to help ensure children start their first grade year off on the right foot.
In first grade phonics, it's important to reinforce kids' understanding of short O words like dolphin, dog, sock and doll. By learning short vowels, kids can decode and decipher these sounds in words they don't already know. This guided lesson takes first graders through exercises and examples that will help them practice identifying short O sounds within a text.
Tis the season for putting pencil to paper! Your child will love honing her fine motor skills, working on sight word recognition and practicing letters in this worksheet, perfect for spring, summer, winter and fall.
Some words are easily pronounced, such as cat, while others do not follow common rules of pronouciation and are more difficult for early readers to decipher. These are called sight words. This guided lesson provides kids with lots of examples of sight words, plus opportunities to practice what they have learned. When the lesson is finished, check out our accompanying sight words worksheets.