This is great! I modified it slightly to work with materials I already had. Only $5 worth of items and it's working great for getting my 5 year old to blend and recognize words. Dollar tree abc flash cards to review phonics sounds Dollar tree dry erase board and markers (I write the words on board instead of using the cards) Dollar tree play dough ( put sound balls right under the letters on mini dry erase board) Google cvc words and easy sentences and get started!
That is awesome to hear!! Thank you for coming back to share your feedback and progress. I love that you also shared how cheap it can be to teach. Dollar Tree is perfect. This comment made my day. Thank you so much. Let me know if you ever have any further questions.
Hi - so glad to have found your videos. I am trained in OG and currently teach a once a week co-op phonics class for K-1. Do you sell any of your other curriculum plans? Such as your flow sheet of activities? I would be very interested. Love the non-worksheet, hands - on approach with lots of games!
I am finding your videos so helpful. I am a kindergarten teacher. Do you find that kids have an easier time reading word families and just switching out the first letter or is it easier when they read successive and swap out the last letter?
I’m so glad you enjoy them! I am noticing that it depends on the child. One student of mine may memorize word families but who actually be able to apply and read them independently later. Whereas reading successive and swapping out will. However, I have other kids who do great with word families. I find it has to do with their long term memory abilities (aka ADHD). For most kids, the playdoh strategy with word families help the most.
It depends how old he is. If he is under 7 years old, this is very normal and could fix itself when he’s 8. If he’s older, I usually draw a funny letter story for b’s where it’s 3 pregnant mommies walking doing the street with their “big baby bellies B.” And then I say if the belly went the other direction, it wouldn’t be a belly anymore…it would be a “dirty diaper D.” It is cheesy kid humor. I can make a video about this soon!
This is great! I modified it slightly to work with materials I already had. Only $5 worth of items and it's working great for getting my 5 year old to blend and recognize words.
Dollar tree abc flash cards to review phonics sounds
Dollar tree dry erase board and markers (I write the words on board instead of using the cards)
Dollar tree play dough ( put sound balls right under the letters on mini dry erase board)
Google cvc words and easy sentences and get started!
That is awesome to hear!! Thank you for coming back to share your feedback and progress. I love that you also shared how cheap it can be to teach. Dollar Tree is perfect. This comment made my day. Thank you so much. Let me know if you ever have any further questions.
Oh! This is brilliant! I've just begun to tutor a young child with dyslexia. Thank you so much ❤😊
You're so welcome!
Just started teaching english in Mexico to kids and I love the idea with the sand. Very good tips, Thank you!
You’re welcome!! You can also use playdoh if the sand gets too messy. Hope it’s going well in Mexico!
Great job!
Thank you!
Great way of explaining!
Aw thank you!
this is awesome
Thank you!
Thank you for making this video. God bless you.
You’re welcome! Thank you for watching.
Muy bueno y bien.interesante gracias,,,por.tu.buena clase hermosa mis
Gracias!
Thanks for sharing. The ideas could be used for teaching different langauges as well. Will be watching other videos of yours
Thank you so much!! That is a great point about other languages
This is well detailed.
Thank you, ma'am❤
Aw glad it was helpful. Thank you!
Hi - so glad to have found your videos. I am trained in OG and currently teach a once a week co-op phonics class for K-1. Do you sell any of your other curriculum plans? Such as your flow sheet of activities? I would be very interested. Love the non-worksheet, hands - on approach with lots of games!
will be binge watching all your videos by the way! 😀
I just posted my level 1 resources on the website!
I am finding your videos so helpful. I am a kindergarten teacher. Do you find that kids have an easier time reading word families and just switching out the first letter or is it easier when they read successive and swap out the last letter?
I’m so glad you enjoy them! I am noticing that it depends on the child. One student of mine may memorize word families but who actually be able to apply and read them independently later. Whereas reading successive and swapping out will. However, I have other kids who do great with word families. I find it has to do with their long term memory abilities (aka ADHD). For most kids, the playdoh strategy with word families help the most.
That’s so awesome!
Thank you!
Love it. I'm teaching my grandson how to read. ❤
Aw that’s so sweet. Let me know if I can answer any further questions.
@@allthewritecolors thanks for inviting me to ask questions.. He is struggling to differentiate the letter b and d. Please assist.
It depends how old he is. If he is under 7 years old, this is very normal and could fix itself when he’s 8. If he’s older, I usually draw a funny letter story for b’s where it’s 3 pregnant mommies walking doing the street with their “big baby bellies B.” And then I say if the belly went the other direction, it wouldn’t be a belly anymore…it would be a “dirty diaper D.” It is cheesy kid humor. I can make a video about this soon!
@@allthewritecolors he is six. Thanks for answering me. ♥️
You're welcome. I just posted a video in my Shorts section about this. Feel free to check it out. @@tshidimokone6595
Thank you so much teacher
You are very welcome
How you read bigger words
Split the syllables up into “teams” of sound balls. I’ll make a video on that hopefully soon!
how can I get some of you material?
Hi, you can download my free scope and sequence at my website: allthewritecolors.com
I see that u are using hand gestures when saying the alphabet sounds. Do u have a list of those hands gestures?
I only use hand gestures for the five short vowels shown in the video. Any more and it would be too hard to remember and lose its effectiveness.