Jump to content

Menu

If your children didn't learn letters/numbers by osmosis...


Jennifer132
 Share

Recommended Posts

If you have children who, by four or five, didn't learn their letter sounds and numbers by osmosis, do you have any favorite toys/resources you like to use to teach them? Nothing too crafty (so not me).

Eta: by osmosis I mean that they didn't just pick up these things from regular reading of books and playing with educational toys. I do sit with my little girls reading and pointing out letters and sounds, numbers, etc. They did learn shapes and colors this way, but the alphabet seems to be coming more slowly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Definitely letter factory.

 

Also, we're quite liking get ready, set, go for the code for cementing/practising them with my younger DD

 

Numbers were helped by the show Peg + Cat, love that show. 

 

Also, for little ones numbers/math I like Mathematical Reasoning, Beginning 1 and Beginning 2

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Montessori.  I introduced one tactile letter at a time with its sound (no name) and left them out to play with.  As soon as he grasped one, I added another...and then showed how to smush them together.  Our letters were made by Learning Resources, I think(?) and had raised arrows to show the finger how it should be written.
Same thing with numbers.  I have a set of spindle boxes and 45 spindles.  You can make one easily with divided trays and pencils.  But the first box had the numbers 0-4 over their respective compartments, and at first I only put out 10 spindles.  We'd go over each one together: see the zero?  It looks like a big hole.  Nothing goes in the big hole.  See the one?  It looks like one stick.  1 stick goes in its box..and so on and so on.  When he caught the pattern I added the second box, numbers 5-9.  Then we introduced MUS blocks to take their place and continued with the 10s, using cards that I could layer to make "10 and 1" (11) "10 and 2" (12)... with the MUS blocks above each pair showing the same.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Letter Factory and Starfall here, too.  And when they have letter sounds down, try out LeapFrog's Talking Words Factory.  All three of mine started sounding out words independently.  I read to them a lot, true, and as soon as they knew letters I'd point out familiar ones (beginnings of store names, easily-decoded words in books)...but I still think that the Talking Words Factory video made a big impression on them and gave them the idea to try decoding on their own.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

They learned them in a Montessori-style pre-school in German. One letter at a time with hands-on activities, tracing the letter in the sand, make the letter with blocks, put the letter on the wall and one day, do actions beginning with that letter, another day, bring pictures, another day, draw. Go on walks and have the letter with the teacher then point at trees: "T-ree. Tree. Tree. T. T. Tree."

 

30 letters with the ess and the umlauts, one per week. 

 

They did not learn by osmosis as they are pretty distractible but the hands-on one by one method with lots of actions and sensory data to accompany the letter seemed to set them up well.

 

Like most kids who learn to read around six or seven in countries where school starts in first grade, their reading has taken off and they've gone seemingly from CVC to reading chapter books within a matter of the first two months of first grade. But we spent a LONG time outside and in the sand and in the paint and tracing letters with our hands, heads, etc. before that.

 

I'm not anti-technology, but I think the human brain developed in four dimensions with smell, sight, touch, sound, and taste, and I liked that the German schools took that approach. They never stopped anyone from reading who was reading but the also let it sink in on all levels before requiring it at around 7.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

HWOT-the wooden blocks are good to start the caps, accompanied by writing for older kids. Then flashcards for sounds. T just needed a ton of practice and drill to get it. D needed less practice, but it still took a long time (years).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am embarrassed to admit it, and wish I could tell you my children learned their letters by forming them out of leaves and sticks and homemade salt dough, but I have to agree with many previous posters that Letter Factory is what worked for us.  They don't need to watch it all that many times either for the information to stick (and you probably won't want to watch it too many times -- it is ANNOYING, but effective).

 

I'm not sure about numbers.  I think Kate's Preschool Math book would be good for numbers.  We also had some wooden numbers that we would pick up and then do "7" hops or spins or barks or something.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A Leapfrog fridge magnet toy. You put the letter in and it sings, to The Farmer in the Dell, "The ___ says ___, The ___ says ___, Every letter makes a sound, The ___ says ___." It does both the short and long sounds for vowels.

 

The down side is it's all capital letters, not lowercase.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We had & I used the Letter Factory. That has helped for exposure, but the below plus actual work with numbers & letters is what made them actually learn them.

 

Numerals - UNO is awesome. It includes colors if they don't know those yet. My kids can start playing UNO at 3 & I don't have geniuses. We all call the card we put down (yellow or 6s). The kids match the number or the color.

 

LOE phonogram game cards. (I bought two different color sets from Rainbow Resources along with the game book.) We play all sorts of games - some from the book, some made up ourselves.

We actually use these to teach the sounds of the phonograms, not the names of the letters. But, I also use the cursive cards along with the print cards to teach matching of the cursive to the print letter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What worked for us was a combo of all of the above; Leapfrog Letter Factory, sandpaper letters, starfall.com, and Happy Phonics....letter books (Dr Suess), and Sesame Street...whenever we got out playdoh or fingerpaints we would take a minute or two to make some letters before they had free play.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We do letter sounds first.  There is no need to know letter names when you read.  Letter names can be learned after reading is coming along. We used flash cards and letter tiles.  I glued together letter combinations (ch, sh, ai, ee, ou, ing, ight, etc.) and we built words and rearranged words for practice.  My hands on kids enjoyed that.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We're screen free, so I just wrote the letters on index cards and initially just focused on the usual sound of consonants (e.g., /k/ for c) and short vowel sounds for vowels.  Didn't try to teach the names of the letters until that was quite sold.  We made it a game -- we would jump on the bed together and "shoot" at each other with our fingers after each card, then play dead for a bit, then come back to life, do another flashcard, and repeat the whole process.  Started with 2 or 3 and added a few each time the current stack was solid.  We had a lot of fun, and he learned it pretty quickly.  After that, we went to Ordinary Parent Guide where they start to do CVC words (I think it's lesson 27 or so) for 10 minutes or so a day, which is all the attention span he has at this point.  This has worked great for us, he's enthusiastic about trying to sound out words when he sees them on signs or in stores, or if he sees a word he feels he can sound out when we read out loud together.  Another thing we used is Progressive Phonics which is available for free download, and which he has fun with (silly stories and pictures).

 

LMC

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A side note about letter factory. Eldest took to it when he was two and learned his letters and their sounds then. It took till he was five before we grasped blending. Next oldest has ben shown letter factory for years, but he didn't take an interest to the show till he was four. Once he was asking to watch it repeated on his own choosing then the letters and sounds stuck.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just taught them as part of our phonics program. It was pretty painless once we started doing it every day (maybe 5 min/day?). I didn't every want any talking toys or books in my house.

 

Though I'm pretty impressed at what my kids learn by conversation, adults don't generally talk about letter names/sounds. Actually, I just taught one of my older kids letter  names recently. You con't need letter names to read...

Emily

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Leapfrog Letter Factory has a shocking way of sticking in the brains of young kiddos. My kiddo knew all of his letters and sounds at 18 months old, and is reading CVC words now at 3 1/2. He was a Letter Factory addict for awhile (probably because that's about the only TV he got). Also, I didn't teach him the names of the letters. When I saw a letter, an M, for example, I'd say that's an MMMMM (calling the letter its sound). Hopefully that helps!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You might also get their eyes checked.  We did Letter Factory.  It's fine, cute and adorable, but my ds didn't learn from it.  Turned out he was dyslexic.  Before we knew, we did MFW K5 as a letter of the week study (adorable!) and tried AAR pre- (adorable but out of reach for him).  So it's just one of those things to watch.  If their phonological development is off as well, I'd be more concerned.  It's definitely good to get their eyes checked.  Were they premies?

 

Oh, you asked about that.  Again, my ds has SLD math.  His issues at that age were indicative of it.  We now use Ronit Bird.  The ebooks from Ronit Bird are FABULOUS, easy to implement, and affordable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...