The goal of the activity is for students to read different graphemes from left to right, top to bottom, to develop their reading fluency and enhance their ability to recognise and decode graphemes sequentially, which is crucial for proficient reading..
The goal of the letter formation activity, which includes explicit arrow guides for forming letters and gradually removing them, is to help students develop proper handwriting skills and letter recognition, ensuring they can write and identify letters accurately.
The goal of this phonics-based activity is to enhance early reading and writing skills by teaching students to accurately associate spoken phonemes with their corresponding written graphemes. Using scaffolds like letter tiles or flashcards initially aids in this process, but these supports are gradually removed to promote independence, ensuring students can confidently identify and form graphemes without assistance.
Digital Letter Tiles
The goal of this activity is to help students strengthen their grapheme-phoneme matching skills by engaging in a series of exercises, ultimately improving their ability to associate letters with their corresponding sounds, a fundamental skill for reading and phonics development.
Letter formation practice
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The goal of the letter formation activity, which includes explicit arrow guides for forming letters and gradually removing them, is to help students develop proper handwriting skills and sound, letter recognition, ensuring they can write and identify letters accurately.
Finding the Suffix
In this activity, students will identify and highlight suffixes (-s, -es, -ed, -ing) in words to deepen their understanding of word structure and word families. They will work with a variety of words, first spotting the suffix and then determining the base word. This hands-on approach helps students recognise how suffixes change a word’s meaning and tense.
What Vowel Can You Hear
Students will look at a picture, listen for the vowel sound in the middle of the word, and write the correct grapheme on their whiteboard—building strong sound discrimination skills for reading and spelling.