To make this a short vowel interactive game, you can have the students record the words on individual whiteboards or on paper. Clue 2: Tell the students that this word is a type of transportation. These short vowel games are great for kindergarten and first grade! I hope you are feeling excited and ready to tackle short vowel practice with your students.
Click any of the pictures above to snag these short vowel activities. Short Vowel Activities Use these fun short vowel activities with your students at home or at school! This includes 35 different short vowel activities to practice cvc word families. Short Vowel Activities: Hot Seat Try this fun short vowel activity to spice up your phonics instruction! In this short vowel activity, hide word cards under student desks for them to find!
Choose the correct short vowel practice skill and hide the word cards under student desks or chairs. If they read it correctly, you can reward them with a prize! I usually give them a Skittle. Clue 1: Write three letter spaces on the board. Short Vowel Activities for Kindergarten and First Grade These short vowel games are great for kindergarten and first grade!
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Thanks so much for these colorful game boards. Thanks, again. You have such a creative way to engage students in activities that promote learning and are also fun at the same time!!
Thank you, Danielle — your comment was a real day brightener! I really love to hear that classroom teachers can use my materials. I know how much time, energy, and expense go into teaching — so I am thankful to lighten your load at least a bit! I have to send another comment. I did not download the games before the previous comment — I just wanted to thank you. Now that I did download the games, I want to doubly thank you. I so love how each game board is different and works on different sounds.
Such a super idea and fun too. So glad you to hear you like them, Debbie! I just want to thank you for sharing your wonderful learning materials. I am so looking forward to using the short vowel game. It will be a great resource for many of my kids! Anna, You are such an inspiration to me!
Go, you! Hi Hanan! If two people are playing, you need two playing pieces coins, gems, whatever. Put pieces on start. Then you roll a die on your turn.
If you get a 2, and the top of the board says that a 2 equals a, then you move to the very next picture that has a short a sound. Does that make sense? And now that I have seen them — What lovely pictures that shark racing through the water!
There are so many children who confuse vowels that are not at all alike. Have fun with them, Susan! Wow, this is just what my kinders need!
I love all of the combinations, which will allow me to differentiate for all learners in my class. Thanks so much! Thanks for this, and for all the other quality resources you provide! It was a combination of these last two […]. Your email address will not be published. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Sharing is caring! Facebook Twitter Pinterest This game provides a ton of practice hearing the different short vowel sounds.
Directions: 1. Place your pieces on Start. The first to the end wins. So simple. Update: here they are! Tips for teaching phonics Sign up for our free 5-day email series to learn what phonics skills to teach and how to structure your phonics lessons!
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A peek at our week: Letter C Activities for Preschool. Visualizing: A reading comprehension exercise. Reply to this comment. We hope that you and your learners enjoy them! Thank you. Aileen Otoko. Hi Eramosa! Thank you so much for the kind words! Thank you so much for taking the time to give me this encouragement, Pam! It means so much! Dear Anna, Thank you so much for these free resources!
They helped! Love this! I will definitely have to share! Thanks for posting! They are great for fluency as we read and re-read them quite a few times. For each vowel, I created two different passages. One is a fun, short vowel passage, while the other includes a visualization box to extend their learning. As shown above, students now only need to decode the passage, but they need to show their understanding of what they read by drawing an illustration that matches the text.
I shuffle up the cards and each student gets one card either a CVC word or a picture. Students mix around the room and try to find the classmate who has their match.
Once everyone has found their match, we check them, shuffle, and play again! This is a nice fast warm up or review game for my students! I have these cards for each short vowel. This is one of my favorite small group games, called Showdown! For this game, each student gets the word family cards an, ag, at show above and the group gets a pile of CVC words.
One student will start as the leader and choose a word and read it aloud to the group ex: van. Students will have to listen to the word and decide which word family it belongs to. Then, in a clockwise motion, the next student becomes the leader and chooses another CVC card from the pile to read. I love this game because students are practicing both reading and listening to those CVC word families that they will see so often in their books. Again, I have these cards for each short vowel with different word families!
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