Alphabet learning games for preschoolers: Browse Alphabet Games | Education.com

Опубликовано: November 1, 2022 в 8:20 pm

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Browse Kindergarten Alphabet Games | Education.com

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Mastering all 26 letters of the alphabet can feel overwhelming to kids just beginning their school journey. In our kindergarten alphabet games, delightful animation, charming characters, and engaging challenges will make practicing the alphabet exciting. Your students will have time to master each letter, both in uppercase and lowercase, as they play to win these interactive kindergarten alphabet games.

Is your child itching to read and spell words? Education.com’s kindergarten alphabet games can scratch that itch for your young learner! These interactive games make learning the alphabet a breeze. Whether uppercase or lowercase, your kindergartener will get lots of practice identifying all the letters of the alphabet. Some letters look the same, so give your child all the practice he needs with these animated games. Once he’s mastered all the letters in the alphabet, he can move onto phonics and learn the sounds that go with each letter. Then, before you know it, he’ll become a master reader!

Can your child find letters he knows in our kindergarten sight word games? Finding letters in words is a great way for your child to identify and use letters in word contexts.

50 Simple Alphabet Activities for Preschoolers

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30 Jul

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It’s almost time for back to school for preschool and kindergarten kids and these alphabet activities will come in handy!

How do you teach the alphabet to preschoolers?!

As a preschooler, I don’t really think a lot is expected for them to know. Some basics are good though, like colors, shapes, numbers and letters.

To refresh my preschooler’s memory of letter recognition in general, as well as knowing the uppercase and lowercase alphabet and getting to know some of the letters sounds, I’ve been collecting ideas for activities that Henry can do to get him back on track of school. (Check some more out my ABC Learning & More Pinterest Board. )

Not to mention it’ll be great to get me back into school mode too!

With any learning activities, it’s very important to not crush your child’s confidence. Build on what they already know and expand slowly. And only go further when they’re excited to learn.

We want our kids to love learning! Not dread it.

So if they’re not excited about an activity, put it away until another day.

The big question then is…

How do you teach alphabets to preschoolers in a fun way?

Here are 50 alphabet activities meant for preschoolers that do just that.

Hands-on activities that have the preschoolers playing and involving their entire body while learning their ABCs.

Without them even realizing that they’re learning to recognize the letters of the alphabet, both the upper and lower case… or their letter sounds.

Let’s get on with it and see how to teach the alphabet to preschoolers in a fun way!

Recognizing Letters of the Alphabet

Identifying the letters of the alphabet can be a fun activity for preschoolers to learn while playing!

Here are 

25 Alphabet activities to recognize the letters of the alphabet.

  1. An ABC Mat is super handy to have on hand when your child is learning the alphabet! Try an active ABC mat learning game to get them really involved!
  2. By singing the ABCs the child can find his way through an alphabet maze! Use vehicles or a ball, or even a doll to walk their way through the maze.
  3. Squirt the Letter.
  4. Make learning magical with magic letters that the kids reveal as they paint over them.
  5. Do a letter search and find and match the pieces back together. (Little Hands, Big Work)
  6. Make a sensory bag to find the letters.
  7. Get creative and have her feed the monster letters as you call them out. (Little Family Fun)
  8. Use sticker letters to match to letters that you write on a paper towel tube! (Activity Mom)
  9. Make letters from pipe cleaners. (Make and Takes)
  10. Have fun stacking letter tiles! The catch? Name the letter before you can add it to your tower! (Stay At Home Educator)
  11. Try a magic trick like Playdough to Plato does with a ABC cup hunt game! Which one is the pom pom under?
  12. Find the letter and trash it! A fun idea from Motherhood on a Dime.
  13. Playing House does a bean bag toss into a letter tub that you call out.
  14. An activity twist on musical chairs, play musical alphabet with your preschooler and identify the letter you stop on! Kids Activities can make this more difficult for older kids too!
  15. Fish for Letters from First Palette. Can you identify your ‘catch’?
  16. Letter “I Spy” with Grown Up Board Games from A Heart for Home.
  17. Make these simple ‘building blocks’ so your child can build a letter and then tell you what it is! (Simple Real Moms)
  18. Write the alphabet on the sidewalk and water the ‘garden’. (Toddler Approved)
  19. Magnetic letters matching from NutureStore make great alphabet games!
  20. Simply make it a race! Lay out some letter cards and shout out a letter, have your child run as fast as they can to find it and bring it back to you. (Frugal Fun 4 Boys)
  21. A classic from my childhood. When in the car and traveling, do an alphabet hunt. (Teach Mama)
  22. Let the children play on a typewriter, or old computer keyboard. (picklebums)
  23. NurtureStore reinforces alphabet identification by baking the alphabet.
  24. Another use for the ABC Mat is to play twister! (Learners in Bloom)
  25. Homemade letter sponges for the bath from Learning 4 Kids are a fun learning addition to bath time!

Additionally, these products are excellent to have on hand when learning letters.

These do include my affiliate link that helps to support Hands On As We Grow® at no additional cost to you if you purchase. We truly appreciate the support, thank you.

  • Alphabet Foam Puzzle Mat
  • Foam Bath Letters & Numbers
  • Large Wooden ABC 26-piece Puzzle
  • Melissa & Doug Classic ABC Block Cart
  • Alphabet Fun Flash Cards
  • LeapFrog Fridge Phonics Magnetic Alphabet Set

These provide amazing opportunities for letter or alphabet games and activities to do at home!

Learning Uppercase & Lowercase Letters

Lowercase letters tend to be harder for preschoolers to identify as well as match up with their uppercase counterparts.

Here are 9 alphabet activities to help preschoolers distinguish between upper and lower case letters.

  1. Got on a letter hunt and match the found letters to a set of lowercase letters!
  2. Match uppercase and lowercase hearts using a free printable.
  3. Write lowercase letters on clothespins and have your child match and clip them onto an uppercase letter that’s printed (or written) out. (I Can Teach My Child)
  4. Bring out the Easter Eggs. Label each side with corresponding upper and lowercase letters! Can your child put the eggs back together? (Teachers Pay Teachers)
  5. Learn letters on the go with two paper plates, one with lowercase, one with uppercase letters. No Time for Flash Cards has the how to.
  6. Make learning the ABCs a big event! Turn the floor into a mega doodle of letters and then match corresponding letters to it! (Filth Wizardry)
  7. Match upper and lowercase letters on the sidewalk.
  8. Practice writing while also learning both upper and lowercase letters by using a tray of salt. (Teach Preschool)
  9. Play a game of alphabet bingo. (Teach Mama)

Letter Sound Activities

Many of the activities for preschoolers that are listed for recognizing the letters of the alphabet can also be adjusted for learning the sounds of the letters too! 

Here are 16 alphabet activities for preschoolers to work on the sounds of the letters!

  1. Go on a hunt for toys that start with the letters and then got to punch through for a prize in our letter sound punch alphabet game.
  2. Make an alphabet game to sort by beginning letter sounds.
  3. An active way for the kids to learn their letters is simply with a ball and shouting out words that start with a letter! The Pleasantest Thing gives us many variations of this alphabet game in her guest post!
  4. Take learning outside with a sidewalk letter sound scavenger hunt like No Time for Flashcards.
  5. Another version of this would be to spray the letter that makes the sound from Train Up a Child.
  6. Indoors, set out some cups and letters on them and have the kids find as many toys as they can that start with each letter. (PreKinders)
  7. Simple. Kids love to pretend to ‘work’. Give them tees and a hammer and pound the sound idea from ABCs of Literacy.
  8. Add letters to muffin tins and toss a small object. Where it lands the child has to tell you what sound that letter makes. This idea’s found at ABC & Learning by Playdough to Plato.
  9. Do a beginning letter sound toy wash!
  10. Climb up the stairs when you get the right letter sound from A Mom with a Lesson Plan.
  11. Make a collage from magazine cutouts for letter sounds. (Carrots are Orange)
  12. Get active with a letter sound jumping game from The Imagination Tree.
  13. A Run N Spell alphabet game from Having Fun At Home gets the kids moving and learning starting letter sounds.
  14. “Baking” the Alphabet on a hot day from Not Just Cute. Hungry for a banana? Fill up the letter b-b-b-B!
  15. Alphabet bowling with letter pins from Toddler Approved
  16. Use letter pops (sticks with a letter on the end) to have the kids identify objects from around the room or house that start with the same letter.  (Dr. Jean & Friends)
  17. Match toys to letters with this hands-on sound activity from No Time For Flash Cards

Fantastic books for learning ABCs:

Supplement these learning activities with books and your preschooler will be singing, reciting, spelling and sounding out the ABCs in no time I bet!

  • Alphabet Book (Farmyard Tales Books Series)
  • Alphabet Rescue
  • Alphabet Mystery
  • Dr. Seuss’s ABC: An Amazing Alphabet Book!
  • I Spy Letters

I’d love to know.

When was your child able to identify some letters of the alphabet?

Henry learned his alphabet really early it seemed. Identifying a few letters when he was 20 months old and knowing almost the entire alphabet when he was just over 2 years old.

George on the other hand has no interest yet at 22 months so it’s not on our radar.

If you have an eager early learner, these beginning learning letter activities are perfect for toddlers!

Onto numbers! 40 number activities for preschoolers too!

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About Jamie Reimer

Jamie learned to be a hands on mom by creating activities, crafts and art projects for her three boys to do. Jamie needed the creative outlet that activities provided to get through the early years of parenting with a smile! Follow Jamie on Pinterest and Instagram!

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17 alphabet games

A rare child gets acquainted with the alphabet only at school. Modern parents strive to show the letters to the baby and teach them to distinguish them as early as possible. How can I do that? Of course, in an entertaining way! Educational psychologist Samira Filatova talks about games for learning the alphabet for preschoolers.

Samira Filatova, teacher-psychologist of the Academic Gymnasium of St. Petersburg State University

Acquaintance with letters

I would conditionally divide all the ways of learning the alphabet into exercises “at the desk” (they are usually given in teaching aids), outdoor games and those that are aimed not only at memorizing letters, but also at developing fine motor skills, creativity, creative abilities. And each child at a different time may come up with all these methods.

The first thing to do to get to know the letters is to hang the alphabet on the wall. Most often, you can find options with the image of objects whose names begin with the specified letter. Better yet, an alphabet with sound effects. It is desirable that not the letters of the alphabet are pronounced, but the sounds that they designate, that is, not “Ka”, but [k]. It is believed that thanks to this approach, it will be easier for a child to learn to read.

So, the acquaintance with the letters has happened, now you can start memorizing them. The game is the best for this. After all, the game is the leading activity in preschool age. Learning through play is effective and, with the right approach, will not tire the child.

At-the-Desk Exercises

You can purchase special manuals, print them off the Internet, or even draw the letters yourself. What kind of assignments can you come up with?

Find the desired letter among other letters . Arrange the letters randomly on a piece of paper. Name any of them, and the task of the child is to find it. It happens that children themselves name the letter they want to find. In this case, do not refuse them.

Find the correct letter in the drawing . The task differs from the previous one in that the letters are, as it were, built into the picture. For example, a house, trees, flowers, swings are depicted. The letter “P” can be window sashes or swings; the letter “M” – grass; the letter “K” is hiding in the branches of trees. A more difficult version of this game is to find objects in the picture that begin with the desired letter.

Find letters of the same color, size, name them. Letters of different sizes and colors are “scattered” on a sheet of paper. The child needs to find all the letters that are the same according to the given criteria and name them. A more complicated option is to change the orientation of the letter in space. Then the variant of the task may be as follows: “Find all the letters that lay on the left side.”

Assemble the letter as a mosaic . Write the letter so that it occupies the entire sheet, color and cut it into squares, triangles, any shapes. You can also entrust this to the baby if he already knows how to use scissors. In this case, you need to make the markup with a dotted line to make it easier for him to cut. The task of the child is to put the letter back from these figures.

What else can you do with letters on paper? Coloring them, tracing them with a dotted line – there are many options for action.

I would also include in this group the game “Memory” , in which you need to find the same letters. You can complicate it: name not only the matching letters, but also the words that begin with them. Picture Lotto is also great for learning the alphabet.

Those who have already mastered the letters can try to start reading. It will be very useful for learning syllables “Cashier of letters and syllables” . You can buy it in the store or print it yourself from the Internet. How to play with her?

Prepare pictures of animals and objects, select cards with letters and syllables and ask the child to match them. In the future, you can complicate the task: give children syllables in the wrong order (for example, “Ka” and “Mouse”, which he must match with the image of a mouse, for this he will have to rearrange the syllables). I would mark this task as one of the most useful. Teachers recommend teaching children not only by choosing the right solution, but also by searching for inconsistencies, inconsistencies, and wrong answers. This develops the ability to analyze, and in the future – the ability to critical thinking.

Creative games that help develop fine motor skills

Here the kid will make letters on his own : sculpt them from plasticine or dough, decorate cardboard blanks with coins, buttons and beads, make crafts from improvised means (designer, twigs, leaves, cotton swabs, sweets ).

Have your child draw letters on the sand (you can use kinetic). Working with sand is useful for the development of fine motor skills, as well as for optimizing the psycho-emotional state. Let the kid choose what he wants to draw. Show by your own example what needs to be done: start writing short words or names in the sand, you can add a beautiful ornament and write the letters themselves in a special graceful handwriting.

Children love to play with magnetic letters . Try leaving short messages to each other by posting them on a refrigerator or a magnetic board, or compete to see who can write the longest word or the most short ones.

You can combine these options: bury plastic letters in kinetic sand, and then, while digging, name them. An “advanced” option is to invent fairy tales about these letters.

Use interactive books in which the child presses on a letter and hears the corresponding sound. But before you bring such a book home, make sure that the sounds in it are pronounced correctly.

Outdoor games

Print letters on sheets of paper and stick them on furniture and walls. The task of the child is to find the letter , which you will name.

Use blocks with the letters that you probably already have in your home. It is interesting to play this game with several children at once: the host rolls a die, and the players name and depict an animal or object with the letter that has fallen out.

I will share my own experience of how I played with my daughters. At first, the girls laid out large 9s in a chaotic manner on the floor.0023 soft puzzles with letters . Then I called them in turn the letters on which they should stand. The one who does not make mistakes wins. This game is also interesting because the letters can be arranged as you like: on their sides, upside down. At the same time, children learn to recognize the outlines of a letter, regardless of its orientation in space.

Whatever games you choose, it is important that they are interesting for the child. If he doesn’t want to play them, gets distracted, you can’t insist. Look for other game options or wait for a more suitable occasion.

Read also:

7 opinions of psychologists about homeschooling

Edutainment is the best educational format, and that’s why

Why it is so important to read aloud to a child Kuzmina/Shutterstock.com

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How to teach your child the alphabet through games

How to quickly learn the letters of the Russian alphabet with your child? Just invite him to play! The game is the best form of learning for children, where the child is always involved in the process and quickly learns the material. We have prepared for you a selection of 7 simple games for learning letters. Your child will have fun and easily memorize the letters of the Russian alphabet.

1.

Catch game

You will need plastic bottle caps, corrector or nail polish. Write letters on the lids, let dry and you can play.

With this game, your child will not only memorize the letters, but also practice manual dexterity and play enough with water – after all, all children love to frolic in the water.

Pour water into any container and put the lids with the letters there. Give the child a spoon or net and let him catch the letters in turn, name and remember.

If your child does not know a single letter yet, then call the “catch” yourself first and ask the child to repeat.

2. Letter quest

This is an active and very fun game that helps develop imagination and memorize letters quickly. Here, too, there may be different options, depending on your imagination.

You will need stickers, markers and a primer. Write letters on sticky notes and stick around the house. For example: “K” – on a chest of drawers, “L” – on a spoon, “C” – on a washing machine, etc.

Then take the primer and show the child the letter to be found. Let him repeat after you and go in search. When the desired letter is found, ask the child to name it again, and then name the object that begins with it.

For children who already know letters, syllables can be glued at home according to the same principle.

3. Walkers

You will need a blank sheet of paper, a ruler, colored markers and a cube with glasses. Draw a square on the sheet, draw it into 35 small squares. In the lower left corner, write “Start” and draw a line from it with a light felt-tip pen to the “Finish”, which will be in the middle. Then from “Start” to “Finish” write the letters “A” to “Z” in alphabetical order.

The game is ready. Now take turns throwing a cube with glasses with your child and walk. If the child still does not know how to count, help him, and call the letters that both of you will drop out together.

4. Puzzle letters

Collecting puzzles, children develop logic, attention, memory and imagination. And by collecting puzzle letters, the alphabet is memorized much faster.

You will need unused cardboard packaging from toys or any other items. Choose with your child suitable large letters on the package and cut them out. Then draw with a marker on the back of the line, so that you get the details of the puzzle and let the child cut it out. The more details you get, the more complex the puzzle will be.

Then shuffle the pieces and have your child reassemble the letter. And when he collects it, let him loudly name it and the words that he knows with this letter.

If there are no boxes at home, then just draw a big letter on a piece of paper, color it and also cut it into pieces – the puzzle is ready.

You can also download our best letter learning games.

5. What letter does it begin with

This game not only helps to learn letters, but also develops logical thinking.

You will need: any household items and letters of different colors (you can take magnetic ones) or cardboard cards with letters.

Anything can be taken from items: dishes, fruits, vegetables, clothes, etc. Put all this in front of the child, select the letters you need and put them in a pile next to it.

Next, pointing to the object, ask the child: “What is this?” He answers: “Bananas”, and you: “What letter do bananas begin with?” If the child answers, ask him to find his letter “B” in a pile and put it next to the bananas.

Help the child if at first it is difficult for him to find the right letters on his own.

6. What does the letter look like

This game will help the child quickly reinforce each new letter.

For example, you are teaching the letter “A” with your child. Ask what item it looks like. If he can’t immediately answer, fantasize about this topic together. Ask leading questions and let the child answer. For example: “The letter “A” looks like a tree? Or maybe it looks like a house? etc. Try to play association on the street, where you are surrounded by many different objects.

If you do not live in a Russian-speaking country, then let the child look for familiar letters in his books.

7. Letters on the walk

Learn the Russian alphabet right on the street. In the fresh air in the game, any information is absorbed faster.

Everything that is around is useful to you: sticks, pebbles, moss or shells. Write any letter on the ground or sand with a stick and ask the child to lay out the same one next to it. To begin with, you can practice laying out the letters along the drawn outline, and then try to lay them out yourself.

Do not forget to say all the letters out loud together and move on to a new letter only after the child remembers the previous one.

Did you like our ideas?

And we also want to give your child a very fun and exciting RUSBUKA game right now. Simple and fun exercises will help you quickly learn all the letters of the Russian alphabet, pump your hand motor skills and develop your imagination.