4/9/2024 0 Comments Board game for kindergarten![]() ![]() Need some rhyming book suggestions? Check out this list here: Rhyming Read Alouds for Kindergarten Center Activity: Rhyming Clip Cards Revisit the different rhymes and see if your students can think of more words that rhyme! You can write them down on an anchor chart or whiteboard. Reading a rhyming book is a simple activity that you can use in your phonics whole group lesson! As you are reading, ask for students to be rhyming detectives and listen for rhyming pairs. Whole Group Activity: Find rhyming pairs in a rhyming book This could also be used as a center activity. To engage your whole class, have all the students give a thumbs up (if it rhymes) or a thumbs down (if it does not rhyme), then have the student sort it. Students will pick a card, look at the two pictures, and decide if the words rhyme or do not. ![]() Using a pocket chart, board, or table, display the “YES” and “NO” cards. You can find my favorite rhyming songs here: Rhyming Songs List on YouTube Whole Group or Center Activity: Rhyming Pairs Sort You can also create your own rhyming songs or rhyming games to further practice this skill. Encourage your child to listen to these songs and pay special attention to the rhyming words. Classics like “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” or “Baa, Baa, Black Sheep” can be a fun way to learn about rhymes and rhythm. Singing is an excellent way to engage kindergartners, especially when you use it at the start of a lesson! Introduce them to songs and chants that incorporate rhyming words. Here are five of my favorite activities to practice identifying rhyming pairs: Lesson Introduction Activity: Rhyming Songs Or if you said, “Does not and net rhyme?” they should say “no”. ![]() For example, if you said, “Does nap and cap rhyme?” they would say “yes”. Students should be able to hear two words and tell if they rhyme or not. The first skill included in rhyming is identifying a rhyming pair. Rhyming Skill #1: Identifying Rhyming Pairs Today, I am sharing 12 of my favorite rhyming activities for Kindergarten that you can add to your lesson plan. When students lack these phonological awareness skills, they have a harder time with phonemic awareness, and they end up struggling with reading fluency. If they were not exposed to nursery rhymes and songs, this key piece of reading is missing. Once they get to Kindergarten, they should have some kind of understanding of rhyming words, but will still need more practice. Children can hear the rhyme, rhythm, and repetition in those preschool songs, and unknowingly they start understanding how rhyming words work. Rhyming is a phonological awareness skill that is first taught through nursery rhymes and songs. ![]()
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