Abc Stickers For The Tub

Preschool is the idealisti time to invent and heighten students’ understanding of written and spoken language. The letters of the alphabet are the basic building blocks that lie at the heart of communication, both spoken and written.

Preschool students must be encouraged to develop conceptions of print, alphabetical cognizance and phonological consciousness – these conceptions are the cornerstones on which to build reading skills.

Preschoolers ought to be encouraged to love reading and feel happy and convinced in regards to the reading process. For this to occur, you must make sure that all students comprehend the basic concepts, no matter of person capacity level.

As a class, your students will get started to associate words with pictures and understand that letters have very special shapes, sounds and names. They will learn that these letters form words and that these words have meaning. Reading is the next critical step.

The following activenesses may be applied to interactively instruct the ABC’s.

1. POWERPOINT ABC’s

PowerPoint demonstrations may be used to give hope or courage to visual learning accomplishments and to aid students get started to make the connection amid letters, sounds, words and pictures.

Create a PowerPoint presentation. Each slide must comprise a letter of the alphabet. After each slide include five words beginning with the letter, and five corresponding pictures of the words that you have chosen. Students read the letter together, the teacher sounds out each of the five words phonetically and the class reads out the letter that each of the words begins with. Students are then shown a picture of each word.

2. HUMAN ALPHABET

In this action students learn the shape of each letter by creating the shape with their body.

Divide students in to groups of three or four.

Students will need a huge clear space for this action so move desks and chairs out of the way.

Have a fun version of the ABC song playing. Stop the music and call out a letter.

Each group ought to speedily lie on the floor and form the shape of the letter. If a student is not necessitated they may help by calling out the letter when asked.

3. THE NAME GAME

Children write their name on a piece of paper. The teacher shows the class a big flashcard with a peculiar letter of the alphabet written on the flashcard. When the letter is shown, students must cross that letter of their name from their card.

When all possible letters of the first, middle and last name are crossed out, students call out ‘THE NAME GAME’. As each student finishes they earn a reward point or a sticker. As students become more confident, intimate sight words may be applied to play the game.

4. Big A, Little A

On big pieces of Cardboard, laminate Uppercase and Lowercase letters. Divide students in to groups and have each group match the big A with the little a, the huge B with the little b and so on.

5. A PICTURE TELLS A THOUSAND WORDS

Show students a range of images and have the students call out the letter that the word connected to the effigy begins with.

Useful Computer Lessons…

Teacher tube has a good deal of video files containing teachers and students rapping the ABC’s. Download these files on to PowerPoint, if you have access in your classroom, or, play on a laptop or computer to your class.


Abc Stickers For The Tub

Learn your ABC’s in the tub. Enjoy soft, imaginative fun for the tub with these colorful bathtub stickers. The chubby foam shapes are easy for little hands to hold and stick to the tub or tile when wet.


Most helpful client reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
5Great instructing tool
By W. Jares
We purchased a set of these for my son to use in the bath, so that he could learn his ABC’s. Once he accomplished that, we quickly found out that one set was not enough. We have three sets, and we use these to instruct spelling and reading.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
5For all ages
By Mom of Two Toddlers
I purchased these for my 18 month old to support her learn her ABC’s. My 4 year old likewise loves to play with them. They do get indentations from teeth.

3 of 3 humans found the following review helpful.
3Smaller than they appear in picture!
By runtherace
When these arrived I was a little disappointed to find out how little each letter was (about 1 1/2 inches each). I was hoping they looked more like the picture, but a great deal of of the letters are actually hard to tell apart….they just aren’t printed very clearly. I wanted to use these to help my son recognize letters as he was playing in the tub….but they will most likely just be play toys. Oh well, my son still loves them.

See all 9 client reviews…

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