Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Rhyming Activities For Early Years – Learning how to rhyme is an important pre-reading skill for your preschool student. The ability to identify similar sounds is also necessary for early spelling skills that your students will need later down the road. With our free rhyming activities for preschoolers, your students will learn to recognize rhyming words by sound, while building key fine motor skills. These resources will equip you to teach rhyming and matching to your students.

Our free rhyming activities can be used in a variety of different ways, depending on the age and ability level of your student. The set comes with 6 different rhyming page books and 3 pages of cut out rhyming pictures. For younger students, you could simply print out the rhyming word pictures and have them draw a line to match each of the rhyming sets.

Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Older students can use the rhyming game as intended with the extra page books. Flapbooks are minibooks that can be cut and folded to create an interactive element. They’re great for hands-on learners, and they fit nicely in a notebook. Each flipbook prints on a single sheet of paper, and basically, students will cut on the solid lines and fold on the dotted lines until they’ve made a “folding-like” booklet (see below).

Multisensory Rhyming Activity

Once the booklet is assembled, students then color and cut out the rhyming pictures. Each of the rhyming images is then glued behind the correct page. Students can then practice reading the word on the outside of each page, lifting each time to discover the correct answer. “Bee…rhymes with…tree!” While students are not expected to read the larger words in preschool, the exposure will help and some will memorize them through sight and repetition. The entire booklet can be glued into your notebook for review work down the line.

Another way you can use this trend is to have students make their own rhyming flashcards. Creating their own set of rhyming cards will help personalize the activity and build important sharing skills. Students can color and cut out the pictures, then glue them onto blank flashcards. These flashcards can be used to play rhyming games like concentration. For students who are building reading skills, you can even have a set of “word” flashcards for students to match to the picture.

We have developed a comprehensive two-year program that will start your early readers with a solid foundation in language arts. Our R.E.A.D. With fun, interactive and engaging material. Program can be started as soon as your child knows all their letter sounds. Download the first week free and get started today! Click here. Nursery rhyme activities are a great way to extend the basic nursery rhymes taught in almost every preschool classroom. Having hands-on activities help bring the rhymes to life, and students practice various skills while reinforcing the rhymes.

Stick art is a fantastic way to work on counting to ten while reciting the lines of the poem. Simply provide a variety of craft sticks, markers and glue and let students’ creativity guide the art. When the student finishes, ask them to count the sticks they used in their art.

Mother Goose And Nursery Rhymes Activity Pack

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on “1-2 buckle my shoe” and are included in the complete Nursery Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Why are there so many nursery rhymes about sheep? This may be a mystery that has never been solved, but these are adorable nursery rhyme activities to count on when the class is learning Baa Baa Black Sheep, Little Bo Peeps, or Mary Has a Little Lamb!

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on “Baa Baa Black Sheep” and are included in the complete Nursery Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Reinforce color words with the nursery rhyme “Baa Baa Black Sheep.” Start with the original rhyme. Next, substitute in different colors. A pocket chart with the rhyme written out and colored sheep with their words is beneficial. Students enjoy picking the different colors to substitute in the rhyme.

Three Printable Humpty Dumpty Literacy Activities For Kids

Extend this activity to the art table by providing pages with sheep and different colors of paint or markers. Students select a color, copy the color word on the blank, and color the sheep!

Baa Baa Black Sheep is a fantastic way to practice counting practice too! Supply counters and pages with bags of wool in different amounts. Students place one counter on each bag as they count, practicing one-to-one correspondence.

File folder games are perfect for reviewing concepts such as “small” and “big.” Sorting letter identification is also excellent here – sort things according to the L sound for Lamb or the M sound for Mary!

The activities in this set focus on “Mary Has a Little Lamb” and are included in the Complete Kindergarten Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Literacy Games For Kids: Indoor And Outdoor Learning Fun!

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills.

A prop tray with some sheep, an apron, and a small hat are all that students need to recreate the nursery rhyme on their own. Turn this into a preschool-friendly variation of “hide and seek” by having “Bo Peep” close their eyes while someone hides the sheep. The class can say the rhyme while the student waits. Students can give hints such as “hot” and “cold” or other clues about where to find the sheep. “Bo Peep” must collect their flock and collect them. Keep repeating until everyone has had a turn to find the sheep.

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on the nursery rhyme “Little Bo Peeps”.

Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Bring some variation to the art center with this fun nursery rhyme activity! Play some violin music while students paint. Encourage them to move their brushes to the music. Want to make it more interesting? Use spoons (the bowl ran away with the spoon) as paintbrushes!

Free Printable Rhyming Bingo Game For Kindergarten

Students can practice “moon jumping” like the cow for a fun gross motor activity. Cow costume is “adderly” optional, of course. Make it musical by adding “Rocketship Run” by Laurie Berkner or a similar song to the activity. Encourage students to jump high, far, soft, low and any other variations they can think of!

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on “Hey diddle diddle” and are included in the complete Nursery Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Bulletin boards don’t have to be “display only!” This interactive bulletin board covers number matching, counting, telling time, rhyming and reading and doesn’t need to take up even an inch of precious floor space! And, as a bonus, it is a beautiful decoration for the classroom. Read more about the bulletin board here!

This rhyming game is a great way to practice endless sounds! Each tiny mouse pairs up with a cheese wedge that rhymes. Pictures on the cards help non-readers master the concept too!

Picture Rhyming Cards (free Printable)

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on “Hickory Dickory Dock” and are included in the complete Nursery Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Humpty Dumpty is a favorite nursery rhyme, and there’s a whole post of nursery rhyme activities for that rhyme right here!

Another fun Humpty Dumpty activity is perfect for independent math review. Simple puzzles help students self-check their answers while matching ten frames to numerals.

Rhyming Activities For Early Years

Little Miss Muffet and Itsy Bitsy Spider are great for units on insects, nursery rhymes and even Halloween. These two activities are simple to set up and keep students engaged and learning!

Five Little Ducks Storytelling Water Play

Give those fine motor muscles a workout at the sensory table! Dollar store tongs, bowls and small plastic spiders work with any dry sensory bin material! Students pinch, scoop and wiggle the tiny spiders in the bowls.

First, demonstrate how to draw the web on the paper by making concentric circles with lines coming from the center. Students use liquid watercolors to paint a beautiful rainbow web. When the paper is dry, attach a pre-cut spider, or one that the students make on their own!

While this isn’t exactly the type of “crown” Jack broke when he took his notorious spill down the hill, students love decorating their own blingy headwear! Peeling the little gems and drawing on the crowns provides fun fine motor practice!

Nursery rhymes are a quick way for emerging readers to practice word concepts, rhyming, and many other important skills. The activities in this set focus on “Jack and Jill” and are included in the complete Nursery Rhyme Circle Time Unit.

Three Reading Rhyming Games For Kids: Free Printable #31daysoflearning #worldbookday

From falling down a hill to jumping over lamps, Jack sure gets into some shenanigans! Students engage their gross motor skills by jumping over a plastic candlestick. Do this while reciting the rhyme to make it ‘stick’!

Practice early reading skills and the concept of opposites with this pocket chart activity. first,

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