Kindergarten Reading Resources

Welcome to our Kindergarten Reading Resource page. Reading is a critical component of your child's kindergarten year. On this page, you will find helpful videos, activities and links to websites. 


Happy Reading,

The Kindergarten Team

Introduction to Reading Development 

For most children, reading is not a skill that comes naturally. It must be explicitly and systematically taught. Current research shows there are five "pillars" to early literacy development. Below, you will find a helpful infographic and link that goes over the five pillars. 

Five Pillars of Reading Resource



Phonemic Awareness


Our first pillar of literacy is a skill called phonemic awareness. Phonemic awareness is the ability to hear and manipulate the sounds in words. In order to become a strong reader and writer, children must first be able to hear the sounds in words. Below is a quick one minute video describing phonemic awareness and short exercises. 

Down below are the one minute drills you can use with your child. As stated in the video, complete the drills in the following order:



In class, we implement a phonemic awareness curriculum called Heggerty's. Down below, you will find weekly Heggerty videos for your child to participate in. 

Lesson One:

Lesson Two:

Letters/Digraphs/Blends:


Phonics


Phonics is the key to decoding new words. Phonics instruction is to help children learn the alphabetic principle — the idea that letters represent the sounds of spoken language — and that there is an organized, logical, and predictable relationship between written letters and spoken sounds.


Articles Reviewing Phonics

Article reviewing phonics 

Article reviewing writing development


Phonics Activities: 

Read your child's weekly word sheets everyday 

Write sounds at home in sand or sugar

Write a letter to a family member or friend 

Making words activities 

Make a grocery list to shop with 


Decodable Books

Reading to our children is important. It is a good model for how fluent reading should sound, and it's great for comprehension. However, what types of books should your child be reading? We recommend "decodable books" or "decodables". This is a type of text that has been carefully sequenced to progressively incorporate words that are consistent with the letter-sound relationships that have been taught to the newest of readers. Please check out a list of awesome decodables below! Click on the names and it will direct you to their website.