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Our K–2 Letterland program introduces students to the foundations of phonics through engaging stories and characters that bring letters and sounds to life. This structured approach helps students develop strong decoding, encoding, and early reading fluency skills in a fun and developmentally appropriate way.
This document shows the progression/pacing of skills taught for grade K-2
This document will tell you more about the Letterland Characters.
You can use UFLI Decodable Texts, which align with phonics skills taught in class to help students build confidence and fluency while reading words they can sound out. You can also use Roll and Read games, which add fun and repetition to practice important word patterns and high-frequency words. Together, these tools support strong reading foundations in an engaging and effective way.
This document has texts which align with phonics skills taught in class to help students build confidence and fluency while reading words they can sound out
This document has games which add fun and repetition to practice important word patterns and high-frequency words.
Sight Words or Heart Words are high-frequency words that help build reading fluency and confidence. While many sight words can be sounded out with regular phonics patterns, some of these words have tricky parts students need to learn "by heart."
Here you can find 12 engaging activities for practicing Sight Words.
Here you can find you can find directions for an engaging sight word activity.
This digital resource provides literacy activities at each grade level, pre-kindergarten through fifth grade. Families and communities may access this resource for activities that specifically target the literacy skills of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, reading comprehension, and oral language.
Discover the many reasons why reading aloud with your child has such a big impact on their literacy development and social-emotional growth. And get tips on how to read aloud (make it fun and interactive), plus links to finding great read-aloud books.
Use this link to find activities to support your child with rhyming. Rhyming is an important early reading skill that helps children recognize sound patterns in words. It builds phonological awareness, which is the foundation for learning to read and spell. Through songs, poems, and word play, students learn to hear similarities in sounds, making it easier for them to decode new words as they read.
Spelling instruction at your child's school may look different from what you remember of your school days. Here's a guide to what you might expect from our child's writing and why things have changed.
This document has handwriting and other fine motor activities for grades Pre-K to 3rd grade.