11 answers

Sight Words

Hello

Is anybody doing sight words with their kindergardner? Any advice on how to teach a 5 yr old her sight words. I want to make it fun. Any advice would be great!

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Hi. My son, who is also 5, had sight words. What we did was first put them on flashcards and then for every one he got right he would get 1 M & M or Skittle or watever. It seemed to motivate him pretty well. We tried to do this every night. Sometimes we would have him "race" with daddy to see who could get the most right. He always won :) Good Luck!
E.

2 moms found this helpful

More Answers

Hi M.,
I am a kindergarten teacher but am taking this year off because I am due to have baby #2 in 4 weeks. :-)
Here are a couple of ideas to help with sight words...

I would always start with a small group of words until those are mastered and then add new ones to the group. Depending on your daughter and her teacher...aim for just a couple of words a week.

1. Bingo - you can make bingo cards with the sight words and play a game together.
2. BANG! - Make multiple copies of a group of sight words and cut them up. Put them into a can or bowl. Make a few other cards that say BANG! on them and put them into the bowl as well. Have your daughter pick a card...if she can read it, she gets to keep it. If she can't read it, she has to put it back in the bowl. Play until your daughter collects a predetermined amount of cards. She can play with her friends too.
3. Painting - Go outside with a cup of water and some sight word cards and have your child practice writing/painting them on the driveway or sidewalk. The kids loved to do this on a warm day. NO MESS involved!!! Sidewalk chalk is also great.
4. At the homework table, choose 3 cards. Lay the cards out next to each other, left to right. Read them to her. Read them together and then read them again. Mix them up and see if she can read them to you. IF not, read them together again. Make sure to mix up the cards so that she is not just remembering the sequence. Place the cards top to bottom and do the same thing.
5. As you are reading together, find words that she knows!
6. On letters, magazines or newspapers have her circle words sight words. Do you see the word 'and'?

I hope that this helps... ask your daughters' teacher for more ideas too.

~K.

3 moms found this helpful

Aloha,
there are 'picture word bingo' games and other flash card type word games. you can also make your own flash cards.... glue pictures from magazines onto index cards, then write the corresponding word on the back. Also, when you play these games... one techniques is: have your child pick a picture, then have her FIND the corresponding word that goes with it... when she does this, have her look at the first letter in the word as a 'cue' to finding the correct word for the picture. For example: a picture of a cat...then tell her "what does cat start with?" Then she would have to find a word that starts with "C." Then when she finds the correct pairing... have her explain WHY the two go together... for example: "this is word for cat.. and this is the picture of cat." Then have her s-p-e-l-l it out... AND sound out each letter phonetically.Also have pictures that start with the same letter, for example: "cat" "chair" and "celery"...each starts with the letter "C" , BUT each sound different. SOund it out with her, and spell it. Through auditory AND visual repetition... ie: practice.... they will thus "sight read." To add more variety and challenges as they master it, just as more words and pictures. You can also buy these 'word games' at child education stores, or on Amazon.com.... there is also a good DVD series out there called "Word Factory" by Leapfrog. It is excellent.... I also used this with my girl from when she was 2 years old, and she enjoyed it AND learned letters and reading from it. This is the link for it: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw/102-###-###-####-###... you can also find the word bingo games as well. Here is the link:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw/105-###-###-####-###...
Of course, they will also teach sight reading in Kindergarten.
Good luck and hope these were helpful,
~Susan
www.cafepress.com/littlegoogoo

2 moms found this helpful

Hi. My son, who is also 5, had sight words. What we did was first put them on flashcards and then for every one he got right he would get 1 M & M or Skittle or watever. It seemed to motivate him pretty well. We tried to do this every night. Sometimes we would have him "race" with daddy to see who could get the most right. He always won :) Good Luck!
E.

2 moms found this helpful

No advice, really. Rachel is picking up sight words (just turned 5). We don't do any practicing. We just have a ton of books around and read to her every night. I think she will pick them up at her own pace.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi M., My daughter (5yrs) Does an online reading program at headsprouts.com. We love it! It is fun and teaches sight words, letter sounds, blends, etc. There are 2 different programs - basic and advanced. It is a little pricy, but well worth it. I think I did like 5 payments of $26 or someting (total for both programs). It teaches so much that I would never have the patience or know - how to teach. I highly recommended.

1 mom found this helpful

Check out the bookstore - there are ample selections to choose from. A fun idea would be to take pictures of the items and then put the word on the photo - and past them around the house, or her room. She will quickly learn that CAT is the cute fuzzy cat in the picture (as an example). Have fun!
K.
http://Kellyis.stayinhomeandlovinit.com
Healthy Home, Healthy Family, Healthy Income

1 mom found this helpful

With my kids we used index cards as well. For regular reading I found we could use flash cards, books, etc. But sight words in particular have a lot of words that are hard to put a picture to, like "I", "said", "has". For those I put three on index cards and taped them to his door. Whenever I had time (or with homework each night) I asked him to ID the words (they need to be able to do it instantly, no pause or sounding out, before thier teacher will credit them with "sight reading") and I added a sticker to the index card each time he was successful. At 5 stickers I added another sight word and a special treat- I used rewards like gummy snacks or an extra 10 minutes of his video game.

1 mom found this helpful

Like another mom said, the best thing you can do is label, label label!! My 3 y/o has already learned a few sight words just from the things we have labeled around the house (like his rubbermaid drawers etc) If you don't want little index cards everywhere you can do it just in his room or the bathroom he uses on the clock, toilet, bath, closet, door etc. This will help tremendously and attach something "real world" to the word which is soooo important.

1 mom found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.