Alphabet Ideas for Any Letter

1. Letter Hunt- Give each student a letter written on an index card. Student has to find an object in the classroom that begins with that letter.

2. Alphabet Ball- Toss a soft ball to each student and call out a letter. Student has to say sound the letter makes or say a word that begins with that letter.

3. Alphabet Soup Game- Place magnetic letters in a large bowl. Each students has a turn removing one letter with a soup ladle. Student names letter, its sound, and a word that begins with the letter.

4. Upper and Lowercase Alphabet Match- Write uppercase letters on one type of paper shape and lowercase on a corresponding shape (i.e. uppercase letters on tree and lowercase letters on apples). Students match uppercase and lowercase letters.

5. Playdoh Letters- Write an alphabet letter on a piece of construction paper and laminate. Prepare complete alphabet. Student uses playdoh to form letter on top of laminated letter.

            

6. Alphabet Walk- Look for specific letter while walking around school

7. Musical Letters- Class sits in a circle. As music is played, children passa round a can containing letters. When music stops, child holding can removes a letter and reads it and its sound aloud.

8. Form letters out of blocks.

 

 

Ideas for Each Letter

A

1. Form A using Applejacks.

2. Make apple prints

3. Have apples for snack.

4. Glue magazine pictures beginning with a on to an

   apple tree.

B

1. Form B using buttons, beads, or beans.

2. Blue Day- Have students wear blue to school. 

    Lessons revolve around the color.

3. Have bananas for snack.

4. Glue magazine pictures of words beginning with b

    on to a paper bag.

C

1. Form C using Cheerios or cottonballs.

2. Make paper plate clowns.

3. Make cookies in the shape of a C.

4. Have carrots for a snack.

D

1. Form D using Do-a-Dot paint bottles.

2. Make paper bag dogs.

3. Write e's on an envelope.

E

1. Form E using paper eggs.

2. Make paper plate elephants.

F

1.Form F using fabric scraps or fish stamper.

2. Make paper plate fish.

3. Have Swedish fish for a snack.

4. Make fruit salad.

G

1. Form G using green paper scraps, glitter or

    goldfish crackers.

2. Graph gummy bears by color.

3. Have grapes for snack.

H

1. Form H using heart stampers or make a giant H using student’s handprints.

2. Make funny hats.

3. Pick words beginning with H out of a hat and try to read.

4. Have Crazy Hat Day.

I

1. Color I pattern and glue paper ice cream cone on

    line going down middle of letter.

2. Graph favorite flavor ice cream.

3. Have ice cream for a snack.

4. Fill igloo with words beginning with I.

J

1. Form J using jellybeans.

2. Graph favorite color jellybeans or jelly.

3. Have jelly on crackers for a snack.

4. Make jello.

K

1.Form K out of Hershey Kisses or Kix cereal.

2.Glue magazine pictures beginning with K on to a

   kite.

L

1. Form L using leaf stampers.

2.Graph favorite color lollipops.

3. Make lemonade.

4. Make a paper plate lion.

M

1.Form M using macaroni or mini marshmallows.

2.Have marshmallows for a snack.

3. Make masks.

N

1. Form N using noodles or newspaper scraps.

2. make paper neckties and write Nn on them.

O

1.Form O using orange scraps of paper.

2.Taste orange juice.

3. Make paper bag owls.

4. Make paper plate octopi.

P

1. Form P using popcorn or purple and pink scraps of

    paper.

2. Make popcorn for a snack.

3. Make paper plate pigs.

4. Make paper plate pumpkins.

Q

1. Form Q using Q-tips.

2. Make Q into a queen. Give each student a paper

    Q. Children draw eyes and lips on it. Children

    then cut out a paper crown and glue it on top of

    Q.

3. Make a class quilt.

R

1. Form R using ribbon or red scraps of paper.

2. Make rainbow R's using 3 crayons taped

   together.

S

Form S using sequins or stampers.

T

Form T using tissue paper.

U

Glue an umbrella on to an U.

V

1. Form V using violet paper.

2.Turn a V pattern into a vase of flowers. Students

   draw flowers coming out of V.

3. Make vegetable prints.

W

1. Form W using woodsy shapes.

2. Turn W pattern into a wagon by gluing on paper

    wheels and a yarn handle.

3. Watercolor a W pattern.

X

1. Turn X pattern into xylophone by gluing on paper

   bars and sticks.

2. Show students real x-rays.

Y

1. Form Y using yellow paper or yarn.

2.Taste yogurt.

3.Graph favorite yogurt flavor.

4. Sing Y.M.C.A.

Z

1. Make zigzag Z’s using rik rak ribbon.

2. Turn Z pattern into a zebra. Children glue black

    stripes on to a white Z pattern and glue on paper

    ears, mane, and tail. Students then draw eyes

    and a mouth.

3. Make a class zoo map.

 

 

Alphabet Book

Students create a page for each letter we study. When we complete the alphabet, students create a cover for their alphabet books. I punch a hole in the pages and bind them.

The page for each letter is as follows:

A is for apples. some green, some red.(tissue paper apples)

B is for bakers who bake crusty bread.(draw baker's face)

C is for cars you see in the street.(trace car pattern)

D is for doughnut, so round and sweet. (color doughnut and glue on foam "sprinkles")

E is for eggs that mom uses to bake. (glue on paper yolk)

F is for fish that swim in the lake. (crayon resist fish)

G is for grapes, some purple, some green. (Do-a-Dot paint bottle purple and green grapes)

H is for hat, the funniest I've seen. (cut out hat pattern and decoarte with sequins and a feather)

I is for icecream, a treat for me. (color icecream cone and paint a cherry on top using fingerprint)

J is for strawberry jam and grape jelly. (watercolor one jar red and one jar purple, glue on aluminum foil jar lids)

K is for king, so tall and proud. (decorate king's crown with sequins)

L is for lion whose roar is so loud. (glue yellow paper strips around lion's head to be mane)

M is for mask that can hide your face. (decorate mask with sequins)

N is for newspaper that is in Dad's briefcase. (glue newspaper squares on to briefcase)

O is for octopus with eyes big and round. (glue wiggly eyes on octopus)

P is for pumpkin that grows on the ground. (paint pumpkin)

Q is for quilt, so warm, yet so light. (glue felt squares on to quilt)

R is for rainbow, so pretty, so bright. (draw rainbow with markers)

S is for stars, their sparkling twinkle we see. (make stars using stampers and glue on gold glitter)

T is a teddybear I love and he loves me. (color teddybear)

U is for umbrella that keeps me dry. (color umbrella and fingerpaint raindrops)

V is for vegetables I must eat, but don't know why. (trace vegetables)

W is for whale that swims in the sea. (color whale)

X is for x-rays, I hope not for me.  (draw white chalk skeleton on black rectangle)

Y is a yo-yo, watch it go. (color yo-yo and glue on yarn string)

Z is a zebra, it’s the last you know. (glue black paper strips on zebra)

             

              

 

 

                            

Chicka Chicka Boom Boom Alphabet Review

 

I begin my weekly review of the alphabet using the book, Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin Jr.

                            

Below are ideas I use after reading the story:

 

1.Story Retelling- I mounted a palm tree on a metal cookie sheet and distribute magnetic letters to students. As each letter is read, the student holding it hangs it on the palm tree. Palm tree patterns can be found on:

http://www.dltkkids.com/books/chicka/chickacoloring.htm

http://www.ourschoolfamily.com/pdfs/Chicka%20Tree.pdf

 

2.Art- Paint student’s forearm brown and press on to blue paper to represent tree trunk. Paint student’s hands green and press on top of tree trunk to represent palm fronds. Once tree is dry, glue on letters (stickers, foam letters, stampers,  alphabet cereal).

 

 

3. Language Arts- Match lowercase coconut patterns to upper case palm tree patterns.

4. Math- Place the correct amount of coconuts on each palm tree according to the number written on it.

5. Science- Taste a coconut or coconut milk. Graph who likes and does not like the taste.

 

 

 

Alphabet Review Using Dr. Jean

Who Let the Letters Out? (Kiss Your Brain CD)-

I made a large doghouse, which I laminated, and hang it on my chalkboard. Inside the doghouse, I stick magnetic alphabet letters. As I play the song, I place the letters outside the doghouse. Another way I use the doghouse is by distributing the magnetic letters to the children. As a particular letter is sung, the child holding that letter sticks it inside the doghouse.

                         

 

The Alphabet’s in my Mouth (Kiss Your Brain CD)-

I made Letter Baby by cutting out 2 posterboard circles and attaching them with a brad. The bottom circle has the alphabet written on it. As we sing the song, I move the wheel so the letter we are singing about is in Letter Baby’s mouth.                

 

Alphardy (Sing to Learn CD)-

You can download a book to use with the Alphardy song on http://www.drjean.org/html/monthly_act/act_2005/03_Mar/pg04.html.

I got mine bound at Staples and it looks like this:

                

 

 

VOWELS

 

To introduce each vowel I use a poem

          and "Valerie the Vowel Bear" puppet.

 

 

                       

 

 

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