![]() Save BIG and get the Seasons Math and Literacy Centers Bundle ! Get this resource and ALL the other seasonal math and literacy center units. ![]() Caterpillar More or Less with worksheets.Build the Number – Bird Ten Frame Mats (1-20) with worksheets.Bug Patterns (AB, AABB, AAB, ABC) with worksheets.Flower Sort with sorting mats and flower cards with a worksheet.Plant the Seed (counting or adding game) with worksheets.Color by Number (add: 2 options, count: 2 options).Map the syllables with counters or cubes in ekonin boxes. Some simple activity ideas for teaching children to break apart words into syllables could include: Say the first syllable in the word, and ask students to say the final syllable. Spring Shape I Spy with shape spinner (color and blackline) with worksheets There are lots of different ways to practice syllable skills with kindergarten students.In the Spring Poster (home-school activity).Garden Syllable Sort (1, 2, 3, 4 syllable words) with worksheets.Spring Rhyme Time Puzzles with worksheet.Growing Sight Words: with sight word cards (fry list one and one page of blank cards) with worksheets.Flower Letter Cards (uppercase and lowercase) for sensory writing and matching with worksheets.Rain Letter and Sound Match-Up with worksheets.Spring Beginning Sound Mats and Letter Mats with worksheets.Spring Letter Build It Mats (playdoh or manipulatives) with worksheets.Writing and Journal Paper (with lines, dotted lines, and without lines).Spring Word Cards (uppercase and lowercase set).Closed syllables can also begin with a vowel and end. Most CVC words (consonant, vowel, consonant) are examples of closed syllables e.g. That’s why they are called closed syllables. Included in Spring Activities: (updated February 2022) Closed syllables are syllables that contain one vowel, and that vowel is ‘closed in’ by a consonant, causing the vowel to say its short sound. These activities are designed for preschool, pre-k, or kindergarten. You can use these activities as arrival activities, center activities, small group instruction, and circle time. Simply print the sheet you need, and you’re off on the journey to amazing writing samples. It also includes two fine motor activities to strengthen their fine motor muscles! Each spring activity has a page of teacher tips to help you create the activity easily and ensure it will go smoothly. The resource includes 5 writing prompts for first graders covering different aspects of Spring (Weather, Easter, Life Cycles, Earth Day, and Living Things). Math skills covered are one-to-one correspondence, counting, addition, patterns, number identification, and more/less. Literacy skills covered are letter identification, letter formation, beginning sounds, rhyming, syllables, sight words, vocabulary, and writing/journaling. Spring activities and centers are loaded with fun, spring activities to help your students build math and literacy concepts! Now includes two fine motor activities, one writing center, six literacy activities, and eight math activities.
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