Lesson

Hear Short Vowel Sounds

Students learn to hear and name the short sounds for a, e, i, o, and u.

Hear Short Vowel Sounds

What students learn

Students learn that the vowels a, e, i, o, and u can make short sounds. They practice listening for each sound and naming it correctly.

Why it matters

Hearing short vowel sounds is the first step toward reading simple words. Once students can tell the sounds apart, they can begin to blend them into real words.

Learn the idea

Start with and listen for the short /a/ sound in familiar words. Then move through , , , and .

As you listen, ask the student to repeat the sound after each clip and say one word that belongs with that vowel.

Try it

Say a short vowel sound and have the student point to the matching letter. Then say simple words like cat, bed, pig, hop, and sun and ask which vowel they hear in the middle.

Parent guide

Keep the work playful and quick. Say the sound, let the child repeat it, and then connect it to a real word. If a child mixes up two sounds, compare them side by side with two short clips and ask which one sounds different in the middle.