
Lesson
Match Letters to Picture Words
Students learn to connect letters with picture words that begin with the same sound.
Match Letters to Picture Words
What students learn
Students learn to connect a letter sound with a picture word that begins with that sound. This is the step that turns sound practice into real word awareness.
Why it matters
When a child hears /b/ and thinks of ball, the sound starts to mean something useful. That link helps children notice beginning sounds in books, songs, and the world around them.
Learn the idea
Review and to keep the alphabet moving. Then point to a few toys, foods, or classroom objects and ask the child to name the first sound in each word.
Try it
Say a word and have the child clap once for the first sound. After a few rounds, replay and ask the child to sort one or two objects into a starting-sound group.
Parent guide
Use real objects when you can. A spoon, a ball, and a book are easier to understand than abstract examples. If the child guesses, slow the task down and ask, "What sound do you hear first?" Repeat the same few words until the answer feels easy.