I’m so excited to share an alphabet series that my two year old has been using behind the scenes for the last few weeks!
It’s called Learning the Alphabet and is designed to help kids learn letters (upper and lowercase) and their sounds. It’s a “prequel” to Reading the Alphabet and contains the same kinds of hands-on activities.
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Teaching Young Children the ABC’s
Before I share the specifics, I want to remind all of us that every child is different. The activities included each week were designed to make learning the alphabet hands-on, playful and interactive. Very few of the alphabet activities are “print and go” like you’d find in a workbook.
With that being said, please feel free to adapt the pages as you see fit for your child/students. Follow the lead and interests of your child. This is KEY, especially when teaching young children.
Although the packs are shared for free in ABC order, I actually recommend NOT teaching the alphabet in ABC order. For one, I like to start with the letters in this child’s name to make it more meaningful. This is especially important for reluctant learners.
You can read more of our tips for teaching letters and sounds here.
Learning the Alphabet Activities & Printables
**Please note that the activities share in this post are the activities in the FREE ABC packs. The Bundle Pack has been updated and expanded since this post, so it is more comprehensive. You can read about about the updated activities HERE.**
Today, I’m going to walk you through all the activities included in each of the free printable ABC packs There’s a lot of information here, but I’m hopeful it will be a helpful resource as you use these printables with your child/students.
Read about these supplies for Learning the Alphabet HERE.
1. Simple Alphabet Books
Each pack contains a little book that has a simple image and word below it. Six images are included for each letter. The books can be printed in color or in black and white. NSis really loves coloring, so the black and white is what she prefers.
The books can be read over and over and are a fantastic way to build vocabulary with young children. By the 3rd or 4th time through, kids can even “read” it with you!
2. Alphabet Tracing Page
These are exactly like the ones you’ll find in our Handwriting Practice Pack, except they match with the clip art from Learning the Alphabet. NSis enjoys these, but we don’t spend a ton of time doing them. I placed all of them in plastic sleeve protectors and created a Handwriting Notebook for her. I let her pull out her notebook when she’d like to “play” with writing.
3. Alphabet Lacing Cards
In both upper and lower case letters, these cards include the six images from the Alphabet Books. I recommend printing these onto cardstock, laminating and hole punching along the edges to make alphabet lacing cards.
These cards are great for letter recognition, letter sounds, and hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills. If your child is very young, be prepared to help her thread the lacing card.
4. Cut & Paste a Letter Sound
This activity features several different skills at the same time, namely cutting, gluing, letter recognition and letter sounds. The large block upper and lowercase letters can be adapted many other ways as well.
If you follow the directions on the printable, first the child cuts the picture strips for the letter. This is similar to the Cut & Pattern activities with Reading the Alphabet, our Pre-K/K Packs, and our Cut it Out! Packs {level 1} except the strips are a bit smaller for smaller hands. Our absolute FAVORITE pair of scissors for young learners is the Maped Koopy Spring Scissors. Seriously amazing because they eliminate a lot of the frustration for young learners.
NSis is still perfecting her scissors skills, but she loves to try. {Notice my fingers are also in the photograph above. She still needs quite a bit of help.} I helps tremendously to print these strips onto cardstock so that the paper isn’t so flimsy.
Once cut out, the images are glued down around the letter. As you glue them down, name each picture together.
You can also take these blank letter pages and adapt them for what your child likes to do. NSis loves our alphabet stamps, so we stamped n‘s in the capital N.
5. Roll and Race!
Instead of your basic upper and lowercase sort, do a little rolling and racing as you climb the letter ladder. Such a simple yet fun game for teaching letter recognition.
Instead of using the letter cards pictured above, you could also use letter stamps, letter stickers or have your child write the upper and lowercase letters in the rungs of each ladder {for those who are ready}.
6. Letter Puzzles
These are simple letter puzzles containing the alphabet pictures with words. The cards can be cut by the child or cut ahead of time.
Mix up all the pieces {12 pieces total} and let your child rematch them. They can also be reworked and glued down the next day. And if you want to make it a little more challenging, also cut the cards vertically to make it four pieces.
7. Roll and Match a Letter Sound
Rolling letter sounds has been a favorite of NSis. She LOVES our Photo Stacking Blocks and asks to play with the all.the.time. I knew these packs wouldn’t be complete without rolling activities. This one is also very simple, yet is a great way to teach vocabulary.
For her, I print off the letter picture inserts twice. We take turns rolling {really, she throws and/or kicks them} and trying to match the pictures, like alligator/alligator.
To use the blocks for more letters, print off the images you need and insert the same number of images from each letter in each block. For example, if you wanted to compare three letter sounds, insert 2 letter images for each letter each of the blocks.
In the bonus material from the Bundle Pack, you’ll find letter inserts, so you can roll and match letters and pictures. More bonus material is shared at the end of this post.
8. Alphabet Coloring Pages
Yes, I did include an upper and lowercase coloring page for each letter simply because NSis loves to color.
Feel free to use it any way you’d like, such as letting your child paint the pages.
9. Alphabet Do-a-Dot Pages
My advice is to wait to use the Do-a-Dot paint markers with these because you can get multiple uses out of these pages if you
use counters or pom-poms with them
or Power Magnets {she worked this one 5 times in one sitting using the different colors of magnets, all of her own accord}.
You can also use circle stickers.
And, of course, Do-a-Dot Paint Markers. In this pack, you’ll find four different versions of these Alphabet Do-a-Dot pages. Simple ones like those seen above and harder ones featuring both upper and lower case letters.
10. Letter 10-Grid
We love grid games. They cover so many literacy and math objectives. You can read more about with our Alphabet Grid Games.
These are for younger children and feature numbers 1-10. You can re-label a smaller die or print off the 1-3 die template {seen in the image above} found in the bonus material of the Bundle Pack.
11. Alphabet Playdough Mats
These playdough mats are interactive, similar to our Alphabet Playdough Mats Pack, but also get kids to work on recognizing numbers 1-10 and one-to-one correspondence.
I always slip these into plastic sleeve protectors first. Draw a number card and add that many objects to the page with playdough, based on the directions. In the example above, the child is to add bubbles to the fish page.
12. Numbers Pages for 1-10
These number pages are also great for Do-a-Dot Paint Markers, Power Magnets, counters, stickers, or pom-poms. These are similar to the ones in Reading the Alphabet or our Pre-K/K packs, except they are for numbers 1-10.
Place all the number cards in a pile. These are the same number cards used for the playdough mat. I HIGHLY recommend laminating them, as you’ll use them in every pack A to Z.
13. Number Cards 1-10
Included with each letter are number cards 1-10, which can be played with in many ways.
Read the number and practice one-to-one correspondence by adding that many objects to the card. Lay them on the floor and jump to the numbers.
Place them in order 1 through 10. More ideas are included on the Number Card pages.
So there you have it! Whew. I hope that helps to explain what exactly you’ll find in every free letter pack of Learning the Alphabet. Remember you can grab the UPDATED BUNDLE PACK!
There’s an App for Learning Alphabet Sounds!
Alphabet Sounds Learning App has FOUR levels of interactive play designed to extend your child’s understanding of letters and their sounds. It will definitely grow with your little one!
Enjoy teaching!
~Becky
Becky, your are incredible! My daughter (2,5 years old today) LOVES Reading the Alphabet pack, but I’ve been skipping some activities because they were too difficult for her age, plus she’s bilingual so her vocabulary is building up slower but paralel 🙂 (to my delight). This NEW pack will be EXACTLY what she needs at this age. I can’t thank you enough. All the best.
Maja
Awesome! It sounds like you’re a great teacher to adjust your instruction to what she gets and doesn’t get just yet.
I love Learning the Alphabet!! My son (who just turned 4) has really enjoyed this! He was not ready for the Reading the Alphabet, so I was so excited to see this pack. I love all the literacy connections you provide in it, I feel like it just meets his needs perfectly right now. Every time I use this with him, I feel so good about all the good learning he is doing, and he loves it too because it is fun! Thank you so much Becky!
Aw, you are so welcome. I’m glad your little guy is enjoying them!
Can someone please direct me on the link I need to download these packs.. I keep going around in a circle??
Look towards the end of this post and you’ll see images for all the packs. Click on any of those images and it will pull up the post with the free download it in. Hope that helps!
I love these packs too! I’ve been using them for my two and half year old and he enjoys them 🙂 I had found the printables earlier but seem to be having a hard time getting to them now. Clicking on the pictures just takes me to a larger image, not the download itself. Not sure if there’s a temporary glitch 🙁
It’s fixed now. 🙂 Thank you for your patience.
The links to download each letter seem to be missing. Or am I missing something? I’ve scoured the page and I can’t find picture or link to click on to download a letter pack. Help!
Try–> https://thisreadingmama.com/free-abc-printable-packs/
I’ve bought 2 packs and I put them to trash by mistake…How do I recover these deleted items? Thank you!
Is there any way you can go into your trash can on your computer and recover them there? It’s not deleted completely until you delete the files in your trash. Feel free to email me at becky@thisreadingmama.com if you need more help.
thanks a lot for your job! it helps me with my little students. you’re amazing!
Thanks for sharing this
Learn Alphabet