Games for teaching rhyming words




















Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. What a great post! Love all the ideas! Thanks so much, Chelsey! They learn so much from it. I absolutely love this post — rhyming is just so important and the most fun way to learn sound recognition skills and a love of language — discovered you post via Measured Mom Alice Mums Make Lists. Thanks for the kind words, Alice!

I really appreciate them. Plus, kiddos just love playing around with words! I loved your post! Thank you so much for all the wonderful resources you have made and now share with us! I am so grateful. You have enhanced my classroom resources as I make new games from your website. I have a rhyming game idea to share.

I printed out mittens on scrapbook paper and put pictures of rhyming words on each pair of mittens. Then I hung up a clothesline and my students hung up the rhyming pairs with clothespins.

They have been having a blast with the game. We use affiliate links and may earn commission from purchases made through those links. Table of Contents. Comments Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published. Rhyming Worksheets: No-prep worksheets to help students become familiar and build mastery with rhyming words. Digital Circus Themed Rhyming Activity: Look at the image under the circus entrance and find the word that matches. Click and drag the yellow box over your answer.

Click and drag all of the rhyming words into the box. Then check out this digital rhyming resource for kindergarten. I love incorporating themed activities into my phonics lessons. Here are some of my favorite holiday and seasonal rhyming activities for kindergarten. Frankenstein Rhyme Time : Match the Frankenstein heads by finding the rhyming images.

Christmas Rhyming Freebie: This Is a great winter activity that you can grab for free! Way cool! Some very valid points! I appreciate you writing this write-up plus the rest of the website is also very good. Sam Hiram Blanca.

At this time I amm going to do my breakfast, once having my breakfast coming again to read additional news. You can also have your child create their own Rhyme Book! Create the book with five blank pages. Have your child draw pictures of objects that rhyme or cut out rhyming pictures. Then bind the pages into a personal rhyming book.

Singing rhyming songs and rhyming chants is another great way to teach rhyming. Singing is so easy to fit into your daily schedule, as you can basically break out in song or chant any time of the day and it is so much fun to sing! Thank you so much for reading my post on rhyming today. You might also enjoy reading my previous posts:.

How to Teach Letters and Sounds Correctly. How to Teach Beginning Blending in Reading. Does your child have a favorite rhyming activity? Let me know in the comments below.

Karina Richland, M. Karina has an extensive background in working with students of all ages and various learning modalities. Students check the word on their mat to see if it's a rhyming match. If so - they get to keep the card and add it to their mat like points! If you're looking for a quick set of Rhyming Picture Cards , then these are a good fit for kindergarten. If students are really struggling with vocabulary or rhyming, show just one card and limit the number of cards to pick from.

Show just cards to pick a match from in this case. To work on coming up with rhyming words, you could show a picture card and ask students to generate nonsense or silly words that rhyme. They could earn counters in a ten frame for each correct response and try to beat their best score from last time. Sometimes having an alphabet chart handy is helpful. That way you can guide students to pick out a consonant letter to replace the onset in the word card you showed. You could do any of those same activities in number 3 with these Winter Rhyming Picture Match cards.

You could easily play Go Fish! I stored all of these resources from this list in little ziploc bags inside expandable file folders. That way it kept my guided reading table uncluttered and I could easily pull out and put away what I needed for each group. Another set of rhyming picture cards I used came from this Whack a Rhyme printable activity.

Designed to be played as a game, students whack the mallet when a new card is flipped over rhymes with the card of another player. This game requires students to quickly go through multiple cards sitting in front of other players to check if the new card rhymes.

I placed one rhyming card down next to the mallet. This became the card we were looking to match.



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