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Help Your Child Improve Auditory Skills by Teaching Alphabet Letter Sounds
In order to read, every child must know the sounds of the alphabet letters. He must be able
to recall them quickly - he sees the letter and says the sound without hesitation.
- Test your child's knowledge of alphabet letter sounds by using the provided Alphabet List.
Point to each letter and ask your child to, "Tell me what this letter says."
*The alphabet list has no pictures, so your child has to rely totally on memory.
*You are asking your child to tell you the letter sound, not the letter name.
*Write down letter sounds that he or she misses. This is a good place to begin
fixing your child's auditory gaps.
- If your child needs to learn most of the alphabet letter sounds, help her create her own
Alphabet Book. Staple some pieces of paper together and ask your child to draw pictures
of items that begin with the sound of each alphabet letter.
- You can also teach alphabet letters and letter sounds by using an Alphabet Chart
with pictures.
*Be sure to point to each letter as you are saying the letter name and letter sound.
*Review the alphabet chart once a day and pretty soon your child will be able to
point to each letter and say the sounds himself!
*I have an alphabet chart tacked on the wall at kid-height of my son's bedroom so
he can look at it.
- When you are teaching a letter sound, be careful not to add an "uh" sound at the
end of the letter. For example, letter s should sound like a snake hissing, with no throat sound. Letter s says 'sss,' not 'suh.' If your child learns letters 'c', 'a', 't' as sounding
'kuh,' 'aah,' and 'tuh,' those sounds will not come together to say cat!
Children have different learning rates. Your child may need lots of direct instruction to
learn the alphabet sounds. Don't forget, he will learn letter sounds more quickly with a
short daily review.
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