Activity

Sound It Out, Then Copy

The child blends a short word's sounds aloud, then copies the word — joining phonics with handwriting in the classical "say it, then write it" pattern.

Ages 48–72 months

Supports this milestone

  • writes for a variety of purposes using increasingly sophisticated marks. — Head Start ELOF

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Materials

  • A few simple three-sound (CVC) word cards, such as sun, cat, dog
  • A writing surface — paper, chalkboard, or dry-erase
  • Optional — the "Copywork — First Words" worksheet

Steps

  • Show a word card and tap each sound slowly, such as "/c/ /a/ /t/".
  • Blend the sounds together and read the whole word.
  • Have the child say each sound, then read the word back.
  • Model writing the word, naming each letter sound as you form it.
  • Invite the child to copy the word and read it aloud once more.

Variations

  • Change the first sound to make a new word (cat → hat → mat) and copy each.
  • Build the word with letter tiles before writing it.

Differentiation

  • For beginners, trace over a highlighted model and focus on one word.
  • For confident readers, dictate the word and have them write it without a model.

Accessibility

  • Use letter tiles, sand trays, or air-writing for children not yet writing on paper.
  • Accept any home language the child speaks when talking about the words.

Safety

  • None — this is a seated, supervised activity.

Practices these skills

Evidence