I SEE, I SPELL, I LEARN® - PICTURE SIGHT WORDS™ FLASHCARDS - SETS 1, 2 & 3 COMBO PACK
duz… dose…DOES! wuz, wus…WAS!! "Thay where rite wen thay sed it wuz hard!"
Looks familiar? If your child struggles with sight words, try these cards created by a dyslexia tutor. Sight words cannot be "sounded out"; they must be memorized. Right-brained children often struggle with memorization. These specific picture cues have been tested and proven effective, as they allow the child to use right-brain strength to recall a picture in place of a letter.
The cards do all the work and are easy and fun. They can be used by themselves or as part of any reading or spelling program. Kids love them, as do parents, teachers and tutors. Great for right-brained learners and
emerging readers.
The 25 cards in Set 1 are:
any, are, eat, for, from, goes, have, how, love, many, Mr., Mrs., now, of, one, out, said, say/says, she, they, to, too, two, want, you.
The 25 cards in Set 2 are:
again, all, been, come, could/would/should, does, done, down, front, her, here, none, our, put, saw, some, there, walk, was, were, what, when, where, who, why.
about, because, brother, busy, change, father, friend, full, gone, listen, look, month, mother, nothing, once, only, other, people. please, pull, push, strange, sure, use, very.
WHAT ARE SIGHT WORDS AND WHY PICTURE SIGHT WORDS?
Children start to read by “sounding out” words. However many words cannot be sounded out. Words like “are”, “your”, “come” appear so frequently in early reading material, that children must be able to recognize these words by “sight”, hence the name “sight words”. So sight words must be memorized or recognized instantly, rather than being sounded out or decoded.
Why Picture Sight Words?
These cards were created by Roma Chadha Sood, a Reading Specialist to help right-brained children with Dyslexia, ADD/ADHD who struggled with memorization. Roma works extensively with children who struggle with reading & spelling.
The traditional method of exposure to and repetition of sight words can be difficult, boring and worse, ineffective! Picture Sight Words help a child read, spell and understand sight words much faster. The words have been taken from Dolch Sight Words lists (Pre-K to 3rd grade). Each set has 25 words that go from a beginner level in Set 1 to an advanced level in Set 3.
HOW PICTURE SIGHT WORDS PROGRAM HELPS?
HOW TO USE PICTURE SIGHT WORDS FLASHCARDS?
READING INSTRUCTIONS:
Work on recognition & reading before spelling.
1. Show your child the picture and say the word.
2. Read aloud the sentence on the back of the card.
3. Explain the meaning of the word and discuss the context using the picture and sentence.
4. Make up your own sentence(s) with the word.
5. Ask your child to make one up too.
Do three cards per session. When the entire set has been mastered, move on to the next set.
Make Reading Fun:
- Matching Game: Write out the words on 3x5 cards. Place a few on the table and have your child MATCH the picture cards with the plain cards. This reinforces what the word looks like without the picture cue.
- Flip Over Game: Once the child has seen the picture cues a few times, spread out the cards with pictures facing down. Point to each word on the back of the cards (the side with NO pictures). If the child cannot recognize the word, he/she can flip the card over to see the picture cue. Tell them the word and play the game again using this word with others they are working on.
- Treasure Hunt: Once the child has started recognizing the words without the help of the pictures, have him/her look for and highlight these words in a story or text.
SPELLING INSTRUCTIONS:
Learning to spell sight words usually takes much longer than learning to read them. Show the card and repeat the sentence as needed.
Make Spelling Fun:
- Link the shape of the letter to the picture cue and/or the sentence at the back of the card.
Help them use their right-brain strengths to remember the picture, rather than memorizing a letter over and over. Here are some ideas. - Make it Art: Use the word "draw", not "spell". Have them draw the word with its picture cue. Repeat the letters used in the word as they draw.
- Play "What's Missing?"
Write down the word with a blank for the tricky letter (the one with the picture cue). Have them fill in the blank. Let them refer to the picture cue for as long as needed.
For example, "pull" - if the child writes 'poll' instead of 'pull', repeat the sentence: "U can’t pull those long ladders!" Help the child recall the picture. You could ask, "Who can’t pull the ladders?" (Show the picture if needed.) Gently lead the child to remember the missing letter is an "u".
For more spelling practice, there are sight word e-workbooks available at our online webstore.
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