![]() To assemble the flash cards, first print out the pages. This is the Dolch word list of 95 common nouns that students of all ages should know.īelow are the Dolch words organized as printable flash cards. This is the Dolch non-nouns word list for third grade readers. This is the Dolch non-nouns word list for first and second grade readers. This PDF includes two lists, the Dolch pre-primer and primer non-nouns lists. According to Wikipedia, the original Dolch lists are now out of copyright.īelow is each Dolch sight words list formatted as a straight alphabetical listing. In addition to the non-noun lists, Dolch created a list of 95 nouns that beginning readers should learn on sight. Service words include common verbs, adjectives, adverbs, articles, and prepositions. Edward Dolch's book, Problems in Reading, published in 1948. The lists of "service word" non-nouns first appeared in Dr. You can then print the list or save it to your computer. To view a list, click on the link to open the list as a PDF document. If you find these word lists useful, you might also like my printable math flash cards. The lists of words themselves are out of copyright or have "open-share" copyright. You have my permission to copy, print, and distribute these lists and flash cards for personal use or in the classroom, but you may not sell them. Others I extracted from public domain sources such as the Top 1,000 Most Common Words in Contemporary Fiction, available on Wikipedia. Most are based on the Dolch sight words lists. I created these word lists as PDF files and flash card sets. Students learning English as a second language (ESL/EFL) can also benefit greatly by learning these lists. If you are a teacher or parent, make sure your students and children know these lists! It will pay dividends for years to come by helping the children become more effective readers right from the beginning. Learning common sight words helps a new or slow reader to read much faster and with better comprehension. My kindergartners enjoy folding the booklets and practicing their colors by reading and writing the words in multiple ways on each of these 11 FREE pages."Sight words" are written words that you recognize immediately without sounding them out. If you’re looking for some fun sight word activities for FREE, here are my Color Word Sight Words Fluency Books. Students (and parents) love how easy they are to use. If they are learning virtually, I can assign them through Google Classroom or Seesaw. Then, at home they can access them for additional practice. I typically assign the sight words based on the words we are learning that week and students can access them in technology centers or during literacy rotations. Each word has 6 cards to expose your students to the words you are assigning them. These cards help students learn all 100 of Fry’s first 100 sight words and there are even 6 extra words to practice. Since students are living in such a digital age, I have also created Sight Word Boom Cards that can be used in the classroom or at home. These Sight Word Writing Practice Worksheets are great to assign for classwork, homework or you can laminate them for center use. I also love having my students write the sight words we are practicing during rotations. Once they learn the correct spelling by using scaffolding such as these worksheets, they read and write the word correctly. As you can see, words like ‘said’ don’t follow the rules and most children spell it out ‘sed’. Task Cards like these are great because they have the students using the words in multiple ways to help memorize them. They are great to have around for students that are struggling to remember their words as well. I just print the words we are focusing on that week and have them on hand to use throughout the day. They are extremely easy to laminate and use over and over. I have created these Sight Word Task Cards for you to use in literacy centers. ![]() ![]() I like to facilitate the learning of sight words with simple worksheets or task cards that have students reading the word, building it and then using it in a sentence. We always get these catchy tunes stuck in our heads, but it works! I have them write the word on a whiteboard and oftentimes I play a song about the sight word to help engrain the word in their minds. We start by spelling it and reading it in a sentence. Sometimes this sight word is brand new to the kids and other times it’s a word we have been practicing all week. Just like many kindergarten teachers, I start my literacy lessons with a sight word of the day. These activities will help give your students lots of practice with these sight words so they will begin to recognize them by sight! How Can I Help My Students Learn Sight Words in Kindergarten? Some sight words, referred to as high-frequency words, do not follow the rules of the English language and are therefore difficult to decode. ![]()
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