The standards correlation for this activity is coming soon!
The standards correlation for this activity is coming soon!
Sound It Out! lets beginning readers practice phoneme (letter sound) and grapheme (sound spelling) relationships by dragging and dropping letters to spell a word correctly. Students can choose from two game themes.
Try Sound It Out!
with a sample list!
- K-2ndDigraphs Diverse
- K-2ndLong e Words
- 3rd-5thLong Vowel Patterns
- 3rd-5thDiphthong oi/oy
Note: Although this activity is designed for the grade levels above, it can also be used as a remediation or enrichment activity at any grade level with an appropriate word list.
Create your own word lists and more with Premium Membership
Building Literacy
- Foundational Skills
- Phonics
What? When a beginning reader comes across an unfamiliar word, they are often told to sound it out. More…Less
Sounding out involves decoding, which is applying knowledge of letter-sound correspondence and patterns in order to pronounce words correctly. Decoding is a foundational skill needed to build phonics and reading fluency. Kindergarten and first grade students learn to decode words with simple patterns, like CVC words. From third grade on, students begin identifying word chunks to decode multisyllabic words. Some words are more difficult to sound out than others, due to irregular phonetic patterns.
When? Students first learn about letters (graphemes) and the their relation to sounds (phonemes) in kindergarten and first grade when studying the alphabet. More…Less
Kindergartners and first graders will then learn to build on their alphabetic knowledge to be able to decode and sound out simple CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) words, like cat. As students move to higher grade levels, they will be exposed to increasingly complex phonetic patterns. For example, first grade students will study vowel digraphs like /ow/. In 2nd grade, students will study silent letter patterns, like /kn/. Later, in upper elementary and middle school, students will be exposed to multisyllabic words and will chunk word parts, like prefixes and suffixes, to decode. Throughout K-12 English language arts, students will learn phonetic patterns in order to better sound out words and become fluent readers.
How to teach: Often teachers assign weekly spelling words that follow a particular spelling pattern. Sound It Out! engages students in interactive spelling practice. The learning game can be used during literacy centers or part of homework, as independent work.
Play to learn: Students click the sound blocks to sound out the words they hear. More…Less
A word is broken up by graphemes, just how words are broken up in an Elkonin box. When a student places the letter(s) in the wrong spot, immediate feedback is given. Students are given 1 to 5 attempts depending on the number of graphemes in the word. After using all attempts or after a correct response, the game will show students the correct way to sound out the word and will show the word in Elkonin boxes. Students who responded correctly can skip over the visual of the Elkonin boxes and the audio of the correct pronunciation. Students will continue to work on the game until they have tried to sound out all words on their word list.
Teaching Tip: Sound it Out! can supplement K-8 phonics instruction during word study or homework. VocabularySpellingCity’s ready-made Words Their Way lists are a suitable choice for students K-12. Primary students can practice simple spelling patterns, like the silent e. Students in grades 3-5 can sound out more complex patterns, like final unstressed syllables, while students in grades 6-12 can benefit from Sound It Out! to decode multisyllabic words. English Language Learners (ELLs) can benefit from phonics practice using Sound It Out! because of the audio visual features. Sound It Out! can be effective with high frequency words, as they follow unusual phonetic patterns and are difficult to sound out. Also, avoid pairing the game with an abbreviations word list.
More Learning Activities & Games
Occasionally we post links to our favourite phonics teaching activities by talented teachers and parents around the web. If you have any other successful games and resources you’ve made for your students and children then please do send a link and explain how this helped your students practise their phonics. We’d love to see what works for you!
Check out this great phonics game from the Coffee Cups and Crayons blog that kids can play outside on the pavement to help them with their blending practise.
It’s a bit like hopscotch – which happens to be one of the monsters’ favourite games.
Find out how to play at: Walk the word and sound it out.
Our Monster tip for this game: Some children may find reading the letters difficult this way as they do not look the same as they do on the page. If they do, children could face each letter (stand on top of it or below it) and jump to the right saying each sound as they go.
A CVC word is a single syllable three-letter word that follows the pattern of consonant, vowel, consonant. Learning about CVC words is an important tool in phonics as it can help children with reading, writing, and rhyming three-letter words. CVC words help introduce children to reading by first learning the sounds of the individual letters, and blending those sounds into one three-letter word.
The most exciting time in a new parent’s life is probably when their child first starts saying coherent words, like mum or dad? The next step taken by most parents is to try to teach them more. So, their child learns to communicate effectively. The easiest way to start is by teaching your kids about the CVC words. They are an easy transition to enriched vocabulary. not just that, I will share some fun activities. You can do it with your children. To teach them about CVC word, all the while, playing with them.
Teaching kids about the concept of CVC opens a new dimension for them. Your child gets excited about making new words. As a parent, every time they tell you the correct word. It is wise to award them with something they enjoy. That encourages and motivates them to learn more. It saves you a lot of tantrums as well.
For kids these days, the best way to teach them is to use digital learning applications. They enhance their concentration span for a specific concept. The enticing animation and vivid graphic. They don’t let your child lose attention out of sheer boredom. The learning apps these days, come with a game-based interface. My point is, your child solves the worksheet thinking it’s a game! It’s hitting two birds with one stone!
These words are great for introducing younger students to phonemic awareness, the ability to hear and manipulate the sound in words.
English Created Resources prides itself on providing everything a learner needs to improve the level of English. Our website aims to provide all the required materials for English Language Teachers and Learners to help them master and improve their English, help their pupils master all the required skills.
Such materials are provided for free download to be available always for learners around the world. You can find English ESL worksheets for home learning, online practice, distance learning and English classes.
Through our website, teachers will be able to help their children improve both their written and spoken English. We provide materials related to all the different skills. Our reading Comprehension Worksheets help students to master reading and writing skills. There are also questions to measure pupils’ understanding and help teachers evaluate their pupils easily.
Samples From the Book
Our Website helps you to give your child a boost using our free, printable worksheets. You will be able to help your child with his grammar skills with our printable worksheets that focus on using and punctual tion, Reading & writing.
Such Worksheets are a useful learning tool for kids who are trying to write or want to practice their language skills at home.
Sound Out — A Game for All Talks of Life! Tabletop Phonics Word Game, 6 to Adult, Sound It Out, Educational, Reading, Decoding, Pronunciation, English, Game Based Learning, Teacher Resource, Wordplay
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K Teacher
Just JH
I really like this app! It’s great to use in my small groups. They think we’re just playing a game :). I especially like that you can adjust it to manually change the words to give the kiddos a chance to practice sounding it out on their own. The art work is darling!
Weird!
Bizzzymomof3
This app does not actually sound out the letters?? Is there a way for me to access that option or is that not what this app does?
Great for early readers
sjddisney
I’m a first grade teacher with a daughter in kindergarten. I was looking for an app that would help her grow her phonics skills. By the time your kiddo gets to first grade they should be able to sound out CVC words. This app is great for 4 and 5 year olds and those 6 & 7 year olds who are struggling with reading. I like how there are different levels for your child’s skill set to grow. For example one skill set shows the kids how to spell the words so they just drag the sounds to make the word. Another skill set is the word is read and the child has to sound it out. I also like how it’s a child’s voice that does the letter sound when the tile is touched. The graphics are great too and the drawings are too cute for words.
What I’m confused by is when your child spells the word wrong and they have to redo it the game doesn’t recognize the correction and won’t grab the tiles. So your child can’t get the satisfaction of fixing the mistake. Also the short-o and short-u sound don’t sound correct to me. It should be more pronounced for young ears to hear it and mimic it. I’d also like to see the word sounded and blended together once the child is done spelling it.
Overall as a teacher and a mom I approve of the app. It would get the fifth star if those things mentioned would be fixed. I’m pleased with my purchase and happy to support a fellow teacher’s app.
Sound It Out is a game that will help your child discover phonics. It was developed by a kindergarten teacher to promote beginning phonics. It has beginning, middle and ending sounds. It has a trace option as well as a spell option. There are two levels of play. One level for beginning spellers and the second level is for those that need an extra challenge.
Sound It Out uses CVC words (consonant, vowel, consonant) to promote letter sounds and spelling. It helps children use letters and their sounds to create words. Colorful pictures are provided to show the child which word they are sounding out, spelling or identifying.
You can add an unlimited number of students and every student answer is tracked and can be reviewed in results. Perfect for understanding progress and customizing learning plans for your child or student.
Download your copy today and let the fun begin!
What’s New
Enhancements and improvements which include the following:
> Improved navigation on the student management screens
> Remove ability to repeatedly click the «next word» button within the game
> Optimized support for iOS 13
> Updated database framework to latest version
App Privacy
The developer, HAVOC, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.
No Details Provided
The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.
Information
- Provider
- HAVOC, LLC
- Size
- 17 MB
- Category
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Education
- Compatibility
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- iPhone
- Requires iOS 13.0 or later.
- iPad
- Requires iPadOS 13.0 or later.
- iPod touch
- Requires iOS 13.0 or later.
- Mac
- Requires macOS 11.0 or later and a Mac with Apple M1 chip or later.
- Age Rating
- 4+, Made for Ages 0 to 5
- Copyright
- © 2012 — 2020, HAVOC, LLC
- Price
- 99.00 RUB
-
Developer Website
-
App Support
-
Privacy Policy
-
Developer Website
-
App Support
-
Privacy Policy
Supports
-
Family Sharing
Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.
More By This Developer
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I have seen for myself how well games can work for helping children learn to read and write at home during distance learning but I have also learned that not just any old game will do. Games should be genuinely fun (as all learning should be!) as well as interactive, and of course accessible on tablets as well as computers so that kids can play them more easily. I wanted to see how many games that fit this description (that are also completely free) are out there and have put together a trustworthy, teacher-approved list for you.
I have scoured the internet — seriously I spent hours — looking for games that will help kids take those first important steps towards learning to read at home and games that are interactive where kids can improve their blending skills.
I have been very strict about listing only games that
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are completely free
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don’t require flash
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can be used on any device
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are actually FUN
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are interactive
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support children with CVC words
What are CVC words?
CVC stands for Consonant — Vowel — Consonant. So a CVC word is made from this pattern of letters. CVC words are the very first words that children encounter as they learn to read because they are the easiest.
What’s an example of a CVC word?
An example of a CVC word that kids come across early on as they begin reading would be mat. Other first CVC words could be sat, cat, tap, map, rat etc.
Reading CVC words
Before beginning to read CVC words, kids should know the sounds that some letters of the alphabet make. They don’t need to know every single letter sound necessarily but they’ll need enough to make a few simple words. Keep in mind that knowing the vowel sounds — a, e, i, o, u — will be helpful for them to be able to read more CVC words.
How to sound out CVC words
When children read words they are taught to say each of the sounds the letters make and then attempt to blend or put the sounds together, to get the word. For example, when reading sat correctly kids should first say “sss-ah-t” and then as they get better at blending they will be able to put the sounds together more and more easily and get the word.
CVC words and sight words
What’s the difference between CVC words and sight words? Whereas CVC words can be ‘sounded out’ using the sounds of the letters that the child has learned, ‘sight words’ or ‘tricky words’ are irregular. This means that the letters in the words aren’t pronounced the typical way that children are taught. For example we. If you were to try to read the word we by saying the sounds of the letters W and E, you’d say ‘w-eh’. Tricky words or sight words simply have to be memorised so that they can be recognised on sight.
CVC words games online
I have scoured the internet for the best CVC word games which include four focuses. Some of the games require the child to match a CVC word to a picture which is good because it means kids can play the games on their own, promoting independent learning. A few of the games focus on thinking about whether a CVC word is a ‘real’ word or a ‘fake’ word. (Also known as ‘alien’ words or even ‘silly’ words in my classroom!) Some games help kids sound out CVC words which supports their early reading skills and some support writing as they teach kids how to blend CVC words.
Free phonics websites
These games are all from free phonics websites where you can access tablet-friendly CVC word games. No sign up required. Some games ask which Phase you want to practise — select Phase 2. If you are asked which sets you want to practise you should choose the sets of letters that your child has covered. If you’re not sure I’d say select them all and then see which sounds your child isn’t familiar with yet, start again and uncheck those ones. Alternatively, you could teach your child the unfamiliar sounds and then practise them straight away on these games!
If you visit other areas of these sites keep in mind that Phonics Play is offering full free access at the moment for home learning and that Topmarks contains other games which are Flash-based that won’t work on mobile devices.
Here are the tablet-friendly and interactive CVC word games that I have found for you online:
Games for sounding out CVC words
Word machines
This is a great one for kids who are brand new to words and I love the idea of a machine that spits out words along with the object that matches the word. Choose which middle vowel you’d like to practice and then children see a picture that shows what the word says, hear it sounded out and then hear the word itself. The word machine then says “Now your turn” and your child should have a go at saying the sounds and then the word.
The best part about Word Machines is that after kids sound out and say the word they get to choose whether to swap the first or the last consonant from the word to make a new word by pressing a big red button or by pulling a lever! This is a really helpful way to teach beginner blenders how to read that I use in the classroom too.
Real and fake words phonics games
Differentiating between real and fake words is great practice for children to be able to understand what they are reading which will be more and more important as they get older. These games help even the youngest kids start to work on their reading comprehension in really fun and interactive ways.
Obb and Bob
This game is set in space where kids see alien characters: Obb and Bob. Bob loves real words and Obb loves alien words! I use the idea of Obb and Bob characters often in my own classroom, as do other teachers, so it’s possible that your kids may even know them already! Children have to read the word by sounding it out and then decide whether it’s a real word or an alien word. They should drag the alien words onto Obb and the real words over to Bob!
This game is so popular that there are actually several versions of it across the internet but the best ones are on Phonics Bloom, where it is (mistakenly maybe) titled Odd and Bob and on Phonics play where the game is called Picnic on Pluto.
Buried Treasure
Buried Treasure is the exact same concept as Obb and Bob where kids sound out the words and then decide if they are real or fake words except this game is pirate-themed! Kids will have to drag the word onto the bin if they think it’s a fake word but into the treasure chest if they think it’s real. I love the whistling tune that plays when you get one right! A great interactive game with funny pirate sound effects that kids who are into pirates will love.
Dragons Den
Another real or fake word sorting game but this time featuring dragons who breathe fire when you give them a word! Dragons den is exciting and interactive and is another great option for kids who need that bit of extra practice with their blending but would like a change from aliens and pirates!
CVC word matching games
Match cards
Kids have to sound out the word and then drag the picture that matches the word onto it. I’m a big fan of Match Cards because it’s SO clear and child-friendly that a young child could easily play it by themselves and won’t need help once they know how the game works.
CVC word writing practice
Rocket Rescue
The rocket is broken! Children are shown a picture and hear the word aloud (so turn your volume up!) and they have to type in the CVC word to help put the rocket back together. Each word that they type in adds another piece and the rocket is slowly put back together.
My favourite thing about Rocket Rescue is that the kids get to actually type the word in — this is so great for kids to interact with technology in different ways and get some early typing practise in! It’s also an added fun element because many kids will enjoy the use of the computer keyboard or an on-screen keyboard in itself.
Space Race
Obb and Bob are back! In this game, kids are spelling out the CVC words to help the spaceship zoom across space from planet to planet so that Obb and Bob can be reunited! This game does include the odd longer word, like rabbit, so may be better for children who are already very familiar with phase 2 sounds and have a good grasp of blending already.
On the other hand, if you’d like your child to begin to move on from CVC words and help kids read longer words then Space Race would be an ideal starting place. Kids could be encouraged to type out their answer and then check it by sounding out what they have written so see if they think it’s right.
CVC Word Boom Cards
I made three decks of CVC word Boom Cards where kids drag the missing letter into the gap to complete the CVC word. Start by practising filling in the missing first letter and then move on to the decks where kids practise working out the missing middle sound and the missing last sound of the CVC word. Pictures on each card help kids to guess what the incomplete word could be and with the CVC word Boom Card bundle, you can play all three of the decks.
What are Boom Cards and how can I play them at home?
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Can you find the word in each row that starts with a different beginning sound than the rest? In this phonics worksheet, learners will say the words in each row out loud, then circle the item that has a different beginning sound. Designed for preschoolers and kindergarteners, this worksheet offers meaningful pre-literacy practice for students as they begin to make the connection between sounds and spelling.
See in a set (11)
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Grade
Preschool
Kindergarten
Subject
Reading & Writing
Grammar
Phonics
Letter Sounds
Word Patterns
Beginning Sounds
View aligned standards
RF.K.2
Sound It Out is a game that will help your child learn and discover phonics. It was developed by a kindergarten teacher to promote beginning phonics. It has beginning, middle and ending sounds. It has a trace option as well as a spell option. There are two levels of play. One level for beginning spellers and the second level is for those that need an extra challenge.
Sound It Out uses CVC words (consonant, vowel, consonant) to promote letter sounds and spelling. It helps children use letters and their sounds to create words. Colorful pictures are provided to show the child which word they are sounding out and spelling.
Sound It Out is great for teaching your children or students sounds, letter recognition, words, letters and spelling. If you child is already learning sight words, dolch words, fry words, CVC or flashcards then this is the app for you. It works well for preschool, kindergarten or first grade (1st grade).
Download your copy today and let the fun begin!