Pre-reading skills are your child’s first steps toward reading and writing. As your child grows familiar with language and communication, letter-sound recognition (phonics), listening skills, vocabulary acquisition, phonological awareness, and decoding will naturally develop. However, if you consciously strengthen these skills, you’ll be setting your child up for a smooth sailing literacy journey.
Letter/sound recognition involves identifying upper and lowercase letter symbols and their corresponding sounds. For example:
Letter | Sound of letter name | All sounds of letter | Examples |
I, i | ah-ee | short /i/ and long /i/ (ah-ee) | itchy, find |
C, c | see | /k/, /s/ | cake, city |
R, r | ah-r | /r/ | race |
Matching letters to sounds helps children develop an understanding of words and spelling patterns. It’s fundamental to how we transfer written language into spoken words.
Active listening is a skill that needs to be honed from a young age. Children need to be able to distinguish the sounds in words such as syllables or phonemes to blend and segment words. These listening skills form the basis of phonological awareness and without this, a child will struggle to learn to read.
Phonological awareness includes identifying and manipulating words, syllables, and onsets and rimes. Children with phonological awareness can recognise words with the same initial sounds like 'ball' and 'baby'. They can make oral rhymes and clap the number of syllables in a word.
Pre-reading Activities You Can Do at Home
Singing nursery rhymes is the ultimate pre-reading activity for preschoolers. It’s an opportunity to introduce children to new ideas and words. Your child absorbs language from their surroundings, so singing storied nursery rhymes reveals a window into a whole other world. Singing Old Macdonald together can be a fun way to learn about farm animals.
Retelling stories helps your child narrate events in the right order, an essential skill for listening and speaking. Ask your child to retell a story they have heard. This could be a story about playtime or a family trip that happened a while ago or the plot of a book or film that they enjoyed. After a weekend outing, ask your child to remember who you met, and what happened. This helps your child to recall, listen and speak.
At I Can Read, children are exposed to sounds at the phoneme level. Children achieve phonemic awareness through implicit learning. This may take the form of play, games, activities, and visuals. Leveraging multimodal learning, children become more engaged and take on ownership of their learning. Their pre-reading skills are achieved through intentionally planned lessons by our Reading Specialists and I Can Read’s unique pedagogy.