Alphabetics: Names, Sounds, and Letters

Alphabetics helps young learners understand that letters have names, letters make sounds, and those sounds help build words. 

Families can teach alphabetics during simple, joyful moments at home—without adding extra clock hours.

What Families Need

Create a small alphabet learning space at home.

Place colorful capital ABC letters where children can see them often. Use magnetic letters, foam letters, paper letters, alphabet cards, or homemade letters. Keep a container filled with colorful capital letters of the alphabet within easy reach.

The goal is simple: make letters visible, touchable, and part of everyday conversation.

Let’s Play with Letters

Start with the child’s name. A child’s name is meaningful, familiar, and powerful for learning.

Step 1: Display the ABCs

Place colorful capital letters where the learner can see them.

Step 2: Sing, Name, and Point

Sing the alphabet song. Point to letters as you sing. Call attention to letters during the day by saying things like:

“Look, there is the letter B.”
“That sign has the letter M.”
“I see the letter T on your shirt.”

Step 3: Use the Learner’s First Name

Ask the learner to say their first name.

Then repeat the learner’s first name clearly.

For example:

“Your first name is Carol.”

Step 4: Teach the First Letter

Say:

“The first letter in Carol is C.”

Point to the letter C if it is displayed.

Step 5: Find the Letter

Ask the learner to remove the letter C from the container of colorful capital letters.

Say:

“Find the letter C.”

When the learner finds it, celebrate the effort.

Step 6: Name the Letter and Say the Sound

Repeat:

“The first letter in Carol is C. C sounds like /k/.”

Then ask the learner to say:

“C.”
“/k/.”
“Carol.”

Additional Alphabetics Actions for Families

Use these simple actions to build phonemic awareness and phonics through daily practice.

1. Name Letter Hunt

Ask the learner to find letters from their first name in the container.

Say:

“Carol begins with C. Can you find C?”
“Carol also has A. Can you find A?”

Place the letters in order and say the name together.

3. Beginning Sound Talk

Use everyday objects around the home.

Say:

“Cup starts with /k/.”
“Ball starts with /b/.”
“Door starts with /d/.”

Ask:

“What sound do you hear at the beginning of ball?”

5. Clap the Name

Say the learner’s name slowly and clap the syllables.

For example:

“Ca-rol.”

Clap once for each part.

Then say:

“Carol begins with the sound /k/.”

7. Same Sound Game

Say two words and ask whether they begin with the same sound.

“Carol and cat. Do they start the same?”
“Carol and ball. Do they start the same?”

This helps learners listen carefully to beginning sounds.

9. Movement Letters

Invite the learner to form a letter with their body, fingers, or arms.

Say:

“Can you make the letter T with your arms?”
“Can you trace the letter C in the air?”

This supports memory through movement.

2. Letter Sound Match

Choose one letter and say its sound.

For example:

“This is M. M says /m/.”

Then ask:

“What else starts with /m/?”

Possible answers: mommy, milk, moon, mop.

4. Point and Say

Point to letters on books, food boxes, signs, clothing, mail, or toys.

Say:

“I see the letter S.”
“S sounds like /s/.”
“Snake starts with /s/.”

6. Build the Name

Place the capital letters of the learner’s name in a row.

Say each letter slowly.

“C-A-R-O-L spells Carol.”

Then ask the learner to touch each letter as you say it.

8. Letter of the Day

Choose one capital letter each day.

Display it, name it, say its sound, and look for it throughout the day.

For example:

“Today’s letter is T.”
“T says /t/.”
“Let’s find T today.”

10. Read, Stop, and Notice

During storytime, pause and point to a letter.

Say:

“This word starts with B.”
“B says /b/.”
“Bear starts with /b/.”

Keep it short, playful, and connected to the story.

Fluency

Vocabulary

Comprehension

Free Resources

Family Reminder

Alphabetics grows through repetition, conversation, and joyful practice. Children learn best when they can see letters, touch letters, hear letter sounds, and connect letters to words they know.

Start with the learner’s name. Keep the letters colorful. Make the practice playful. Celebrate every attempt.

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