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Letter Writing Worksheets

Craig Said:

I'm trying to learn Bulgarian on my own. Anyone have any sites that help me with writing the letters?

We Answered:

Could this be what you are looking for? cause it looks just like the Cyrillic Alphabet to me....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_cur…

Wait...I have something bookmarked that is easier to copy from...not a worksheet, but you can make one up...I'll talk you through it...I make them for my daycare kids in English. Not difficult.

*edit* Haven't located the pages I THINK I have bookmarked, but this looks like what you want:
http://speakrussian.blogspot.com/2007/01…

I imagine if you keep going through that, there will be the whole alphabet.

Here's another site: http://www.baylor.edu/Russian/index.php?…
If you want, I can teach you how to make your own worksheet.

Andy Said:

Can you help me find some good education worksheets for my little brother?

We Answered:

If he's a typical four year old boy, he will likely resist worksheets. I can't blame him. I would, too!

What is your objective? Is it the same as the school's objective? YOU might want to teach him to recognize letters and numbers, whereas the school wants him to learn how to sit down and shut up and fill out a worksheet. Sometimes you'd be amazed at how different your real goals are.

Alphabet worksheets. Do you want him to recognize letters? Make printouts of letters; i.e., if you're working on the letter A, print out 20 A's and 3 B's, 2 V's and 1 S. Put the letters all over the house; tape one to the door, one to the oven, one to a chair, three to the TV, etc. Then give him a container (bucket, pail, tupperware bowl, etc.) and have him run around the house and gather all the A's he can in 5 minutes. Have him point out A's on signs when you drive from place to place.

Do you want him to make the letters? Have him do so in a variety of ways:
Make an A out of Play-Doh.
Make an A out of matches / chopsticks / pencils.
Make an A drawing with:
* Pencils
* Crayons
* Markers
* Paint
Make letters on the sidewalk with sidewalk chalk.
Make letters on the sidewalk or wooden fence using a clean paintbrush and plain water.
Draw letters in a pan of flour. Use fingers or sticks. (If you press a clean sheet of paper on top of the flour, it not only erases the letter, but makes an amazingly smooth surface to draw on!)
Make letters on glass (tabletops, windows, sliding glass doors) with a dry-erase marker. (Nothing like getting to "draw on the furniture" to add some appeal to this task!)

Want him to understand letters make certain sounds? Next time you're out, point out all the real-life things that start with A, or C or F. Start doing verbal pop quizzes in the grocery store.

Numbers can be done in much the same way. Match up written numbers with dots. Play adding games with a couple of dice.

Look through PBSkids.org and sprout.org, there may be a lot you can use there.

Dolores Said:

preschool phonic letter worksheets?

We Answered:

Do you mean the "Jolly Phonics", where, for instance, the "s" sound has the picture of a snake and u get to do an action as well as having the picture in front of the child?

I have used a book called "The Phonics Handbook" by Sue Lloyd, this has all the pictures, actions, letter shapes for writing, etc

Have a look at google books and type "jolly phonics", it comes up with some sample pages i think (or maybe the whole book), I've only had a quick look but if you can't see it on the net you'll probably be able to buy it from amazon.

Stanley Said:

i need a site that gives preschool worksheet?

We Answered:

I would suggest making them on your own, better yet think of more creative ways to help children learn how to write their letters. Not only are worksheets completely developmentally inappropriate, they are not going to produce the outcome you are hoping for. Children under the age of say 5 or 6(kindergarten) are not focused on writing letters on a piece of paper because they can not relate to it. Try writing letters in shaving cream on the table or give every child a dry erase board during circle time and say I am thinking of a word that starts with the letter D, write the letter D, who's name starts with the letter D? Or say I am thinking of the Rain outside, what letter does Rain start with? Write that letter. Things like this. Think outside the box. In my center I do not allow any "worksheets". Look on the NAEYC website for more ideas outside the box. Hopefully this helps!

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