I always find lots of them in the children's section of the public library. Some are in the children's books, themselves, some in the reference section for adults dealing with children. You could also try the nearest school district, which often has a staff library for teachers to check out books. You may be able to sit there & look at books. Also, lots of churches have similar books in their play areas or nurseries & you could pick out appropriate songs & pages.
2007-07-07 09:52:20
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answer #1
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answered by embroidery fan 7
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Songs That Promote Phonological Awareness
2016-10-14 06:15:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-12-25 00:07:44
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
Where can I find a songs, fingerplays or word games to promote phonological awareness in young children?
2015-08-13 14:11:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Look up http://preschooleducation.com for lots of songs and fingerplays. You will have a lot of choices, so you can pick and choose which ones are best to develop phonological awareness. Look for ones with lots of rhymes, or same initial sounds.
2007-07-08 04:28:19
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answer #5
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answered by leslie b 7
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Something that worked well for my homeschooled son was finger puppets. Not just ordinary finger puppets, these guys always stayed in a team. They would talk by each saying a sound part of the word, (wiggle each one as he speaks), for instance the word "park" First puppet says /p/, next puppet says /ar/, next puppet says /k/. They would get faster and faster until the word was guessed. Afterward we talked about what "initial" man said, "middle" man said, and "final" man said. If you use make and use puppets like this, just be sure that the puppets "speak" from the child's left to the child's right.
When my son was ready to move from phonemic awareness into actual phonics, these puppets started wearing letters.
A great sight with some free downloads is http://www.starfall.com
2007-07-07 09:59:22
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answer #6
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answered by Thrice Blessed 6
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Working on a CDA? Look for songs etc. with lots of rhyme. Raffi's "Down by the Bay" is a good choice. Let the kids make up their own verses. Alphabet books that talk about the sounds of the letters, not just the names, are also good.
2007-07-07 11:21:34
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answer #7
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answered by EC Expert 6
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It's probable to invest plenty of time and income trying to find approaches to train your children how to read and enhance their studying skills. Is difficult to instruct a tiny kid how to read, and actually attractive them to read is difficult in itself. But it does not need to be like that since you got the help of the program https://tr.im/Q89nV , Children Learning Reading program.
With Children Learning Reading you can teach your youngster how to split up seems and break phrases into phonemes, an important issue as soon as your child is simply learning to spell.
The reading process from Children Learning Reading program makes it easy for kids to read rapidly and precisely, from simple phrases to sentences till they understand to read stories.
2016-05-01 02:42:18
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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try superduper.com. a lot of speech language pathologists use this company for many aspects of the field. of course, some materials are better than others.
2007-07-07 16:56:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I've used abcteach.com, enchantedlearning.com, and kinderart.com
2007-07-10 18:20:15
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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