Word Play: Tell Me What You Hear (/o/)

  • letter card “Oo”
  • hear
  • listen
  • loud
  • sound

MA Standards:

Foundational Skills/RF.PK.MA.2.c: Identify the initial sound of a spoken word and, with guidance and support, generate several other words that have the same initial sound

Head Start Outcomes:

Language Development/Receptive Language: Attends to language during conversations, songs, stories, or other learning experiences.
Literacy Knowledge/Phonological Awareness: Identifies and discriminates between sounds and phonemes in language, such as attention to beginning and ending sounds of words and recognition that different words begin or end with the same sound.

PreK Learning Guidelines:

English Language Arts/Reading and Literature 8: Listen to, identify, and manipulate language sounds to develop auditory discrimination and phonemic awareness.

Word Play: Tell Me What You Hear (/o/)

© Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Department of Early Education and Care (Jennifer Waddell photographer). All rights reserved.

ELA Focus Skills: Listening and Speaking, Phonological Awareness (Beginning Sounds)

Do the word play “Tell Me What You Hear” and have children listen for words that begin with the /o/ sound.  Recite the following chant, using words that begin with the /o/ target sound.

Tell Me What You Hear
Listen, listen, loud and clear (cup your hands to one ear)
What’s the first sound that you hear?

Oscar, ostrich, opposite, on (emphasize the /o/ sound)
Tell me, tell me, what you hear! (children say the /o/ sound)

(Source for chant: Mississippi Early Learning Guidelines for Four-Year Old Children, Mississippi Department of Education, 2006)

Educator Tip: You may want to explain that some letters, like the letter “o,” have a short /o/ sound (owl) and a long /o/ sound (open). Then repeat the activity focusing on the long /o/ sound (ocean, oval, oatmeal, and oak).

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Email this page Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Email this page