Letter Shaping (“Jj”), (“Ll”)

  • letter card “Jj”
  • letter card “Ll”
  • modeling clay
  • paper
  • pipe cleaners
  • plastic straws cut into long and short pieces
  • small stickers (dots, stars, etc.)
  • around
  • curve
  • dot
  • roll
  • shape
  • straight

MA Standards:

Foundational Skills:RF.PK.MA.1.d Recognize and name some uppercase letters of the alphabet and the lowercase letters in one’s own name.

Head Start Outcomes:

Literacy Knowledge/Alphabet Knowledge Recognizes that the letters of the alphabet are a special category of visual graphics that can be individually named.

PreK Learning Guidelines:

English Language Arts/Reading and Literature 7 Develop familiarity with the forms of alphabet letters, awareness of print, and letter forms.

Letter Shaping (“Jj”), (“Ll”)

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

Skill Focus: Fine Motor Skills, Letter Formation, Letter Recognition, Vocabulary

Display the letter “Jj” card. Trace over both the lowercase “j” and the uppercase “J” with your fingers to show children how to form the letters. Show children how to use the materials to shape the letters. Tell children the lowercase “j” has a dot. Ask children to compare the uppercase and lowercase letter “Jj.”

Repeat for the letter “Ll.” Tell children the uppercase “L” has two straight lines: one goes down, the other goes across. Ask children to compare the shapes of the uppercase and lowercase letter “Ll.”

Adaptation: Adapt the materials used for shaping if younger children will be working individually. Use dough in place of modeling clay and large pieces of straws and popsicle sticks in place of pipe cleaners and short straws.

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