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39 Comments

  1. Brittaney P says:

    Love this method! This is a bit of what we’ve been doing so this makes me feel much better about my approach as a first time homeschooling mama. Thank you!

  2. Beth Mayson says:

    This is very informative, Thank You!

  3. I was a preschool teacher for two yests and have littles of my own. I always though letter of the week would be a great idea, but had not implemented it. Going to get the book now thank you.

  4. Denise Pruitt says:

    I definitely agree with the fact that they enjoy learning letters in their names! And I believe the “whole language” type learning of letters is more beneficial than a letter of the week curriculum. Thanks for your ideas & input on this!

  5. Lynette Teel says:

    Thanks for the info! I ran to Amazon to buy the book.

  6. Jennifer L. Kim says:

    I look forward to learning more with this curriculum. I have a degree in early childhood and have taught the last 6 years with early childhood kiddos and kindergarteners. I struggled to find all in one place resources and I would use this to strengthen my teaching and allow it to be a resource I can come to time and time again.

    Thank you for sharing!

  7. Hi, As you said in the post I saw that letters of the week isn’t the most effective way to teach the alphabet, I like the letters cycle, but I wonder if we can teach sound and letter at the same time? Thanks for your answer 😉

    1. Angela Thayer says:

      Yes! You can definitely teach sounds and letters at the same time.

  8. Love this idea! Will be adapting it for the French alphabet. 🙂

  9. Wow! This is very informative and helpful for children, teachers, parents, and caregivers. The range of children I teach would benefit greatly from all of this. Thank you!
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  10. My son is 5 and I had him learning f his alphabets through fun hands on projects like turning cards over and matching them and also snapping letters into place where the picture had the word beginning with the letter.

    We’re starting a homeschool with a charter school for Kindergarten level but I may also have him work on some preK concepts, where we need to turn in something every 3 weeks. Does your curriculum include that?

    1. Angela Thayer says:

      Hi Michelle! That’s great that you’ve been doing fun hands-on activities with your son to learn the alphabet! I’m not exactly sure what you need to turn into the charter school, but the curriculum does have “worksheets” that you could turn in to show the work you are doing at home.

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