Want to help your child learn more words? Do you also want to keep them occupied
while traveling to the grocery store, around town on errands, or even on vacation? Here
are five word-related activities for increasing your child's vocabulary and avoiding the
"Are we there yet?" question.
1. "Find the next letter". This game works well with small children learning the
alphabet. Have your child look for the letters in the alphabet in the proper sequence on
road signs, billboards, license plates, and business signs. As they gain confidence with the
game, you might introduce a time element. Can they find all twenty-six letters before you
reach your destination?
2. "I'm thinking of a .... letter word." Start this game with short three or four letter
words. One player thinks of a word and then announces how many letters are in the word.
The other players then guess a word. The first player then compares the guess word with
the word he is thinking of to see what letters match exactly in their placement in the game
word. The first player then announces how many letters match exactly. For example, if
the game word is love and the guess word is sale, then there is one letter (e) of the guess
word in the exactly matching position as in the game word. So the first player announces
"1 letter". Now the other players in turn try to determine which letter is a match by a
process of elimination. To see if the first letter was the match, a player might guess suit.
When no letters match, the next player might try to eliminate the second letter as the
matching letter and so on. The player who correctly identifies the word wins and is the
next one to think up a new game word.
3. "Alphabet words." Each player must come up with a word which begins with the
next letter in the alphabet when it is their turn. You can make this more challenging by
giving a category for the words like only animals or only verbs.
4. Use index cards to make flashcards of the new words your child is learning.
Have your child shuffle the cards and study each card for the word and its meaning.
5. Bring books and magazines for your child to read while you drive. Let them pick
out topics they like. New topics and authors will expand their vocabulary. Have them read
silently or aloud. Both will help develop their skills as a reader.
These activities will increase your child's vocabulary, letter recognition, print
awareness, spelling, and print motivation (the desire to read) which are some of the early
literacy skills which make for a firm foundation for reading. They are also a fun way to
pass the time. Enjoy!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Celia Webb is an author, illustrator, and company executive. She and her husband,
Mack H. Webb, Jr., founded Pilinut Press, Inc., publishing advanced readers for children
and ESL students. Their website http://www.pilinutpress.com offers more free articles on
developing reading-related skills, word games and puzzles, and activity sheets for their
entertaining and educational books.



