Fun Phoneme Blending Activities - Build Phonemic Awareness

Are you looking for some fun phoneme blending activities? In this blog post I’ll share some of the tried and tested activities my students not only love but have had great success with. You’ll discover effective strategies for teaching phoneme blending so your students will be decoding and blending sounds to make words in no time.

There are phoneme blending activities that cover modelling, multi-sensory approaches, gradual progression, and more. Empower your young learners with strong phonemic awareness using this comprehensive guide to phoneme blending.

Reading is such a complex task that requires our little ones to master multiple skills. Phoneme blending is one of those essential skills. If you are teaching students to read, one of the first skills you will be teaching is phoneme blending.

Your students will need to learn how to blend individual sounds together to make words. So what is this essential phonemic awareness skill?

What is Phoneme Blending?

Phoneme blending is putting sounds together. It is the ability to combine individual sounds, or phonemes, to create words. For example, blending the sounds /c/ /a/ /t/ together creates the word cat. The ability to blend sounds is an important phonemic awareness skill all children learning to read will need to learn.

Hand in hand with phoneme blending is phoneme segmenting. This is where we segment the sounds in words or pull the sounds apart. The ability to segment sounds is another important phonemic awareness skill all children learning to write will need to learn.

There are 26 letters in our alphabet, and yet there are 44 different sounds children need to learn. Your students not only need to learn the names of the letters, but they also need to learn those 44 sounds too. And once they have mastered that, they need to learn how to segment, blend, and manipulate those sounds in words.

Phonemes are basic units of sounds. There are 44 phonemes that can all be blended to make even more sounds. 

Graphemes are the written form of phonemes. Phonemes can be represented with single letters or a combination of letters. For example, digraphs are two-letter graphemes that represent one phoneme. 

Why Teach Phoneme Blending?

Phoneme blending helps kids to decode words and will improve their reading fluency and comprehension too. When children can blend the sounds of a new word smoothly, they will be able to read and decode words quickly and accurately. 

As they practice and get better at decoding and blending, their fluency improves, and then they will find it easier to understand the meaning of the text. By practising phoneme blending activities, your students can master this skill and be on their way to becoming confident readers.

Without this skill, children may struggle to read and comprehend texts. That is going to impact their academic success. By teaching phoneme blending, your students will develop better reading skills. They can become confident readers and be set up for success in school and beyond.

Phoneme blending also lays the foundation for spelling. When children can hear and blend sounds together, they can learn to segment words and break them apart into individual sounds. This skill, called phoneme segmentation, helps them spell words by mapping the sounds they hear to corresponding letters.

Additionally, phoneme blending develops phonemic awareness, which is the ability to identify and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words. Phonemic awareness is a strong predictor of future reading success. By teaching phoneme blending, you will be supporting the development of phonemic awareness skills in your students.

Overall, phoneme blending is a fundamental skill that helps children become proficient readers. Kindergarten teachers play a vital role in teaching and reinforcing this skill. It sets the stage for future reading success.

Phoneme Blending and the Science of Reading

The Science of Reading is a large body of research that offers conclusive research based evidence on the best practices we should be using when we are teaching children to read. This research can help educators better understand the reading process because it explains the skills involved, how they interact with each other, and the specific areas of the brain responsible for reading development. 

Based on this research, we can determine an effective approach for teaching basic literacy skills. The Science of Reading research consistently emphasises the importance of teaching children about phonemes and graphemes. It supports the idea that teachers should teach phonological awareness skills to support young children’s emerging literacy skills.

Phonological awareness is focused on the sounds in words. There are different levels of phonological awareness, but one of the most important for reading is called phonemic awareness. It's when kids can hear and recognise the individual sounds in words.

If you are interested in learning more about phonological awareness and phonemic awareness, you should read this blog post: Teaching Phonological Awareness, Syllables and Phonemic Awareness

Some of your students might have trouble hearing separate sounds because when we speak, the individual sounds all blend together. This makes it hard to tell the different phonemes apart. But being able to hear the separate phonemes is crucial for connecting them to graphemes and then learning to read.

After children understand that words can be segmented and broken down into phonemes, and that phonemes can be blended and put together to make words, they are ready to learn the alphabetic code. The alphabetic code is the relationship between sounds and letters or the system we use to map sounds onto paper. 

This is where phonics comes in. Phonics lays the foundation for decoding. There is no way to bypass the decoding step in the reading process. An understanding of the predictable relationship between sounds (phonemes) and the letters that represent them (graphemes) is at the heart of reading. This letter-sound relationship is referred to as the alphabetic principle, or more commonly, phonics.

Teachers use different methods to teach phonics, but it's important to teach it explicitly and systematically. This means teaching the letters and letter combinations in a clear way and starting with simple words. Kids also need practice reading easy words that match the letters they've learned. 

And that is where engaging phoneme blending activities come in. Now you know what phoneme blending is and why it is so important we teach it in the early years of school, let’s have a look at the best ways to teach it.

How to Teach Phoneme Blending

Teaching phoneme blending should be done through systematic and explicit instruction. 

Early in your phonological awareness lessons, teach children to blend syllables and compound words. Have your kids clap their hands with each syllable and then make a sweeping motion with their hands together to signify the blending technique. 

Then you can show your students how to blend sounds together to form words using the same clapping and sweeping technique. Choose simple, three-sound words at first. These are easier to blend. CVC words like cat or dog are ideal. Say each sound separately and then model how to smoothly blend them together to say the whole word.

Start with individual sounds: Begin by introducing your students to individual phonemes. Teach them to identify and say each sound clearly. No matter how good their phoneme blending and segmenting skills are, children cannot get the correct word and read accurately if they are blending incorrect sounds.

It is crucial to teach children to correctly articulate speech sounds. Use visual aids like illustrated sound cards with pictures of a mouth making each sound to help children pronounce the phonemes the right way.

In kindergarten, the focus of your blending and segmenting lessons should be on phonemes. Phoneme blending can sometimes be a challenge for young children, so here are the steps to follow when teaching phoneme blending to young students:

  1. First segment and blend short words that have only two phonemes. These can be either a vowel and a consonant (VC blend) or a consonant and a vowel (CV blend).  Words like up, in and no are some examples.

  2. Try continuous sounds or phonemes that can be held for a beat or two without distorting the sound. Sounds like /m/ or /s/ are great. Your students will find it easier to practice blending and segmenting words with these types of continuous sounds. They can hold the sounds using a method called continuous blending or continuous phonation. Words like “aaaammmm ... am” are perfect.

  3. Then, introduce a few stop sounds or phonemes that cannot be held like continuous sounds can. It is important that your students articulate the sounds correctly and don’t add an /uh/ or schwa sound to the ends of the sounds. This often happens with the /t/ and /b/ phonemes. Words with a stop sound at the end are easier for children to blend. Try to avoid words with the stop sound at the beginning. Words like atup, or add are good examples.

  4. As your students become more confident, you can introduce words with three phonemes. Remember words beginning with continuous phonemes are easier for your young students to blend and segment. Avoid words with stop sounds like hop and instead use words like mum or room

Gradually increase the complexity of the words as your students become more proficient.

It can be helpful to use a multi-sensory approach and harness the benefits of kinesthetic learning when teaching phoneme blending and segmenting to your students. 

Elkonin boxes and manipulatives like letter tiles or blocks are wonderful tactile learning tools. The manipulatives represent each sound in a word, and using them with Elkonin boxes gives students the opportunity to physically touch or move the tiles as they blend the sounds to form the word. 

Ensure you offer plenty of guided practice opportunities for your students to practice blending sounds. Use word lists, flashcards, or interactive games where students can blend sounds orally or with manipulatives.  Make sure to provide support and feedback immediately if you want your students to master this skill quickly. 

Another good teaching tip is to try to connect your phoneme blending exercises to your class reading activities. When reading books or texts with simple, decodable words that align with the sounds your students have already learned , you can encourage your students to apply their blending skills to read the words in context. 

Continuously review and reinforce blending skills through numerous hands-on activities. Incorporate blending exercises into your daily routines. It can become part of your morning meetings or a transition activity. Regularly assess students' blending abilities to identify areas that need additional support.

Remember to make the learning experience engaging and interactive. Use songs, rhymes, and games to make phoneme blending fun for your students. 

Celebrate their progress and provide positive reinforcement to build their confidence. With consistent practice and support, your students will develop strong phoneme blending skills that will benefit their reading abilities. 

Fun Phoneme Blending Activities

Teaching phoneme blending should be fun and engaging for young children. Using interactive games and activities is one way to make the phonemic awareness activities in your classroom memorable.

So here are the phoneme blending activities my students beg me for. They have been tried and tested in my classroom over many years. I can guarantee they are not only super engaging but also highly effective for teaching kids to blend phonemes.

Use Children’s Names

At the start of the year, we love having some fun learning each other’s names and sneak in a bit of blending practice while we are at it. At transition time, I will say “I’m thinking of a friend to go out to lunch. Her name starts with /s/ and ends in /ally/.” As the children become better at blending onsets and rimes like this, we can move onto blending the single sounds /s/ /a/ /l/ /ee/

Picture Grab

Display a selection of picture cards to your students. The cards should represent simple CVC words like hat, sun and leg. Secretly choose one of the pictures and sound out the 3 phonemes that represent your secret picture. Your students will need to repeat the segmented sounds and then blend them to make a word. The first child to grab the correct picture – the one matching the blended word, is the winner and can keep that card.

Continue giving clues for the remaining pictures by sounding out the phonemes for your students to blend. The overall winner is the child with the most pictures at the end of play.

If you want a set of illustrated CVC picture cards already done for you, download my set of 36 CVC pictures to print HERE in my Free Resource Library.

What’s in the Bag?

This game is full of mystery, and the kids love it. Hide some objects in a paper bag. The children have to guess the secret object, but instead of describing what it is, you segment the word - sound by sound. If a child blends the sounds correctly, you can bring the object out of the bag and give it to the child to hold until the end of the game.

Phoneme Blending Bingo Game

Turn phoneme blending practice into a fun game with phoneme blending bingo! Create bingo cards with pictures of simple 3 phoneme words like hat, pen, and bug. Call out the individual sounds in each word and have your children blend them together to identify the corresponding picture on their bingo card. My kids love a good game of bingo!

If you want to play this fun game with your class, you can purchase my Phoneme Bingo Game HERE

My phoneme bingo game has been designed to help you build phonemic awareness in your students. With this game, your students will not only differentiate between letter sounds, alphabet letters, and decodable words but also learn to blend and segment phonemes—the sounds within words. 

This game has helped the students in my class recognise and manipulate phonemes and they love doing it because of this game.

This Resource contains: 

  • Phoneme Bingo Game Cover

  • Playing Instructions

  • Differentiation Ideas

  • 21 Phoneme Bingo Cards

  • 35 Labelled Calling Cards

It has been designed so you can easily differentiate the activity to suit the developmental levels of your students. There are even ideas for differentiation included in the resource download.

Research shows that explicit recognition and manipulation of sound units, known as phonemes, are vital in building effective reading skills. This game has proven to be an invaluable tool in my classroom, where students have gained confidence and experienced tremendous success in their phonemic awareness skills.

Blending Sounds Scavenger Hunt

Hide objects and toys around the classroom. Try to hide items that can be segmented into 3 phonemes. These will be easier for your students to blend into words. After you give your students the 3 segmented sounds as their clue, they must blend the sounds to make a word. This is the name of the object they need to search the room to find. 

Picture Puzzles

Make some puzzles with pictures of three-letter words. Cut each picture into three pieces. Each piece will represent the individual sounds. You could write the graphemes at the bottom of each picture piece if your students are ready to learn the graphemes to match the phonemes.

When your students reconstruct the picture, they then blend the letter sounds together to form the word.

I like this activity for independent phoneme blending practice. It’s great for literacy rotations because it is self-checking. As an extra challenge and to give the kids a variation, you can jumble all the picture pieces together. Your students will need to search through the pile to find the 3 pieces to make their picture.

Jump and Blend

My students love movement games. I will incorporate kinesthetic learning every chance I get. It helps to make the learning stick! 

Kinesthetic learning requires physical activity and has so many benefits for children’s cognitive, social, and emotional development. It improves the brain's ability to remember information. You have to love the power of motor memory!

I created this movement game to help my students not only learn to blend phonemes but to begin to match simple graphemes with those phonemes.

To begin, arrange three hoops in a line on the floor. Each hoop should contain a letter, forming a three-phoneme word. 

Next, have the children line up behind the hoops. The teacher points to a grapheme, and the first child in the line has to say the associated sound. Once the children are comfortable with the connection between the graphemes and phonemes, the first child jumps into each of the hoops, blending the sounds together to form the complete word.

This Jump and Blend activity lends itself well to phoneme substitution. For example, you could substitute the last sound in dog, the /g/ sound for a /t/ sound to make a new word dot. Just erase the final sound and write in the new sound or swap out the cards if you are using letter cards.

Phoneme substitution is another foundational phonemic skill. It is where children learn to replace or substitute one phoneme (individual sound) in a word to create a new word. It is important because it helps children develop their ability to identify and manipulate individual sounds. This is one of our literacy learning intentions in kindergarten. 

Phoneme substitution supports children's understanding of the alphabetic principle (the concept that letters represent sounds in written language). By practicing phoneme substitution, kindergarteners learn that changing a single sound in a word can create a completely new word, and this is one of the crucial skills for early reading and spelling development.

Blend and Slide

Don’t have room for Jump and Blend or want a kinesthetic game the whole class can do together? Then you can all play Blend and Slide. Your students tap their fingers to represent each individual sound in a given word. They can tap their fingers on a desk or their arm, assigning a different sound to each finger. Then, they smoothly slide their fingers along the surface to blend the sounds together. This kinesthetic activity supports auditory and tactile learning, while also strengthening their blending abilities.

Blending Alphabet Beads

This is another phoneme blending activity popular in our classroom. It’s a great fine motor activity too. Students have to match the graphemes (letters) with the phonemes (sounds) they are learning. They then need to blend the phonemes to make words.

Provide your students with alphabet beads and some strings or a pipe cleaner. I really like those scoobie strings for threading. They are thin but nice and firm.

Display a small list of CVC words. You can write them on the board or display them digitally on a panel. The children thread 3 alphabet beads onto a string so that it makes one of the displayed words. As they slide the beads along the string, they blend the sounds together and form the words.

Want a comprehensive list of CVC words?

Download my FREE list here: CVC Word List

Playdough Blending

Teach blending of 2 and 3 phoneme words with this fun phoneme blending activity. It is a great way to incorporate some sensory play and will help to develop fine motor skills too.

You will need some playdough and some word cards. Get your students to roll a small ball of playdough for each phoneme they hear in the spoken word. They place each playdough ball below each of the graphemes on their word card. 

Instead of pointing to each grapheme as the sounds are made, the children can squash the ball of playdough below each grapheme. 

While we are talking about playdough, I must show you my CVC Words Playdough Cards.

These cards are designed to help children decode, spell, and blend CVC words through hands-on sensory play, you know how much I love hands-on learning! Believe me, your kids do too 😉

With these CVC Words Playdough Mats, you will harness the benefits of sensory play combined with the power of hands-on activities to create a play based learning experience that is fun and educational.

THIS SET CONTAINS:

  • 98 CVC Play Dough Word Mats (A5 size)

  • 2 CVC Word Learning Invitation Prompts

  • 2 Recording Sheets

  • My Best ever Playdough Recipe

  • Playdough Center or Investigation Set up Ideas

Your students will have so much fun making and decoding the words. They won’t even realise how much they are learning.

Whether you're setting up a hands-on literacy investigation area, a small group literacy rotation activity, or a word work station, these playdough mats are perfect. 

CVC Words Playdough Mats
$3.00
Add To Cart

Musical Blending

In this activity, your students will need to be quite familiar with all the common graphemes (letters) and the sounds they represent. This is such a fun game because the words the students create are going to be nonsense words and they always bring a giggle!

Give each student a grapheme card.  Play some fun upbeat music on and encourage the kids to dance around. When the music stops, each student must quickly find a partner. They place their letter cards together and blend the sounds together to form silly words or nonsense words. 

Get ready to play this game over and over. Your students will love it.

Big Blending

For this fun blending activity, you need some big grapheme cards (letter cards). If you are making 3-grapheme words (like: cat, shop, math) you will need three children to stand in a line at the front of the class. You only need two children for simpler 2-grapheme words (like: at, in, she). 

To play, each of the children out the front is given a large grapheme card to hold and show to the rest of the class. As you point to each card, the class has to say the corresponding sound. 

Then, as you run your hand along the line of children out the front, the class blends the sounds together to make the word. 

Choose another group of children to stand at the front and start the big phoneme blending activity all over again with new cards.

CVC Blend and Write

In this interactive activity, your students will have fun blending and writing CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) words. Give a CVC picture prompt card to each child. The ones in my CVC words - Blend, Write and Make Cards  are perfect for this activity.

The children will point to each of the three small pictures on their cards and articulate the first sound of each picture. Then, they will write the corresponding letter beneath each picture. Afterward, they will repeat the sounds, this time blending them together to form a complete word.

This activity provides an excellent opportunity to discuss the concepts of vowels and consonants. You can emphasise that the words being formed are CVC words, where the middle sound is a short vowel sound. and so it produces its short sound. 

If you prefer not to have your students write the words, you can provide them with a variety of letter blocks or magnetic letters to construct the words instead.

If you are looking for an interactive activity to help your students blend, make and write CVC words, My CVC Words - Blend, Write and Make Cards could be just what you are looking for.

I designed these cards to be used for our small year 1 reading intervention group. They were having trouble blending and writing CVC words. Once students know their letter sounds, they can start blending them together into words. CVC words or words with 3 phonemes are relatively easy to segment and blend. They are perfect for children beginning to read, write and spell. 

This resource has 2 full sets of cards. There’s a set containing 66 CVC picture prompt cards and another set containing 66 letter cards. Each set also contains 24 BONUS cards containing basic digraphs /sh/ch/ and /th/ for a little extension.

All up each set contains 90 cards to get your children blending and writing CVC words or words with 3 phonemes.

How to Use the Picture Prompt Cards Set:

I like the child to write their CVC word onto a whiteboard, but it could be recorded on paper. 

  1. Give the student a CVC picture prompt card to place at the top of their whiteboard.

  2. The student then points to each picture on the card and says the corresponding initial sound.

  3. Then the student writes the matching letter symbol under each of the three pictures.

  4. The sounds are said again, this time blending them into a word.

How to Use the Letter Cards Set:

  1. The student chooses a card and places it in front of them.

  2. Then the student points to each picture on the card and says the corresponding initial letter sound.

  3. Next the student finds the matching letter symbols and places them in the boxes under each of the pictures.

  4. The sounds are said again, this time blending them into a word

I know you will find these CVC cards to be a wonderful resource for teaching your beginning readers and writers to blend, make and write CVC words. Use them to create the strong foundation your students need for segmenting and blending sounds into words.

I used these cards daily with my year 1 intervention group and we had great success with them. 

Drive and Blend

I think this one is probably the most requested in our class. Saving the best for last here 😉 All you need is a little car, a marker, and a few strips of cards for each child.

Using the marker write a 3-phoneme word, (CVC words, words with consonant blends or words with common digraphs) on each of the card strips. Space the letters out a little and only write one word on each card. 

Now for the fun part. Your children use their little toy car to slowly drive over each grapheme, saying the beginning sound, the middle sound, and the ending sound as they drive. Then this is repeated, but the car can drive a little faster this time. Tell your children they can really speed up if they know the sounds well enough to make a word.

Want a comprehensive set of Drive and Blend Cards all ready for you to print and use in your classroom?

This resource includes 4 DIFFERENTIATED Drive and Blend Card Sets to meet the diverse needs of your students.

Use the 100 picture cards set to focus on segmenting CVC words. Students identify the picture and then drive their car on the road, stopping in each road box to segment the word into 3 sounds.

Use the 160 letter cards set to focus on blending sounds and reading CVC words. Have the students place a toy car on GO, and as they drive from left to right, blend the 3 sounds to decode and read the CVC word. These cards are best for CVC word decoding practice and building fluency.

There’s also a set of 100 self-correcting cards included. Students can use this set to blend the phonemes and decode the CVC word. They flip the card over to check their accuracy because the picture on the back of each card make this activity self-checking.

Use the 100 CVC word cards set with matching pictures to support your beginning readers. These cards are useful for students needing a visual picture prompt. They will also help students self-check their decoding.

THIS SET CONTAINS:

  • 100 CVC Drive and Blend Picture Cards

  • 160 CVC Drive and Blend Letter Cards

  • 100 CVC Drive and Blend Self-correcting Word Cards

  • 100 CVC Drive and Blend Word Cards with a supporting picture

  • 8 printable cars

  • A Drive and Blend Learning Center Header Poster

  • 3 Learning Prompts

  • 4 “I can” statements to print and display.

  • 4 recording sheets (A5 size) to use on mini clipboards

  • Tile printing instructions

  • Play-based learning ideas

If you want to make your phoneme blending activities interactive, engaging, and age-appropriate for your kindergarten students, you really need to be using movement, manipulatives, and games like these. They are sure to become one of your class favourites - just like mine!

We provide our students with the best phoneme blending activities based on the latest reading research but still difficulties can arise. Here are some tips to keep in mind and help you navigate this somewhat difficult task.

Five Teaching Tips to Help Overcome Common Blending Difficulties in Kids

Some children seem to grasp the skill of blending easily while others need some extra help and practice.

Some children may face difficulties blending simple 3-phoneme words even after they have learned all the 44 Phonics Sounds in English. One common reason for this difficulty is that these children might have been taught incorrect pronunciations of the sounds.

In English, the 44 sounds are usually categorised into two groups: voiced versus unvoiced sounds and continuous versus stop sounds. Unfortunately, it is a common mistake to teach unvoiced sounds as voiced sounds, and continuous sounds as stop sounds, and vice versa.

When children learn to pronounce sounds incorrectly, it becomes challenging for them to smoothly blend the sounds together to form words. Here’s some examples to illustrate what I mean:

The sound represented by the letter s is /s/, not /suh/. The sound /s/ is a continuous sound, meaning it should be said for a couple of seconds. However, when the schwa sound /uh/ is added at the end, the sound /s/ no longer remains continuous but instead sounds more like a stop sound /suh/.

Another example is the sound represented by the letter h is /h/, not /huh/. The sound /h/ is an unvoiced sound, which means only the sound of air pushing through the mouth should be heard. But when the schwa sound /uh/ is added at the end, it becomes a voiced sound /huh/.

Understanding these distinctions and teaching them accurately will greatly support children in blending sounds correctly and improving their reading skills.

It doesn’t stop there though. Here are 4 more phoneme blending teaching tips:

  1. Explicit Modeling: Provide clear and explicit modeling of blending sounds. Ensure you are pronouncing the individual sounds correctly and demonstrate how to blend them together to form words. Place an emphasis on the smooth transition between sounds. Using visual aids like hand gestures can go a long way to help children that are struggling.

  2. Use a Multi-Sensory Approach: Engage multiple senses during blending activities. Use visual, auditory, and kinesthetic elements to help reinforce the blending process. For example, use manipulatives, sound cards, songs, and movement to make blending more interactive and memorable.

  3. Gradual Progression: Start with simple and familiar sounds and gradually introduce more complex blends. Begin with two-sound blending (/i/ /t/ for it and /sh/ /e/ for she), then progress to three-sound blending (/h/ /i/ /t/ for hit and /sh/ /o/ /p/ for shop). Scaffold the learning for your students by providing them ample opportunities to practice blending and heaps of opportunities for repetition at each and every stage before even thinking about moving on to more challenging blends.

  4. Chunking Strategies: Go right back to basics by breaking down (segmenting) and blending more complex words into chunks or syllables. Teach your students to identify syllables or word parts and blend them together first. For example, start with compound words like sunshine, where children blend sun and shine to make the word sunshine. Then move on to syllables like mon and key for monkey and Tues and day for Tuesday

Remember to provide ample opportunities for extra practice, reinforce positive efforts, and create a supportive learning environment where students feel comfortable taking risks and seeking help when needed. Patience, repetition, and targeted instruction will help your students overcome blending difficulties and develop strong phonemic awareness skills.

CONCLUSION

In this blog post, we explored the importance of teaching phoneme blending to children just learning to read and write. We discovered some interactive activities we can use in the classroom to learn and practice phoneme blending and we discussed strategies to overcome common blending difficulties. 

Phoneme blending plays a critical role in developing strong reading skills and phonemic awareness. It sets the foundation for future literacy success.

You have a crucial role to play in guiding and supporting your students as they develop their phoneme blending skills. Remember to create a positive and encouraging atmosphere where your children feel comfortable seeking help, taking risks, and building their confidence in blending sounds.

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