At-Home Packet MAY PreK English

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At-Home Learning Packets

ENGLISH | MAY

Grade

PRE-K
Includes:
Learning Without Tears Materials

Have questions? We’re here to help. Contact us at customeroutreach@LWTears.com or 888.983.8409.


Introduction Letter

Dear Friends,

All of us at Learning Without Tears™ are committed to helping you continue student learning,
even when schools are closed. We are providing you and your students free resources to help
parents and caregivers support learning while children are out of school. You can find access
to all our free online products and resources at LWTears.com.

In addition, we are providing easy to print and copy At-Home Learning Packets. The packets
use the Handwriting Without Tears, developmentally based curriculum designed to engage
children of all learning styles. They are easy to use whether or not your students are currently
using the Learning Without Tears Curriculum.

These pages were created for extra handwriting practice. The lessons focus on good habits
for numbers, letters, words, and sentences. In the older grades, they help with punctuation,
poem, and paragraph skills, and review number formations. The At-Home Learning Packets are
organized by grade and available in English and Spanish. They include lowercase formation
and cursive where appropriate.

The first few pages include grade-level letter and number formation charts, so you’ll know
what to say when you help your child form their letters and numbers.

We are committed to helping you and your students mitigate any learning loss as you respond
to this unprecedented health issue. We are here to support you throughout, so please reach
out with any questions or concerns.

Thank you!

If you would like more information about free resources to support distance learning,
please go to LWTears.com/programs/distance-learning.
Capital Letter Formation Chart

Big Line Big Line Big Curve Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Curve Big Line Big Line
A B C D E F G H I
Big Line Little Curve Big Curve Little Line Little Line Little Line Big Line Little Line
Little Line Little Curve Little Line Little Line Little Line Little Line Little Line
Little Line

Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Curve Big Line Big Curve Big Line
J K L M N O P Q R
Turn Little Line Little Line Big Line Big Line Big Curve
Keep going Little Curve Big Curve
Keep going Little Curve
Little Line Little Line Big Line Big Line Little Line Little Line
Big Line

Little Curve Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line Little Line Little Line
S T U V W X Y Z
Little
Turn Curve Little Line Turn Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line Big Line
Little Curve Big Line Big Line Little Line
Big Line
www.getsetforschool.com

© 2020 Learning Without Tears


Number Formation Chart

1 starts at the 6 starts at the


Big Line down Big Line down, turn and curl up

2 starts at the 7 starts at the


Big Curve to the bottom Little Line across the top
Little Line across Big Line slides down

3 starts at the 8 starts at the


Little Curve to the middle Begin with S, up to the top
Little Curve to the bottom

4 starts at the 9 starts at the


Little Line down Little Curve, up
Little Line across the middle Big Line down
Big Line down the center

5 starts at the First, write 1


Little Line down to the middle 1 starts at the
Little Curve to the bottom Big Line down
Little Line across the top Next, write 0
0 starts at the
Big Curve, keep going
Stop

© 2020 Learning Without Tears


Lowercase Formation Chart

bump

agic c up like a back down dive down swim up down


bump and over

Dots for you! dot

dive down swim up around down


and over bump bump

Dots for you! dot

agic c down

turn

agic c up like a up higher back down down kick! slide away


bump bump the line

Start at the top!

 

2 2

3
down
start little line up and around stop
bump the line

At first, curve up.


Then, go straight down. up

down cross start with n swim up down


bump the line and over (m has two humps)

bump

agic c up like a back dive down swim up down


down and over (n has one hump)

turn
© 2020 Learning Without Tears
Lowercase Formation Chart

bump

agic c keep on going stop down, travel, up back down


bump

swim up around slide down slide up


and over bump

dive down

bump

agic c up like a back slide down and up slide down and up


down
U turn

  2

dive down swim up slide down slide down


and over

  2

little
agic c little agic c turn down curve around slide down slide down

Directions for crossing t:


Left-handed Right-handed
Start at the top!

down cross go across slide down go across


bump the line

© 2020 Learning Without Tears


Fine Motor and Letter Practice for Home
Hand skills are crucial to successful handwriting. Small movements of the hand are referred to as fine motor
skills. If you believe that your child needs extra activities to strengthen his/her hands or fine motor skills, here
are a few suggestions of activities to do with your child.
• Do finger plays. Find books with finger plays at your library.
• Cut pictures from newspapers or magazines. Take a large black marker and draw a line around the picture to give a guideline.
• Put together small beads, Legos, Tinker Toys, Lincoln Logs, etc.
• Knead dough or clay and build an object.
• Find small objects hidden in the dough.
• Play pegboard games.
• Gather small objects from around the house (small buttons, beads, etc.) and place them in a container. Pick them up off
the table with a pair of tweezers and place them back in the container.
• Play with any toys that require moving or placing little pieces.
• Squirt a water bottle outdoors on the sidewalk.
• Squeeze a kitchen baster to move cotton balls with air. Have a race on the table.
• Finger paint with Jell-O or cocoa on a paper plate.
• Use small marshmallows and toothpicks to form letters.
• String popcorn, buttons, or beads to make necklaces.
• Create a design on a piece of paper with a hole punch.
• Clip clothespins to a container.
• Lace cards.

You can do several fun activities at home to encourage letter practice. Make sure to always model the letter for
your child. A few activities are listed below:
• While your child is in the bathtub, draw letters on the wall of the tub in shaving cream or soap paint.
• Take turns tracing letters on each other’s backs and guess the letter. (Write the letter on a piece of paper.)
• Finger paint letters.
• Write letters on the sidewalk with chalk.
• Trace letters in the snow or in the sand.
• Forms letters out of dough or clay.
• Make cookie letters. Form the letters by rolling the dough and putting the pieces together.
• Form letters out of French fries.
• Make letters with pipe cleaners.
• Draw letters on the carpet with your fingers.
• Decorate a letter collage using glitter, paint, and markers.
• Use different types of pencils for writing practice (gel pens, colored pencils, scented markers, crayons, etc.).
• Write your shopping lists together.
• Use a flashlight and make letters on the wall. Guess the letter that was made. Cut out letter templates to place in front
of the flashlight.
• Put letters on a die. Roll the die and write a word that starts with the letter.
• Fish for words. Place cut-out fish in a shoebox. Write words or letters on the fish. Attach paper clips to the fish and
adapt a small pole with a magnet. Come up with a word or sentence using the letter or word on the fish that is caught.
• Write with icing tubes.

© 2020 Learning Without Tears


More Aim & Scribble

© 2008 Jan Z. Olsen Handwriting Without Tears® A Click Away


© 2020 Learning Without Tears
Help e Hold Crayons & Pencils

Help Me Choose My Writing Hand


Some children switch hands when they color or draw. That’s fine until it’s time to learn to write. Children need
to settle on one hand as their writing hand. If a child is truly undecided, choose the right hand. But if a child
prefers the left and holds a crayon or pencil better with the left, choose the left hand. The curriculum we’re
using works equally well for right- and left-handed children.

Help Me Hold a Crayon


Fat crayons are big and heavy for little hands. Trying to hold them can lead to awkward, fisted grips.
We recommend giving children little broken pieces of crayons at first. They’ll hold the little pieces with their
fingertips. Little pieces will naturally develop finger strength and the correct grip. Show children how to hold
regular crayons and pencils, too.

There are two correct grips:

Tripod – 3 fingers Quadropod – 4 fingers


Thumb and pointer pinch. Thumb and pointer/tall finger pinch.
Crayon or pencil rests on tall finger. Crayon or pencil rests on ring finger.

Left Tripod Right Tripod Left Quadropod Right Quadropod

Help Me Hold a Pencil


1. Pick up a pencil and drop it! No writing! Help children pick up the pencil and place their fingers.
Then, drop it again! Do 3–5 pencil pick-ups a day. When a child automatically holds the pencil correctly,
go to step 2.

2. Aim and scribble. No writing—just scribbling to learn how to move the fingers/pencil with ease.
ake 3 dots on paper for children. Have children pick up the pencil and get in good writing posture.
(Rest the pencil hand on the paper. Hold the paper with the helper hand). Now have children aim for
a dot and scribble on the dot. Drop the pencil. Repeat.

3. Now help children write their names with a pencil. Teach NAE with capitals first. Then, teach children to
write Name in title case, with a beginning capital and lowercase letters.

© 2020 Learning Without Tears


Get Set for School® Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment
1. Name CAPITALS Preparation (Print to 100% scale) Directions
Capital letters are the first letters children • F old on the dotted lines. •S
 ay, Tell me the names of these letters.
recognize and name. Naming these letters •N
 ext, unfold and use paper clips on the ends (Point to E, A, etc.)
in random order demonstrates both skills. to make a triangular display. • If the child cannot name letters, look for
• T his printing will be folded inside. The display will an earlier skill, letter recognition. Ask,
show just one line of letters at a time. Which one is R? Which one is A? This shows
letter recognition, but not name recall.

E   A R I O T N S

L U C D M P H G K

© 2021 Learning Without Tears


Y F W B Q V X J Z
getsetforschool.com/assessments
Get Set for School® Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment
2. Name lowercase let ters Preparation (Print to 100% scale) Directions
The first lowercase letters children can • F old on the dotted lines. •S
 ay, Tell me the names of these letters.
name are in their names or letters that •N
 ext, unfold and use paper clips on the ends (Point to c, w, etc.)
look like capitals. Naming lowercase letters to make a triangular display. • If the child cannot name letters, look for
in random order shows both recognition • T his printing will be folded inside. The display will an earlier skill, letter recognition. Ask, Which
and letter name memory. show just one line of letters at a time. one is w? Which one is x? This shows letter
recognition, but not name recall.

c w x t o s k z

u b a y h g v j r

© 2021 Learning Without Tears


m d e i p n f q l
getsetforschool.com/assessments
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Get Set for School® Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment

3. Describe
When we tell children how things look, sound, feel, taste, and smell, we’re teaching them to describe.
Describing words (big, bumpy, furry) are adjectives.

Compare
When we describe how two things are alike or different, we’re teaching children how to compare.
Comparisons require noticing the same attribute (like size) that two things share. Opposites are a
wonderful way to introduce comparing.

Look at this elephant. Look at the bird, too. Let’s compare them.
• The elephant is big. The bird is (pause).
• The elephant picks up things with its trunk. The bird picks up things with its (pause).
• The elephant’s trunk is long. The bird’s beak is (pause).
• The elephant has 4 legs. The bird has (pause).
• The elephant is heavy. The bird is (pause).
• The elephant can walk. The bird can (pause).
• The elephant makes a big trumpet sound. The bird makes a (pause).

getsetforschool.com/assessments © 2021 Learning Without Tears


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Get Set for School® Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment


Nursery rhymes are a delightful way to develop vocabulary, memory, and speech sound awareness. They endure
because of their appealing content, rhythm, and rhyme. Familiarity with nursery rhymes often indicates a language-rich
home and school environment.

4. Nursery Rhyme Repeat (no pictures)


Say what I say. One, two, tie my shoe (pause) . Three, four, shut the door, (pause).________
Jack and Jill, went up the hill, (pause).
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, (pause) Humpty Dumpty had a great fall, (pause).

Rhyming words have the same ending sound. Noticing whether words have the same or different ending sounds is part
of phonological awareness.

Rhyme Or Not (no pictures)


Pig, dig rhyme. They have the same ending sounds: ig.
Pig, hat do not rhyme. They have different ending sounds: ig, at.
• Do bear and dog rhyme? • Do chair and cat rhyme?
• Do bear and chair rhyme? • Do chair and bear rhyme?

Rhyme Find (use pictures)


What is this? (point to bear, dog, chair, cat):
• Which one rhymes with hat? cat • Which one rhymes with hair? bear and/or chair
• Which one rhymes with frog? dog • Which one rhymes with mat? cat
• Which one rhymes with log? dog
getsetforschool.com/assessments © 2021 Learning Without Tears
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Get Set for School® Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment


5. Words
To develop language, children need to hear people talking from the time they’re babies. They need people
to talk and read to them. The more words the better as spoken words gradually take on meaning.
Words (Use pictures)
What is this? __________car _________ banana _________ backpack __________jacket
Words in a category
•Which one do people drive? (pause) car
•Which one is used for carrying things? (pause) backpack
•Which one can people eat? (pause)_banana What foods do you eat? (pause)
•Which one do people wear? (pause)_jacket What clothes do you wear? (pause)

6. Word Parts (No pictures)


Spoken words have meaning, but they also have sound parts. The ability to hear and manipulate
sounds is called phonological awareness. This assessment looks at how children blend sounds together.
I will say word parts. You put the parts together.
I have the word fish. I have the word bowl. I put them together, fishbowl.
Compound word parts
hot + dog = (pause) hotdog back + pack = (pause) backpack cup + cake = (pause) cupcake
Syllables
ap + ple = (pause) apple car + toon = (pause) cartoon jack + et = (pause) jacket
Onset- rime
/s/+ it = (pause) sit /r/ + un = (pause) run /k/ + ar = (pause) car

getsetforschool.com/assessments © 2021 Learning Without Tears


Get Set for School®_ Language & Literacy: 1:1 Assessment Record

Name________________________________________ DOB_____________________ Date ____________________

1. Name Capitals
E   A R I O T N S  EA R I O T N S L UC DM P H G K YF W BQ V X J Z

Notes___________________________________________________________

2. Name Lowercase Letters


c w x t o s k z c w xt os kz u b a yh g vj r m d e i p n f ql

Notes___________________________________________________________

3. Describe and Compare


Elephant is big, bird ______________ uses trunk, bird_________________
trunk is long, bird’s beak___________ has 4 legs, bird________________
is heavy, bird_____________________ can walk, bird__________________
trumpet sound, bird_______________

Notes___________________________________________________________

4. Nursery Rhymes & Rhyming


Repeat q One, two, tie my shoe q Jack and Jill q Humpty Dumpty
Rhyme or not q bear/ dog q bear/chair q chair/cat q chair/bear
Rhyme find q hat q frog q log q hair q mat

Notes___________________________________________________________

5. Words
What is this? q car q banana q backpack q jacket

Which one do people drive?


Which one is used for carrying things?_______________________________

Which one can people eat?________________________________________


What foods do you eat?___________________________________________

Which one do people wear?_______________________________________


What clothes do you wear?________________________________________

6. Word Parts
Compound words q hot + dog q back + pack q cup + cake
Syllables q ap + ple q car + toon q jack + et
Onset – Rime q /s/ + it q /r/ + un q /k/ + ar

Notes___________________________________________________________

getsetforschool.com/assessments © 2021 Learning Without Tears


Get Set for School®
Language & Literacy: Observation Checklist

e
Directions:

am
N
’s
1. Fill in child’s name.

ldi
2. Fill in observation date.

Ch
3. Mark child’s progress.

1. L istens mark


Listens and responds to directions
and questions date

2. Engages mark
Engages in conversations using
sentences date

3. Uses mark
Uses words to express feelings
and needs date

4. Understands mark
Understands important signs in our
environment date

5. R
 ecognizes mark
Recognizes parts of a book
(front cover, back cover, title, pictures, words) date

6.Imitates mark
Imitates reading books
(front to back, turns pages 1 by 1) date

7. R
 ecognizes mark
Recognizes own name and/or names
of friends and family in print date

8. Predicts mark
Predicts what will happen next
in a story date

9. R
 etells mark
Retells a familiar story
(beginning, middle, end) date

10. T
 ells mark
Tells steps for a simple activity
(take a bath, make a sandwich) date
Progress Marks
11. C hooses mark
Chooses books for areas of interest and — early, emerging
uses specific vocabulary to talk about them date

12. Uses mark


3 growing
Uses pictures and play writing to
express words and ideas date 3+ meets expectation

getsetforschool.com/assessments © 2021 Learning Without Tears


My Picture

Happy spring!
© 2020 Learning Without Tears

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