• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

My Obstacle Course: Engage, Encourage and Empower

A fun, structured, systematic way to work on your child's strengths and weaknesses at home!

  • Welcome to My Obstacle Course!
  • What is My Obstacle Course?
  • Developmental Timelines
    • What Is My Child Ready For?
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact Information

Building Letter Recognition – Sensory Bin Letter Hunt

I recently received a letter asking about activities to work on beginning letter identification and uppercase/lowercase matching. As with any concept I work on with Andrew, I begin by providing him with very basic activities and build according to what he needs. This is one of my favorite ways to approach this and lots of other skills.

Note: Remember that these station activities are not meant to be long, drawn out projects that take all afternoon for your child to complete. They have short attention spans which is why doing stations that are quick and to the point work so well.

My Obstacle Course Station Activity: Sensory Bin Letter Hunt

My Obstacle Course Station Activity: Sensory Bin Letter Hunt

For this station activity I would choose some letters, either strategically if I knew he was struggling with them or randomly.

The letters I chose for this particular hunt.

I have used magnet letters, Scrabble or Bananagram letters, wooden letters from a Melissa and Doug game or letter tiles I found at Michael’s.

Magnet letters, wooden Melissa and Doug letters, colored letter tiles from Michael's and Bananagram (or Scrabble) letters

I combined these with a sensory bean bin that I have made. (Now that summer is approaching, it might be fun to go with the summer theme and make a sensory bin with sand! Just remember to put a towel or sheet underneath it for easy clean-up.)

Place the letters in the sensory bin and bury them.

I include a sheet with the letters on it so they can be matched up and so that he knows how many more he needs to find. This does not have to be fancy, just a sheet of paper with the letters neatly written on it or even printed from the computer using a large font size.

Now that the set up is complete (super simple huh!!), it’s time to start digging!

Dig around until a letter appears.
Take the letter out...
and place it on the sheet.
Continue until they have all been found!
What it would look like matching uppercase and lowercase letters.

If your child knows their letters, an extension of this would be to place letters into the bin that form a word. Write the word on a piece of paper or a piece of a sentence strip and the child can put the letters in the correct order to form the word.

It really doesn’t take much to make a fun activity to help your child build letter recognition skills.

Engage, Encourage and Empower!

 

Primary Sidebar

Obstacle Course Mom’s Blog

  • When People Stare, Mind Your Own Business
  • ABC’s of Peaceful Parenting Tele-class
  • What’s Perfect About This?
  • Exciting News!
  • Halloween

Categories

  • Blog
  • Cool Tool
  • Fine Motor
  • Getting Started
  • Gross Motor
  • Literacy
  • Math
  • My Obstacle Course Station Ideas
  • Oral Motor
  • Problem Solving
  • Sensory
  • Social Skills
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • July 2012 (1)
  • May 2012 (1)
  • January 2012 (1)
  • November 2011 (2)
  • October 2011 (12)
  • September 2011 (14)
  • August 2011 (15)
  • July 2011 (19)
  • June 2011 (18)
  • May 2011 (21)
  • April 2011 (20)
  • March 2011 (22)
  • February 2011 (19)
  • January 2011 (21)
  • December 2010 (22)
  • November 2010 (6)

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org