📚 Unlock the Power of Words with SnapWords! 🚀
SnapWords® List A Teaching Sight Word Cards are multisensory flash cards designed to enhance sight word recognition through engaging visuals and motions. With 59 high-frequency words, these cards cater to various learning styles, particularly benefiting visual and kinesthetic learners. The system promotes both phonics and comprehension, ensuring a well-rounded approach to literacy.
J**N
These cards really WORK! And they are FUN! My son is hooked!!!
These cards are amazing! I love this program. Started on it to prepare my son for Kindergarten but wish I had started even earlier. They really helped build my sons confidence so that now he feels like he is reading. I work as a homeworker helper for a group of children in my community center who need extra attention and I got the facilitators there to adopt this program as well. I recommend Set A for ages 3-6 depending on the childs reading level. I also bought the lesson plan book but in opinion, you really don't need it. I do like that it tell you in what order in introduce the words but I'm sure you could Google that. I thought this was a great price too from what I've seen online and in stores.
M**E
Super engaging for my ADHD kids
My students LOOOOOOVE these. I have a 5th grade boy , with short-term memory problems, who has been shown sight word flash card for years and he struggles to rmeebr them. These have given him self confidence and visual pictures in his head, to recognize the words when he seems them in print with out the photos.My second grade kids, with learning differences also, love the body movements that go with them.I teach Jim Stone's animated alphabet in the beginning of the year, for kids who have phonological processing delays, and I followed with ease sight words this last quarter, ofter trying to find sight words cards that were engaging.Now I can't wait for summer school to start so i can use these for the moderate/severe children I will be teaching. Some of whom have behavior problems that impact their learning. I am hoping these cards engage them and make them excited to learn. Are there more products?
K**N
very helpful
these cards are great. our 5 year old daughter was having a hard time remembering her sight words for school & this helped immensely. it gives the kids some context for words like "the" and "to" that are hard to explain to them. the cards have a little description on the book for how to explain to children, which I found helpful. the pictures are nice, the cards are sturdy and come in a little card case to store them. Well worth the money! When the time comes we'll order the other sets.
P**Z
Great tool for visual learners.
I teach Kindergarten. These cards have made a significant impact for several of my students! Well worth the price to boost student confidence and jump start their reading journey!
J**.
Amazingly helpful to parents and teachers.
This set of cards was just was my son needed. He starts Kindergarten in the fall. I am an elementary school teacher, and even with all of my strategies and training, I could NOT get him interested in working on words. This set changed all of that. In 2 ten minute sessions he had learned 10 words, and was starting to rearrange them into simple sentences. It was just the amazing confidence booster he needed. I will be ordering the other sets too. Every kinder classroom should have theses cards.
K**R
Just okay - could be better
I think this is okay, but it could be better. Some of the illustrations could be better and less confusing.For example, little "a" is represented by the small letter holding a doll and the large letter "A" holding 4 dolls. It's confusing to have the large "A" hold 4 dolls if the letter "a" is supposed to signify the singular.Some cards have imagery that is easily confused. For example, the images of "so" and "sit" are incredibly similar appearing to show the letter "s" sitting on a pillow.The image for "an" is just not intuitve and doesn't do much for helping a child recognize the word through the imagery. It has an island image with an octopus (AN octopus, AN island, AN ocean). I recognize when one uses the term "an" instead of "a", but why not use a image that conveys the concept of singular that was employed with "a" with "an" as well?I know it's really hard to have imagery for certain words (i.e., articles), but my child has already confused some of the similar imagery. I really wanted to like these more than I do.
Q**Q
A helpful tool for reading.
A helpful tool for reading, especially if a little extra recognition is needed for sight words. The use of color and images offers that little extra.
S**H
My preschoolers have great memories, but we have struggled with sight words
My preschoolers have great memories, but we have struggled with sight words. These cards give a sentence, picture, and motion to help them remember the word. We add 3 words a week... and practice the words every day. I have tried many different methods to help my preschoolers get started reading and so far this is the most success we have had.I am a middle school science teacher... so teaching this age to read is WAY out of my league. We will buy additional packs once we master the first set.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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