Match sounds correctly and make gold! Help the alchemist make Reading Gold by putting sounds together to make real words. This app belongs to the specific Læseguld game, which was created in collaboration between the Ministry of Children and Education, the Danish Teachers' Association and Time2learn.
This reading app is purely for raw, effective reading and spelling practice and does not contain distracting entertainment. This is important as it takes a lot of concentration to learn and automate the sound method.
The app trains both reading and spelling and is targeted at children who are in 0 - 1. level in reading.
When learning to read, you must be able to put sounds together into words that make sense. For many, it can be a long and difficult process. Both for parents who don't know how and for children who find it difficult. Therefore, it is often this part of the reading process that is not practiced enough.
This part of learning to read is the most important step in the reading process to crack the reading code – and it needs a lot of practice. Plenty of time must be given to listen and taste the sounds and from there hear whether it makes sense or not. It is also a good idea to say the sounds out loud yourself and let the sounds 'read' the word.
We recommend training with this app for 10 min. per day.
4 different pre-sounds are presented, which must be put together with a rhyming part.
All sounds can be heard as many times as you want by pressing the sound. The task is to choose a pre-sound together with the rhyming part that gives a correct word. It involves listening to the sounds, looking at the word and choosing the sounds that make words that mean something.
It is possible to choose the degree of difficulty that suits the individual.
• X X (One consonant in the preceding sound (e.g. b) and a short rhyming part (e.g. i) = the word bi.)
All the words used are phonetic, so the focus is on the method of putting sounds together to form words.
The standard sounds of the letters are used. However, the important sounds are also included:
• -e (eg lion)
• -er (lions)
• -d (soft d, e.g. leaf)
• -g (soft g eg days).
Silent letters (e.g. dog) and vowel glides (e.g. jewelry for jewelry) are not used.
This reading app is purely for raw, effective reading and spelling practice and does not contain distracting entertainment. This is important as it takes a lot of concentration to learn and automate the sound method.
The app trains both reading and spelling and is targeted at children who are in 0 - 1. level in reading.
When learning to read, you must be able to put sounds together into words that make sense. For many, it can be a long and difficult process. Both for parents who don't know how and for children who find it difficult. Therefore, it is often this part of the reading process that is not practiced enough.
This part of learning to read is the most important step in the reading process to crack the reading code – and it needs a lot of practice. Plenty of time must be given to listen and taste the sounds and from there hear whether it makes sense or not. It is also a good idea to say the sounds out loud yourself and let the sounds 'read' the word.
We recommend training with this app for 10 min. per day.
4 different pre-sounds are presented, which must be put together with a rhyming part.
All sounds can be heard as many times as you want by pressing the sound. The task is to choose a pre-sound together with the rhyming part that gives a correct word. It involves listening to the sounds, looking at the word and choosing the sounds that make words that mean something.
It is possible to choose the degree of difficulty that suits the individual.
• X X (One consonant in the preceding sound (e.g. b) and a short rhyming part (e.g. i) = the word bi.)
All the words used are phonetic, so the focus is on the method of putting sounds together to form words.
The standard sounds of the letters are used. However, the important sounds are also included:
• -e (eg lion)
• -er (lions)
• -d (soft d, e.g. leaf)
• -g (soft g eg days).
Silent letters (e.g. dog) and vowel glides (e.g. jewelry for jewelry) are not used.
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