top of page

The Best Phonics  Tutor Blog


There are several simple and practical activities to motivate your child's early literacy learning without it feeling like 'extra' work. Here are 5 activities that work for both parents and teachers alike. These multi-sensory phonics activities make learning sounds and reading fun for children and will work for early years or primary school learners. As all children learn differently, you can adapt these to fit your own child's learning, ability, and interests. Try them out and adjust to fit.


1. Make Easy Salt Dough Letters!


This is not only fun but something your child will love to help cook. Home-made salt dough is cheap and easy to make. It is soft and not sticky and it keeps for up to three months in air-tight containers. Here's a quick and easy recipe:


Salt Dough recipe

  • 2 cups of flour

  • 4 tsp cream of tartar

  • 2 tbsp vegetable or coconut oil

  • airtight bags or container

  • 3/4 cup of salt

  • 2 cups of lukewarm water

  • food colouring

If you are only using one colour, add the colour. Cook all the ingredients over medium heat until they thicken to form a soft ball. Leave it to cool and knead until smooth.


Store in an airtight bag or container. If you are using multiple colours, make the dough without any colour. Cook as above. Leave to cool and knead each separate ball inside a plastic bag with a few drops of each colour to avoid staining hands and clothes. Use the salt dough to make letters or words with your child. They can also use the dough as a base for printing wooden letters or magnetic letters, or write on it using playdough tools, chopsticks etc.


2. Go on a Sound Hunt

This is another simple activity. Go on a sound hunt with your child. This is especially engaging in the woods as you can use the wildlife around you. Whatever you are doing with your child, point something out (like a bird) and ask them what it is. After your child tells you, you can then follow by asking, "does bird begin with k?" Vary the choice so sometimes you give the correct sound and sometimes you don't.

So, "does bird begin with b?" or "does cat begin with g?"

For another level of difficulty, ask "does dog have a in the middle?"

For another level of challenge, ask about the end letter, "so does bird end with p?"

For variety, ask your child to think one up and ask you the question.


3. Stick in the Sand!

Most children love this activity as it involves two favourites-sticks and sand! Whether you are at the beach or in a sand pit in your local park or back garden, you can get your child to write sounds using a stick. Your child can also write letters in the mud if sand is not available or you can put shaving foam in a tray and write letters in the foam.


For variations indoors, fill a tray with semolina, rice, lentils, etc. and take different objects to write with

(paintbrush,chopsticks, etc.) and write letters in the materials on the tray.


Remember to ask your child to write the sound k, not the letter "kay". To combine both, use the pattern "its name is kay and it sounds like k".


4. Play I Spy


Play the I-spy game with your child, saying "I spy with my little eye something beginning with b..." and say the sound, not the name of the letter.

To add a level of difficulty, the thing does not have to be visible.

Say, "I am going to describe something, and you have to guess what it begins with." Imagine it's a bath, and you will begin, "It's in the house...".


Decide if you want to limit the questions your child can ask to three. Add middle and end sounds to increase the difficulty.

Take turns for variety.


Choose a theme (such as animals) to practice topic-specific vocabulary.

Spell out the word for another level of difficulty: "I spy with my little eye something you spell like this t-a-b-l-e", saying the names of the letters.


5. Eat That Sound!


Sweat or savoury sound treats are great for enhancing your child's learning of phonics.


Start by asking your child what kind of treats they would like to make. You can have an assortment of fruits, like apples, bananas, oranges, berries, and some veggies like carrots, peppers, (whatever your child loves!). Your child can decorate the crackers with cream cheese and then stick on tiny slices of the fruit or veggies.


Then take turns eating a treat by saying the sound that it makes "I'm going to eat the treat beginning with b for banana". You could say, "Can you eat the treat with the s sound?" After your child finds it, then ask, "What did you eat?"


Another idea is to get some tubes of ready-to-pipe icing. Or you can use a small plastic bag, fill it with cream cheese and snip off a tiny corner to make a piping bag. Then pipe letters onto biscuits or crackers. Plan it out carefully, talking about the sounds you want to pipe, so you can focus on the sounds. Once the piping is complete, talk about who will eat what sound.


For an added level of difficulty, put them in alphabetical order, or make 3-letter words with the biscuits or crackers. Make sure you have piped a mix of vowels and consonants if you do this.


And finally, remember phonics play and learning should be fun. The more flexible you are, the more your child will enjoy it!


Please post your questions or comments below and I will get back to you!





LEGO construction toys are brilliant! Colourful little blocks in red, yellow, blue, green, and black, ready for a child to use their imagination in creating treasures that usually get displayed proudly around their bedroom. But did you know these little blocks have another hidden secret?


When my son Dylan was little, he was a huge LEGO fanatic! He loved to go to the toy store with me and pick out the latest Star Wars LEGO pack. We probably had one for every month from the time he turned four.


In fact, he got so good at putting the tiny pieces together by just looking at the following instruction booklet pictures that he was often finished constructing by the time I managed to get a cup of tea to sit down and help him! My husband and I were always amazed at how precise Dylan was and if he made any mistakes or it fell apart, he was patient enough to put it back together again. He was a pro and could build creations double his age range, often putting together pieces meant for 9+.


Dylan could spend hours playing with us and making up stories with the mini-figures, but the real joy was getting a new box to construct another starship or starfighter to add to his collection. When Dylan started Year 1 and began writing his name in such beautiful handwriting (he had only just turned five as he is a summer baby), it had me thinking…


What are the benefits of LEGO blocks? Can playing with LEGO toys really help my child’s writing and improve their pencil grip and writing creativity?



LEGO is an excellent tool for helping your child with their writing both physically and mentally. A few years ago, when I was teaching Year 1, I had a student named James who was struggling with his handwriting and the pressure was on me to get him to make progress with his writing. James was part of my morning hand gym group and on Mondays and Wednesdays, we would play with playdough, pick up pom poms, and complete other recommended activities to help his group build their fine motor skills.


One day just before Christmas break, I remember his dad asking me what else could they do at home to help. I recommended that he get a LEGO set. I forgot all about this advice until the start of January. On the first day of the new term, James was very excited and brought me his work.


"Mrs. Cook, I have something to show you!" he beamed.


I nearly fell off my chair in shock! His handwriting was small, precise, and stunning with every letter written clearly. When I asked James how he could write so beautifully, he shrugged and responded that he had gotten LEGO toys for Christmas and spent the holiday playing with them. His dad even told him to tell me, thank you!



Now if that isn’t proof, I don’t know what is. James was so proud of his work and even brought me photos of the LEGO creations that he constructed.

Amazing, now let’s take a look at the other benefits.


1. LEGO can help build your child’s fine motor skills

Since LEGO blocks are made of tiny pieces, your child needs to use movements when they make their LEGO designs that are more focused on their fingers. They also need to push the pieces together or pull them apart as they play with them. This results in well-developed fine motor skills and improved hand strength, which are much needed for a good pencil grasp.



Playing with LEGO toys can help your child to develop dexterity and strength in their fingers. The different amounts of pressure used to assemble Lego pieces is an excellent exercise for small fingers. This practice can support how your child holds a pencil and controls the pressure when applied to writing.





2. LEGO can develop your child’s communication and language skills

Good writing requires the ability of a child to communicate thoughts and ideas and use imagination to create stories. When your child builds a model with LEGO bricks, they learn how to communicate with others if they are with another child or adult and how to share ideas about negotiation and compromise. If your child engages in individual play, they may create stories, adding characters and dialogue, which helps to build their language development.


3. LEGO can help your child become a creator and story maker

LEGO toys can help your child to develop their creativity and experimentation skills. When given the opportunity to freestyle with LEGO bricks, your child is given the freedom to use their imagination and allow their self-expression to flow. They can experiment and test out new ideas; enterprising their story-making. This can be a great activity to do as a family.



4. LEGO can help your child to build their self-confidence

When your child constructs with LEGO, whether that be through following instructions in the manual or from an idea of their own mind, they feel a sense of accomplishment, and pride, and get a self-esteem boost. This can inspire them to try out more complex tasks when they feel ready, a great skill for budding writers.


5. LEGO can help your child build their focus and concentration skills

When your child writes a story, they need the ability to focus on the task. LEGO creations require similar levels of concentration too. Whether your child is following instructions, planning what pieces come next, listening to others’ ideas, or waiting their turn when building in a group, this all take takes huge amounts of focus and attention. This can support your child in building their concentration skills.


Who would have thought those colourful little blocks of plastic could have such magical benefits?

For more information about LEGO go to their website www.lego.com for their latest collections.


Are you looking for literacy help for your child?

You are doing enough already as a parent already, so why not get in touch about professional help to support your child? I'm a qualified teacher with 22 years of experience helping children to read and write successfully.

I would love to help!


Book a discovery call with me and let's have a chat!







While most children learn to read between the ages of 4 and 8, some go through the process much earlier or later than this. Whether your child just started reading or has been reading for years, it’s important to provide them with support and encouragement as they move forward in their reading journey. Here are some tips on how you can help your beginner reader stay on track and enjoy their reading experience as much as possible.



1. Understand where your child is at in their reading development

Allow your child to read from an age-appropriate book out loud. They're at the correct reading level if they read the words fluently without sounding them out and blend them as they say them. Alternatively, if you're unable to do so, I recommend an easier book.




2. Talk about the pictures when you read

In the pre-reading stage, you can talk about the pictures, have conversations about what's going on in the story, and use the pictures to help your child with comprehension.


3. Be patient!

Learning to read takes time. Don't get discouraged, be patient. Reward your child for their efforts!


4. Make it fun

Make reading fun and purposeful. It doesn't always have to be reading from a book that children understand. Play a game of writing words down as your child labels his or her pictures. Share signs, symbols and words that you see at parks, shops, etc.




5. Read together

Children love hearing a story read to them. A family that reads together stays together. This is great for their language development, and you are also an excellent role model for fluent readers.






6. Practice makes progress

Practice sounds and tricky words. These can often be found at the start of children's early readers, alongside tips for making those hard-to-read words a little more easily read. To learn well, little and often usually is the way to go.

7. Teach them some tricks on how to sound out words

As your child learns to read, you can help by teaching them tricks like blending the initial sound of a CVC word to the family rime part eg. (-at) as in c-at=cat. You can use this to help with other words with

the same ending, like b-at, s-at, and r-at.


8. Pick books they can read themselves, then follow up and discuss it

You should select books that your child will enjoy independently. In addition to reading books they enjoy repeatedly, you can enrich their experiences by asking them questions about them.



9. Encourage reading for pleasure

Sometimes the books your child will choose will amaze you! So if they love to read anthologies about Doctor Who or the Dinosaur Encyclopaedia, go ahead and let them.


10. Reading can be challenging-Don't give up!

Reading can be challenging, especially for beginner readers. Encourage your child with gentle encouragement and patience. Reading takes time and practice, but it can be done!


-Read together every day so that they can hear the words aloud.


If your child is struggling with reading and needs extra reading support to become a skilled reader, get in touch, I can help!




Or join my email list for fantastic tips!


bottom of page