Aizweb Magnetic Letters, Phonics Video games Letter Tiles Alphabet Magnets Be taught to Learn Spelling Phonemic Consciousness Speech Remedy Science Studying Manipulative Elkonin Field Preschool Kindergarten Classroom
$25.99
Worth: $25.99
(as of Nov 22, 2024 14:45:21 UTC – Particulars)
Product Description
Magnetic Letter Tiles: Our phonics magnets are the proper academic device for studying and growing studying abilities. The package consists of 140 magnetic tiles for studying frequent English phonics patterns, 4 magnetic Elkonin Field, and 4 robust baggage.
Construct Phonemic Consciousness: Every sound field represents a phoneme ingredient. It is a nice academic educating device to assist college students construct phonological consciousness abilities by segmenting phrases into particular person phonemes. Pronounce a goal phrase slowly, stretching it out by the sound, and say every sound within the phrase. Ask the kid to repeat the phrase.
Coloration-Coded: The magnetic letter tiles are color-coded into distinct teams, masking all main, digraphs, trigraphs, phonemes, R-controlled vowels, and vowel groups. Nice ESL educating supplies that assist children who study English as a second language, or assist with common speech points.
Thick and Sturdy for Tough Play: Every magnet toy is product of premium high quality, thick foam materials to face up to hours of tough play. Molded with easy, rounded corners for simple grip. Designed for little fingers. Additionally, it’s simple to scrub with a moist fabric. Foam magnets have robust suction energy, and so they can stick firmly to any magnetic receiving floor, corresponding to fridges, iron doorways, magnetic whiteboards, and so on.
No Mess: That includes 4 reusable group baggage, making it simple to maintain every little thing neatly organized. Excellent for each house and classroom, it ensures that studying can occur wherever, anytime.
5 reviews for Aizweb Magnetic Letters, Phonics Video games Letter Tiles Alphabet Magnets Be taught to Learn Spelling Phonemic Consciousness Speech Remedy Science Studying Manipulative Elkonin Field Preschool Kindergarten Classroom
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$25.99
Gannon –
Great resource
Great learning tool for kids with reading. I do wish there were a couple of blank tiles to use if you needed additional letters, lose one or anything else.
Peter D. Kittle –
Kid-friendly learning tool
The Aizweb Magnetic Letters/Phonics game is a good addition to my spouse’s first grade classroom. It’s pretty simple — you put a picture tile onto a tray’s first square, then the child uses the letter tiles to spell out the word for the picture. The magnetic “trays” (for lack of a better term) are effective because they’re magnetic, too, and hold the pictures and letters solidly. The use of two colors — blue for the consonants, red for the vowels — also helps reinforce for students the different kinds of letters. The kit includes some double-vowels on single tiles to allow for spelling some words that wouldn’t otherwise fit in the trays, too.The tiles are made of some kind of foam board, and they’re pre-cut but you have to pop them out yourself. This was not challenging or anything, but it was a little prep that I wasn’t expecting. The kit does come with plastic bags to put all the pieces in to keep things organized, and my wife is using the foam board’s 60 holes (after popping out the tiles) as a thing for students to use in learning to count to higher numbers, so no waste.Overall, it’s a nice product for teachers of younger kids, daycare owners, homeschooling parents, and others who want to help kids develop their literacy skills.
SciTeacher –
Can go beyond simple CVC words; unsure exactly what some pics are
To be upfront with you, this is a review written from the perspective of the very basic level of a mom helping kids learn to read, not a teacher. In my opinion, this is a great kit for teaching reading – unlike other kits, this one has magnets that go beyond simple CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) words. For example: there is another “e” that is a slightly different color than the 2 other “e”s for use as a silent “e” at the end of the word. There is a magnet showing “ck” on the same magnet to represent that we say these sounds as one. All the letters (2 each of the alphabet) and combination of letters as seen in the seller’s pictures were included. All the magnets are about 1 inch by 1 inch in size with rounded corners and are sturdy even though made of foam-type material (note- definitely a choking hazard for applicable individuals). As the seller states, there are magnets to cover “all major digraphs, trigraphs, phonemes, R-controlled vowels, and vowel teams” that are said as one sound so this is a magnet set that can grow with the learner as the learner progresses in reading. Magnetic Elkonin boxes of different sizes are also included, although, unlike the seller’s pictures, pictures are not usually used inside these boxes. The boxes are only to represent the letters representing the different sounds in the word (which is why the magnet “ck” has 2 letters but fits in only 1 Elkonin box). I checked it out and these Elkonin boxes can be used with dry erase markers allowing you to use them also to practice writing and spelling. The letter magnets are large enough to see in a one-to-one or small group setting and I like the size so it is easy to put the entire alphabet on a small white board to pick from. I like that the magnets are color coded by type (consonants, vowels, and groups as above). There are small zip-close bags to store the different types of magnets. Here is what I wish: a small instruction sheet that at least explains what the pictures are – surprisingly it is not always obvious. For example: I thought one magnet was “moon” but then saw in the seller’s pictures that it was being used as “night.” That may or may not have occurred to me at some point. There is one picture that I am still confused about. I also wish many more pictures were included as this is the really fun and helpful part. I also wish these picture magnets were larger so what it is depicting would be easier to see and recognize, especially in a small group setting. So this is a magnetic letter kit with the real strength of having not just alphabet magnets, but also magnets representing the usual English letter sounds. This is SO much easier than hunting for the various individual magnets. Plus, this visually represents that these letters are said together as one sound and allows them to fit in one Elkonin box. This kit will not teach you how to teach reading, but it is a tool that will be useful beyond simple CVC words and therefore useful for much longer in the progression of learning to read. You may want to supplement with your own pictures. Hope this helps.
S.D. –
Helpful tool
This set is so versatile and helpful in working on early reading skills. Most other sets stop at CVC words but this one will take you all the way through the learning-to-read phase and into the reading-to-learn phase. It’s not a particularly fancy product but all of the parts are well made and durable enough for home or small-group use. The magnets stick well to our whiteboard and our fridge and I like that the Elkonin/sound boxes have enough spaces for more advanced words. Some of the picture magnets can be a little open to interpretation on what they’re portraying exactly but none of them are unhelpful. There is no reason to aim these only at preschool or kindergarten kids; my 7 year old is reading pretty well in 2nd grade and we’re still using them for practicing skills and working out spelling words. It’s a great set.
BDay –
Nice, sturdy pieces and the magnets really work
The box comes with a variety of letter and letter combination tiles as well as picture tiles and four tiles that they can cling to, each with a different number of spaces. You are supposed to put the picture tile in one and then spell the word in the others. Because there are so many different letter and sound combinations, there are occasionally different ways to spell the words so you should figure out in advance how you want it to be done and put out the appropriate tiles and the board with the appropriate number of spaces.I like this tool as a way of addressing word sounds. By having tiles with digraphs and trigraphs, children can see that you often need more than one letter to make a single sound and that you often have the same sound in many different words. These are valuable skills. I also like that there is an e tile with a different color that can represent a silent e. With so many letter and letter combination tiles, you can spell far more words than the ones for which there are picture tiles.There are no directions or recommendations for use with this so you have to make it up as you go along. That might be difficult for some people.The other concern I have is that there are six tiles in particular that I wasn’t quite sure what they are trying to convey. Certainly, I think a child might have some difficulty. An easy fix as you would just choose that in advance, but it is something to be aware of.There are multiple plastic bags in which you can put everything. The letter boards to not all fit in them. One is too tall. I took all the bags and the spare board and stored them in a gallon-sized plastic bag for easy storage as they box they arrived in was not practical for keeping them once the tiles were separated.