PRINT ACTIVITY

Time to Make a Rhyme

In this activity, you will help your child identify rhyming words in familiar nursery rhymes and produce additional words that rhyme.

Learning Area(s): Language and Communication; Reading and Writing

MATERIALS


  • nursery rhyme books, posters, and/or songs
  • bucket/pail (if acting out “Jack and Jill”) or other props

LET'S PLAY


Begin by teaching your child a nursery rhyme, such as “Jack and Jill,” “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” “Baa Baa Black Sheep,” “Humpty Dumpty,”  or “Little Bo Peep”. Read or recite the nursery rhyme for your child using a rhythmic voice that emphasizes the rhyming words.

Here is an example using the “Jack and Jill” nursery rhyme:

Jack and Jill
Went up the hill
To fetch a pail of water.
Jack fell down
And broke his crown
And Jill came tumbling after!

Then say, “Let’s act out this nursery rhyme by pretending to be Jack and Jill. Do you want to be Jack or Jill? Let’s pretend we are climbing up a hill to get a pail of water. Then we’ll fall down the hill. Let’s play!” Show your child what to do and encourage her to act it out with you. This will help your child gain a better understanding of the meaning of key words in the nursery rhyme; for example, you can pretend that it’s hard work to climb up a steep hill which makes you out of breath, that the pail of water is very heavy to carry, that it hurts when you hit your head or crown, and  what tumbling looks like.

After you have acted it out, repeat the nursery rhyme, pointing out the rhyming words. You can emphasize the rhyming words by saying them differently or using a different voice than the other words in the rhyme. As you recite the rhyme, pause to encourage your child to “fill in” the rhyming words.

After your child is able to fill in the rhyming word pairs, invite her to come up with other words that rhyme with the word pairs (Jill-hill, down-crown). Remember to point out that words that rhyme don’t have to be real words; they can be nonsense words. You can say something like, “I heard some rhyming words in “Jack and Jill.” Jill and hill are rhyming words. They have the same ending sound. Say those words with me…Jill…hill. I can think of another word that rhymes with Jill and hill. It is BillWill you tell me another word that rhymes with Jillhill, and Bill? (Hint: I just said the word in my last sentence.) Yes… will rhymes with Jill, Bill and hill. Let’s try another one. In our nursery rhyme, the words down and crown rhyme. Jack fell down and broke his crown. They have the same ending sound. Tell me another word that rhymes with down and crown.” If child struggles, provide two choices, one correct (town, gown, or nonsense word zown) and one incorrect (pail or broke). You can act out your silly new rhyme together, for example:

Jack and Jill
went up the hill
along with Bill
who forgot his pill.
They have a bucket to fill,
I know they will!

But Jack fell down
and broke his crown.
He yelled “oooh”, “ouch”, and “zown!”
Then they went into town 
where Jill bought a gown,
and they lived happily ever after!

TIPS

  • Children usually begin to produce rhymes themselves when they are 4- to 5.5-years-old. Rhyming is a skill that takes lots of practice. Encourage your child to practice rhyming words by playing rhyming games any time throughout the day.
  • Once your child knows how to create rhyming words, you can extend this learning by playing a family movement game. Line up members of the family to start on one side of the room. Announce a word (choose a word with only one syllable to keep it simple), and each family member takes a turn saying a word that rhymes. Every time two words rhyme, everyone can take a giant step forward (or children can choose their own special move, like a jump and twirl forward). The goal is to generate rhymes and hear enough words that rhyme to get the the other side of the room by the end of the chant or story!
  • Read rhyming books, such as:
    • Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? By Bill Martin, Jr.
    • Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss
    • Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin, Jr.
    • Sheep in a Jeep by Nancy Shaw
    • Sherm the Germ by Dr. John Hutton
    • Clark the Shark by Bruce Hale
  • If you don’t have access or aren’t familiar with nursery rhymes, use songs, raps, or poems your family enjoys in order to point out rhyming words. Your child will be able recognize rhyming words more easily if it is a chant or song they are familiar with.

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