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We can all agree that classrooms are busy places, with little time to spare. As teachers, we have to get the most we can out of every instructional minute. Doing so enables us to structure the day with time for more exploration, discovery, invention, and dare we say play?

There are few things that sap more instructional time than teaching a Letter of the Week (LOTW). I’m sorry to my preschool and kindergarten teacher friends who use these programs, but it’s the truth. Teaching a letter of the week is too slow. Too isolated. Too painful to watch.

If you’re unfamiliar with Letter of the Week, it typically goes like this (opens in a new window) or this: One letter is the focus for the week. That letter, and letter sound, are taught all week. Craft activities, songs, books, and snack choices all revolve around the letter. “S” week might involve a spider craft, making salty or sour snacks, using socks as puppets, and singing an S animal song (opens in a new window). No doubt there’s a lot of fun in there, but a lot more mileage can be gotten out of those instructional minutes.

Pre-K Pages (opens in a new window), a blog about “all things preschool” has a good post on the topic that includes arguments for moving away from LOTW, including the fact that focusing on letters and sounds in isolation makes it difficult for students to understand and apply letter-sound knowledge to real reading and writing. Susan Neuman and Kathleen Roskos describe what the difference between isolated practice and meaningful letter games and sound activities look like in classrooms within Whatever happened to developmentally appropriate practices in early literacy? (opens in a new window)

There are lots and lots of ways teachers can focus on letters and sounds to promote literacy without using LOTW. Classroom instruction that focus on developing phonemic awareness and phonics skill in students, as well as methods like Word Study in which students actively work with (usually) three letters/sounds at a time, categorizing words and pictures to reveal differences and similarities among words. Words Their Way (opens in a new window) describes in detail the word study approach.

Letter of the Week has had a long history in our Pre-K and K classrooms. It’s time to say goodbye.

About the Author

Along with her background as a professor, researcher, writer, and teacher, Joanne Meier is a mom. Join Joanne as she shares her experiences raising her own young readers, and guides parents and teachers on the best practices in reading.

Publication Date
October 13, 2010
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