9 Alphabet Games to Play With DIY Alphabet Stones

Looking for fun and engaging alphabet games that are perfect for pre- and early readers? Games that will help your child learn alphabet names or letter sounds or sight words using one simple DIY resource? Then you are in the right place! Below you will find nine great early reading games to play with DIY alphabet stones.

This fun series of hands-on alphabet games is perfect for letter learning with preschool, kindergarten and first grade students.

Games to play with DIY alphabet rocks

9 Alphabet Games to Play With DIY Alphabet Stones

Why Play Reading Games?

As with every area of child development, some children will learn to read earlier, with seemingly less effort than others. Most of our children, with our support, will get there ā€“ in their own time. However, one mistake I have adult make is jumping too quickly into relying solely upon paper-based literacy activities for teaching early literacy skills. Expecting your child to sit passively and recite letter names or sight words by rote makes literacy learning with young children a whole lot more difficult than it needs to be.

In my experience, young children respond much more positively to fun, engaging, hands on activities that involve them in doing, problem solving, moving or exploring, instead of learning passively. And this goes for learning about letters, or sight word, or anything really.

Why Play With Alphabet Stones?

Being outside, picking flowers from the garden and playing in our mud kitchen, is just about ALL my kindergarten daughter wants to do now. Itā€™s great! With this goal in mind, I set out to create an outdoor game that would support letter recognition whilst being fun and engaging ā€“ a set of alphabet stones for some alphabet games seemed the perfect place to start. Of course, alphabet rocks or stones work just as well for indoor learning too.

Can Alphabet Stones Really Support Alphabet Learning?

Developing recognition of individual letters is about much more than learning to recite the alphabet. My daughter knows how to sing the alphabet song but this is merely rote learning of song lyrics though repetition and memorization. What I wanted to focus on during our outdoor activity time was actual recognition of individual letters. I knew the stones would help to engage my childā€™s interest in letters and help with her letter recognition, a key step in the development of being able to read.

Of course, alphabet stones can be used for many different aspects of literacy learners with pre- and early readersā€¦but weā€™ll get to those in just a moment. Letā€™s get these stones made first!

How to Make Alphabet Stones

You will need:

  • Small, smooth rocks, stones or pebbles (light coloured stones are best)
  • Permanent marker pens or paint markers
  • Mod Podge sealant, or varnish spray
  • A small carry bag

To make:

These are super quick and easy to make. Simply write each letter of the alphabet on a stone with a permanent marker and then seal it with mod podge or spray varnish. Leave them overnight to harden and dry.

Be aware that although the varnish will help seal and protect the letters from rubbing off, it doesnā€™t make them waterproof or scratch proof.

Depending upon which activities you will use your stones for, you might like to make some extra vowel stones and those for common letters, or duplicates if your child has multiples of the same letter in their own name. You might also like to make both an upper- and a lowercase set.

9 Early Reading Games to Play with Alphabet Rocks

The alphabet games on this list become increasingly more difficult as you move through the list. The early ideas are great for pre-readers who are learning to identify the letters of their own name or beginning to name individual letters, while those at the end of the list work best with early readers with some alphabet/beginning word knowledge.

1. Find Your Name: Starting with personally significant letters makes the learning experience more meaningful for your child. Hide the letters of your childā€™s name around the garden and ask them to head off on a hunt to find them. Once they have found them all, invite your child to help you lay them out in order and then sing the letters and their name to a little tune.

Once they have mastered the identity and order of their own name alphabet stones, you can also add some other personally significant letters, for example, /d/ for Dad, /m/ for Mum or /n/ for Nan.

alphabet rocks make my name activity

2. Letter Hunt: Hide the alphabet stones around the garden. Give your child a small carry bag and set them off on a mission to find the letters. When they find a letter, ask what the letter is, or say the letter name to them. You might say, ā€œYouā€™ve found the letter s, it likes to make a sss sound in words.ā€

In What Order Should I Introduce the Letters of the Alphabet?

Depending on your childā€™s age, ability and interest you might start with just a small collection of letters. Many teachers start off with the letters S A T P I N as from these six letters (or rather, the sounds they make) you can form many first ā€˜sound outā€™ words ā€“ such as it, in, at. As your child masters this smaller collection of letters, add two or three more at a time to extend the learning experience. You might continue to add your letters in this order ā€“ M D G O C K E R U B H F L J W V X Y Z Q.

Alphabet rock hunt

3. Order the Alphabet Stones: Once your child is up to finding all 26 stones you can work together to place them in alphabetical order. It may be beneficial to have them look at the letter, listen to you say the letter name and them ask them to repeat the letter back to you, to engage visual, auditory and verbal learning. Sing the alphabet song together as a reward for putting your stones in order.

alphabetical order game with alphabet rocks

4. Play ā€˜Iā€™m Thinking of a Letterā€¦ā€™: Without your child seeing, choose one alphabet stone and hide it in the palm of your hand. Invite your child to guess which letter you are holding by saying, ā€œIā€™m thinking of a letter that I hear at the beginning of the word ___.ā€ For example, if you are holding the letter h, you might say hen. Check if their response is correct by showing them the stone in your hand.

5. Letter Jump: Create a path of letter stones along the grass or paving, each placed a small step apart. Invite your child to jump from letter to letter, saying each letter name (or letter sound) aloud as they jump over it. You can try all different sorts of jumps too. Start with two footed kangaroo jumps, then move onto squatting frog jumps or try one-footed hops. For children who are learning to read sight words, arrange letters as individual words to read aloud as they are jumped over.

alphabet letter jump with alphabet rocks

6. Match Lower to Upper Case Letters: Using two sets of letter stones, one with upper case and one with lower case letters, use the letters in a matching game. Ask your child to find the lowercase t and match it to the uppercase T. Again, start with a smaller collection of matching letters and add to them over time.

Hands On Alphabet Games with Alphabet Stones: Letter Match

7. Initial Letter Sounds: Place the stones around the garden in purposeful places. For instance, place T under a table, place P on a path, place F next to a flower and so on. Then say to your child ā€œWhat letter (or sound) does table start with? Can you find it for me under a tableā€¦ā€ or ā€œCan you find the letter P? Iā€™ll give you a clue, it is on something starting with P.ā€ This will continue to build knowledge of individual letter names and the sounds they make.

8. Sight Word Hunt: Hide the letters around your garden again but this time arrange them as individual words (example shown below). Invite your child to find and read each word. Once all of the words have been found, have your child stand in the middle of your outdoor space. Call out a word and have them race to where that word was hidden and say it aloud.

Sight words hunt with alphabet rocks

9. Making Words: If your child has a good knowledge of the individual letter names and sounds, and is at the stage of making simple CVC words (CVC words are made up of a consonant, vowel and consonant, like cup or dog), or if they are learning sight words, invite them to use the stones to find the correct letters to make individual words. You might ask your child to make a particular word or set them a challenge to make five CVC words or five three letter words.

More Alphabet Games & Activities to Explore;

Alphabet Books
Alphabots Matching Game
Printable Alphabet Matching Game

12 Comments

  1. I was teaching a friends kid to read when i was baby sitting recently and I realised how ridiculous it is that the letters have differnt names to the sounds. Like t says ta etc. Do you call it an “Aye” or an “a”?

  2. These blocks are gorgeously fabulous! The photo itself is a wonderful print or poster! Would it be way too fabulous if the small/lower case letters were on the flip side?? šŸ™‚

  3. A great idea Christie – and I love jeane’s suggestion for putting the lower case on the other side. Having resources like these available for play is such a good way for kids to learn letters. My youngest loves to play with our alphabet fridge magnets. She turns each letter in to a member of a family, but calls them all by their letter names – so playing her way, but getting the literacy teaching too. šŸ™‚

  4. This is a great idea, my little girl is into numbers at the moment so I might make her some number stones. Where did you get your paint pens? I’ve seen paint pens at an art shop but they were pretty expensive šŸ™ Did you need to varnish the stones too?
    Thanks for the idea!

    1. Mel, we have a Riot Art Store near us and I managed to get some double ended paint pens that have two different colours which made the price a bit more reasonable. They also had the paint pens discounted when I was there. I think acrylic paint would work too. I haven’t varnished our stones but did think that I would spray them with a spray sealant – though I never did this with our story stones and they have only rubbed off a little over time.

  5. I was wondering if anyone has suggestions for which kind of paint pens to use? I am looking on amazon and it seems there is some difficulty with paint pents on different mediums. I don’t want it to rub off. Thanks in advance!

  6. Pingback: Twenty...Learning Letter Recognition and Sound Activities for Kids | Imogen's Angels

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