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Conversation guides, tip sheets, posters, and more — browse our selection of resources for your early literacy needs. 

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  • English
    Downloadable Resource

    Letters and Sounds Adventure Map

    Download our Letters and Sounds Adventure Map, a fun, play-based resource to support early language and sound awareness at home. This two-sided tool gives families simple ways to build early reading skills through everyday play. One side features the Adventure Map, with activities like noticing words that start with the same sound, making rhymes, and…

  • Adjusting how you engage a child with a book based on their age, keeps them interested and learning! Canada Animals by Paul Covello is full of great pictures for lots of ages. If a child is….. 0 to 12 months: Name and point to pictures. “Goose! Nest! Grass! Lake! Clouds! 12 months to 2 years:…

  • English
    Tip

    Babies love faces!

    1-5 minutes

    Babies notice faces before they notice other types of objects. This is why they love games like peek-a-boo and looking at themselves in mirrors. Babies also love seeing pictures of real faces in printed photographs and books!

  • English
    Tip

    Books and Diversity

    1-5 minutes

    Science tells us that babies’ brains notice race in the very early months of life. Preschoolers have lots of questions about the people they see around them as they shape their view of the world. One of the best ways for children to learn about diversity is through books.

  • Sharing books with children is a great way for them to hear lots of words. And you don’t even have to be able to speak or read the language that the book is written in. Choose any book, cuddle up with your child and look at the pictures together. You can talk about what you…

  • When reading books aloud to children, try using different voices, adding actions, singing parts of the book, and talking about words that rhyme! Here’s an idea. In the book, Chicka Chicka Boom Boom it says: “Chicka chicka boom boom, will there be enough room?” The adult can say: “Boom and room sound the same at…

  • When cuddling up and sharing a book with your little one, be physically affectionate and playful. You can even relate your own actions to the book. For example, point out body parts on characters in the book and touch or tickle your little ones. “Here are his knees. Here are yours!” “He gets a kiss…

  • Pre-school children are often full of questions! Did you know that it’s just as important to ask them questions too? For example, when reading aloud with them, ask your children about what they see in the book: “What do you think they are playing with on this page?” You can even ask questions about the…

  • Wordless picture books are told entirely through their illustrations — they are books without words, or sometimes just a few words. Creating your own stories with any book can create opportunities for literacy-rich conversations. It can build vocabulary, story sequencing and imagination!

  • English
    Tip

    Play out the actions in a book

    1-5 minutes

    Pre-school children are often full of questions! Did you know that it’s just as important to ask them questions too? When reading books with actions words, try acting out the actions to make the book interactive for the child. For example, when you read “clap your hands if you are happy”, clap your hands! When…