🎨 Movement & Sensory Activities Bank
30+ Quick Literacy Activities for Active Learners
From Lesson 5.1: Tiny Habits, Big Gains
Words That Bloom
🧠 Why Movement + Literacy?
Active children learn better when their bodies are engaged!
Movement and sensory experiences:
- Strengthen memory pathways
- Increase engagement and joy
- Connect abstract concepts (letters) to concrete experiences
- Work WITH your child’s natural energy, not against it
Every activity here takes 30 seconds to 3 minutes.
🎵 SOUND & RHYTHM ACTIVITIES
For All Ages:
1. Syllable Clapping
- Clap hands for each syllable in names, objects, or words
- Example: “Re-bec-ca” (clap-clap-clap), “dog” (clap)
- Bonus: Clap loudly for long words, softly for short words
2. Name That Sound
- Make animal sounds, vehicle noises, or sound effects
- Ask: “What makes that sound?”
- Connect to books: “That’s the sound the bus made in our story!”
3. Rhyme Time Dance
- Say a word, child moves until they think of a rhyme
- Example: “Cat!” → dance → “HAT!”
- Works great during transitions
4. Singing Directions
- Turn cleanup or transitions into songs
- Example: “We’re putting toys away, away, away!” (to “Farmer in the Dell”)
- Add child’s name: “Emma’s putting socks on, socks on, socks on!”
5. Echo Game
- You say a word with rhythm: “BUH-tter-fly”
- Child echoes back: “BUH-tter-fly”
- Add movements for each syllable
6. Letter Sound Safari
- “I hear a /sssss/ sound. Can you find something that makes /sssss/?”
- Child finds and says: “Snake! Ssssnake!”
✋ TOUCH & TRACE ACTIVITIES
For All Ages:
7. Skywriting
- Make BIG letter shapes in the air with whole arm
- Say letter name or sound while writing
- Bonus: Draw letters on each other’s backs and guess!
8. Shampoo Letters
- Write letters in shampoo foam on bath wall
- Wash away and start fresh
- Zero pressure, maximum fun!
9. Play-Doh Words
- Roll Play-Doh “snakes” to form letters
- Build sight words or names
- Smash when done (sensory release!)
10. Sand/Rice Tray Writing
- Fill shallow tray with sand, rice, or salt
- Child traces letters with fingers
- Shake tray to “erase” and start over
11. Finger Paint Letters
- Paint letters on paper, windows, or easel
- Focus on the motion, not perfection
- Great for kinesthetic learners!
12. Textured Letters
- Cut letters from sandpaper, felt, or foam
- Child traces with fingers while saying sound
- Multi-sensory input = stronger memory
13. Body Letters
- Make letter shapes with your whole body
- L = stand with leg out, T = arms wide
- Take photos for a letter book!
🏃 MOVEMENT & ACTION ACTIVITIES
For All Ages:
14. Jump the Sounds
- You say a word slowly: “C-A-T”
- Child jumps for each sound
- Blend the sounds together in the air!
15. Walk & Talk Stories
- Take a walk and make up a story together
- Each person adds a sentence
- Point out environmental print: “Look! STOP sign!”
16. Alphabet Hop
- Tape letters to floor or use chalk outside
- Call out a letter, child hops to it
- Variation: “Hop to a letter that makes /b/!”
17. Action Word Charades
- Act out verbs from books you’ve read
- “Show me what the dinosaur did!” (STOMP!)
- Build vocabulary through movement
18. Letter Hunt
- “Let’s find 5 things that start with /s/!”
- Race around house or yard finding objects
- Touch each object and say its name
19. Rhyme Freeze Dance
- Play music, child dances
- Stop music: “Quick! Say a word that rhymes with ‘fun’!”
- Dance continues after they answer
20. Book Acting
- Re-enact favorite stories with movements
- Jump like the frog, stomp like the giant
- Makes stories memorable!
👀 VISUAL & SPATIAL ACTIVITIES
For All Ages:
21. I Spy Letters
- “I spy a letter that makes /m/. What do you see?”
- Great for car rides or waiting rooms
- Builds environmental print awareness
22. Pattern Making
- Use blocks, toys, or objects to make letter shapes
- “Can you make the letter T with these cars?”
- Spatial reasoning + literacy!
23. Photo Letter Hunt
- Take photos of letters found in real world
- Make a digital “alphabet book”
- Review photos together: “Remember where we found X?”
24. Build-A-Word
- Use magnetic letters on fridge
- Build simple words together
- Child moves letters into place (tactile + visual)
25. Window Words
- Use window clings or dry erase markers
- Write words on windows or mirrors
- Wash off and start fresh!
🍃 OUTDOOR & NATURE ACTIVITIES
For All Ages:
26. Stick Letters
- Find sticks and arrange them into letters
- Make names or simple words
- Take photo before wind blows them away!
27. Chalk Syllables
- Write word with chalk, draw boxes for each syllable
- Jump into boxes while saying syllables
- “Din-o-saur!” (jump-jump-jump)
28. Nature Alphabet
- Find natural objects for each letter
- A = acorn, B = bark, etc.
- Take photos or collect in egg carton
29. Sidewalk Story
- Write one word per sidewalk square
- Walk and read your story
- Silly stories work best!
30. Sound Walks
- Walk and listen for sounds
- Name what you hear: “I hear a bird! Chirp-chirp!”
- Connect sounds to letters: “Bird starts with /b/!”
⏱️ WAITING TIME ACTIVITIES
Perfect for appointments, car lines, restaurants
31. Hand Games
- Trace letters on child’s palm, they guess
- Take turns being the “writer”
32. Invisible Writing
- “Write” letters in the air
- Other person guesses
- No materials needed!
33. Word Chain
- You say a word: “Dog”
- Child says a word starting with last letter: “Goat”
- Continue the chain!
34. Story Starters
- “Once upon a time…” then take turns adding one sentence
- Builds narrative skills and imagination
- Great for long waits
🎯 Age-Specific Adaptations
Ages 2-4:
- Focus on BIG movements (whole body)
- Keep activities to 30-60 seconds
- Emphasize fun sounds and silly noises
- Use simple, repetitive activities
- Best activities: #1, 2, 7, 8, 14, 30
Ages 5-7:
- Add letter-sound connections
- Extend activities to 2-3 minutes
- Incorporate simple word building
- Challenge with rhyming
- Best activities: #3, 9, 15, 16, 21, 27
Ages 8+:
- Focus on word meanings and vocabulary
- Use longer words (3-4 syllables)
- Create sentences or stories
- Add spelling challenges
- Best activities: #15, 17, 23, 29, 33, 34
📋 Weekly Activity Planner
Pick 3-5 activities to try this week. Mix up the senses!
| Day | Activity # | Activity Name | How It Went |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | |||
| Tue | |||
| Wed | |||
| Thu | |||
| Fri | |||
| Sat | |||
| Sun |
🌟 Finding Your Child’s Sweet Spot
Try activities from each category to discover what clicks!
My child responds best to:
□ Sound & Rhythm – Musical, auditory learner
□ Touch & Trace – Hands-on, tactile learner
□ Movement & Action – Kinesthetic, energetic learner
□ Visual & Spatial – Observant, pattern-focused learner
□ Outdoor & Nature – Needs space, loves exploration
Once you know their preference, use those activities most!
💡 Pro Tips
Making It Work:
✓ Follow their energy – High energy? Movement activities. Calm? Touch & trace.
✓ Keep it short – 1-3 minutes is perfect. Stop while they still want more!
✓ No pressure – If they’re not into it, skip it and try another.
✓ Repeat favorites – Kids love repetition. Same game 20 times? Perfect!
✓ Let them lead – If they want to do it “wrong,” follow their play.
✓ Celebrate attempts – Not perfection. “You jumped for every sound!”
🚫 What to Avoid
❌ Forcing activities when child is tired or hungry
❌ Making it feel like a test
❌ Correcting too much – focus on connection!
❌ Doing activities just because “we should”
❌ Comparing to siblings or other children
🎯 Your Top 5 Go-To Activities
After trying several, pick your family’s favorites:
Keep this list visible! Use these activities as your “literacy snacks” throughout the day.
📈 Success Looks Like…
✓ Your child asks to do activities again
✓ They create their own versions
✓ Movement feels natural, not forced
✓ You’re both laughing and having fun
✓ Learning is happening without anyone noticing
Remember: The goal isn’t to do all 34 activities.
The goal is to find 3-5 that your child loves and do those over and over.
Repetition + Joy = Learning That Sticks 🌸
© Words That Bloom | wordsthatbloom.org