Letters J, K, and O with pictures
Meet more useful letters children can connect to clear picture words before they move into bigger reading shelves.
Meet more useful letters children can connect to clear picture words before they move into bigger reading shelves.
Keep the alphabet shelf moving with a few more letters children can hear, say, and notice in simple words.
Hear a whole word and choose the letter that comes at the beginning.
Read and recognise words like cat, bat, hat, and mat.
Use tiny story words that help children listen to and read very short sentence patterns.
Move into tiny reading-and-speaking words children hear often in classroom and home talk.
Blend small words into tiny reading phrases children can track and say aloud with confidence.
Read short three-word lines and match them to the best picture or scene.
Look at a picture and choose the short line that matches it best.
Read and blend short ad words like pad, sad, and dad.
Read and blend am words like jam, ram, and yam.
Read and blend et words like net, pet, and wet.
Use these shelves only when you want a more focused list.
Letter recognition, first sounds, and picture-supported early English for children beginning to notice print.
Open subject shelfTiny useful words and first reading patterns that help children move from letters into early word reading.
Open subject shelfMove from early decoding into connected reading, comprehension, summary, comparison, and evidence-based response work across the grades.
Open subject shelfA gentle Malayalam shelf moving from full akshara familiarity into picture words, home words, and simple early reading.
Open subject shelfA warm Hindi shelf with swar familiarity, picture words, bina matra words, and simple early phrases.
Open subject shelfBuild from counting and comparison into fractions, measurement, place value, rounding, data, and practical problem-solving across the grades.
Open subject shelfTravel from family and everyday observation into habitats, maps, resources, science ideas, and community-linked thinking.
Open subject shelf