fbpx

Kindergarten Sight Words

Kindergarten sight words are words that a child learns to recognize in their whole forms rather than sounding them out. These words appear frequently in texts or are difficult to decode. Some reading programs emphasize sight words more than others.

The Good and the Beautiful kindergarten sight words are taught throughout our Level K Language Arts Reading Booster A program, which can be used separately from the course.

New Level K Language Arts with Reading Booster A Books


This post shares common kindergarten sight word lists, as well as flashcards and posters, and weighs the pros and cons of focusing on sight-word memorization versus teaching phonics.

The Good and the Beautiful Kindergarten Sight Word List

Kindergarten sight words games

The Good and the Beautiful Kindergarten Sight Words list is a select number of targeted words for early readers most helpful to children in kindergarten level.

Download a free The Good and the Beautiful Kindergarten Sight Words poster and flashcards plus activities!

Graphic of dots in a line

Learn more about our award-winning kindergarten language arts homeschool curriculum!

Level K Language Arts Quad Graphic
Graphic of dots in a line

Other Helpful Sight Word Lists

Dolch Sight Words List

Perhaps the most common lists of words contain Dolch sight words, which are a set of 220 sight words first developed in the 1930s and grouped by grade level.

Fry Sight Words List

First created by Dr. Edward Fry in the 1950s and updated in 1980, this list includes the most frequently used words in reading materials for children.

*Both the Dolch and Fry lists of sight words are commonly used and contain many words that can be spelled phonetically. The Good and the Beautiful does not recommend using these lists as sight words lists because many of the words should be decoded at this age rather than memorized.

Should Children Memorize Sight Words? 

Pros of Memorizing Sight WordsIf the child memorizes the most frequently used words in texts and doesn’t have to take time to stop and decode the words, then he or she can read more quickly and pleasantly.
Cons of Memorizing Sight WordsMost of the Dolch and Fry kindergarten sight words can be decoded easily. 

Children have only a certain amount of time to learn each day. Memorizing words can be just as hard and take just as long as learning to decode the words. Time spent memorizing high-frequency words can instead be applied to a good phonics program that teaches children how to decode and read those words, as well as many others.
The Good and the Beautiful Philosophy on Kindergarten Sight WordsThe Good and the Beautiful, one of the most widely used homeschool curriculum programs, focuses on phonics while also having kindergarteners memorize a short list of the highest-frequency words and words that can’t be decoded easily. This method has proven successful with tens of thousands of children using The Good and The Beautiful Language Arts Courses.

A little bit of practice each day goes a long way—consistency is the key. Practice sight words daily if possible, but don’t introduce too many at once. Younger children do best with four to eight sight words at a time.

Teaching sight words can be easy and fun with the simple practice ideas found in our free activity download.

Kindergarten sight word games
Kindergarten sight word games

Find these games and more in this free sight-words activity packet. Click the button below to download.

Check out these fun kindergarten resources!

Colorful & Fun Science for Littles Fields and Flowers & Wind and Waves Preschool–2nd Grade Purchase Here Graphic

You may also like . . .

Spell Color Words graphic square
Graphic Pencil Grip How and Why to Teach It

Join the Discussion

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments

  • Lisa Bradshaw

    Looking forward to making this part of our mornings the remainder of the summer! I’m having trouble printing, though — pages 2-4 seem to be a different size page than the rest of the document, which I did not notice until it printed cut-off. Will play with how it fits to page and print again, but thought I would mention it in case it is a problem for others, too.

    • Customer Support

      Thank you for bringing this to our attention, Lisa! Printer setting vary, but printing as ‘Fit’ rather than ‘Actual Size’ may help. We hope you enjoy the resources!

  • cw

    Will you make one of these for the first grade please?

    • Customer Support

      Update! We have created a list for First Grade Sight Words. Find it on our blog, here!

      Thank you for your suggestion! We’ll pass it on to our curriculum development team.

  • Nolubabalo

    This is good. Thanks for the help! 😍

  • Kelly

    Thanks so much!

  • Soraya Aloui

    A very insightful post, thank you so much!