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Print awareness letters and print symbols

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Master Letters and Print Symbols for Reading Success

You will learn to identify letters, punctuation marks, and other print symbols in books and written text. You will practice recognizing the difference between letters, numbers, and special symbols.

Introduction

You will discover the amazing world of letters and print symbols that make up all the books and writing you see around you. When you learn about written English features, you build the foundation for becoming a great reader. Letters are the building blocks that create words, and print symbols help you understand how to read those words correctly.

What Are Letters and Print Symbols?

Letters are the shapes that make up our alphabet from A to Z. You see letters everywhere - in your name, in books, and on signs. When letters come together, they make words that tell us stories and give us information.

Print symbols are special marks that help us read better. These include punctuation marks like periods (.), question marks (?), and exclamation points (!). You also see numbers like 1, 2, 3 and other symbols like & or # in different places.

Types of Letters You Will Learn

You will work with two main types of letters. Capital letters are big letters like A, B, C that you use at the start of names and sentences. Lowercase letters are smaller letters like a, b, c that you use in most words.

Understanding alphabet order and letter formation helps you recognize letters quickly when you read. You will practice identifying both types of letters in books and stories.

Reading Direction and Print Flow

When you read English, you always start at the left side of the page and move to the right side. This is called reading from left to right. You also read from the top of the page down to the bottom.

The spaces between words help you know where one word ends and another begins. This connects to your learning about spacing between words and left to right reading direction.

Key Terms & Definitions

Letters: The shapes from A to Z that you use to make words when you read and write.

Capital Letters: Big letters like A, B, C that you use at the start of names and sentences.

Lowercase Letters: Small letters like a, b, c that you use in most parts of words.

Punctuation Marks: Special symbols that help you know how to read sentences, like periods, question marks, and exclamation points.

Period: A small dot (.) that you put at the end of telling sentences.

Question Mark: A curved symbol (?) that you put at the end of asking sentences.

Exclamation Mark: A straight line with a dot (!) that shows excitement or strong feelings.

Print Symbols: All the marks you see in writing, including letters, numbers, and punctuation.

Reading Direction: The way you move your eyes from left to right and top to bottom when you read.

Word Spacing: The empty spaces between words that help you see where each word starts and stops.

Practice Activities

You will practice finding letters in your name and in simple books. Look for capital letters at the beginning of sentences and names. You will also hunt for different punctuation marks and learn what job each one does.

Try reading simple sentences and notice how you move from left to right. Point to each word as you read to practice following the correct direction.

What You Need to Know First

Before learning about letters and print symbols, you should understand basic book conventions and identifying book parts. You should also know how to follow print direction when reading and understand word spacing in print.

Related Topics & Connections

Learning about letters and print symbols connects to many other reading skills. You will use this knowledge when you study caps and punctuation marks and punctuation marks in sentences.

This topic prepares you for letter formation and legible printing and printing letters and words formation. You will also build toward understanding punctuation and capitalization rules and basic writing rules.

Your next step will be learning about letter formation with spacing between letters, which builds directly on what you learn here.