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    Boost your child's reading skills with our engaging Reading Comprehension Consonants Worksheets for Ages 4-6! Designed specifically for early readers, these worksheets combine fun activities with educational content to help kids grasp essential consonant sounds and improve their reading comprehension. Each worksheet features colorful illustrations, simple sentences, and interactive exercises that make learning enjoyable and effective. Perfect for both classroom and at-home practice, these worksheets will build a strong foundation in phonics and help your child develop the confidence to read independently. Enhance your child's learning journey with our carefully crafted resources today!


    Check out this FREE Trial Lesson on Consonants for age 4-6!

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    With answer key
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    • 4-6
    • Reading comprehension
    • Consonants
    Let's Look for Blends Worksheet
    Let's Look for Blends Worksheet

    Let's Look for Blends Worksheet

    Does your child love trains? Get them to read the story or help them read it aloud. Ask them to trace the words that start with blends on the dotted lines. This exercise will help them improve their blend-identifying skills!
    Let's Look for Blends Worksheet
    Worksheet
    Vowel and Consonant Sounds: Assessment Worksheet
    Vowel and Consonant Sounds: Assessment Worksheet

    Vowel and Consonant Sounds: Assessment Worksheet

    Test young elementary students on vowel and consonant sounds with this friendly phonics assessment worksheet. Get kids to name each image and look at the word underneath. Ask them to sound out the word, then circle the missing letter to complete. This will help assess their knowledge and skills!
    Vowel and Consonant Sounds: Assessment Worksheet
    Worksheet
    Shhh... What Digraph? Worksheet
    Shhh... What Digraph? Worksheet

    Shhh... What Digraph? Worksheet

    Phonetics sounds can be combined to create a new sound - like a digraph. A great example is the /sh/ sound. Words like 'brush' and 'fish' can be heard. Ask your child to provide more examples. Look at the pictures in the PDF and see if they can identify the objects. Additionally, help them find the digraph missing from each word.
    Shhh... What Digraph? Worksheet
    Worksheet
    Cha, Cha, Cha: Find the /Ch/ Sound Worksheet
    Cha, Cha, Cha: Find the /Ch/ Sound Worksheet

    Cha, Cha, Cha: Find the /Ch/ Sound Worksheet

    Have your students identify the objects in the images and if they struggle, help them check for the /ch/ digraph. This digraph forms a new sound when two or more consonants are combined, so it can be helpful to point it out to them in the colourful printout.
    Cha, Cha, Cha: Find the /Ch/ Sound Worksheet
    Worksheet
    The SH Digraph Worksheet
    The SH Digraph Worksheet

    The SH Digraph Worksheet

    There are many phonetic sounds, each with its own unique sound. When two or more consonants are combined to create a new sound, it's called a digraph. Example: the sh digraph creates the /sh/ sound. Have kids look at the pictures and say the words aloud. Help them circle the images ending with /sh/, like 'wash'.
    The SH Digraph Worksheet
    Worksheet
    Consonant Blend Dr and Tr Printable Worksheet
    Consonant Blend Dr and Tr Printable Worksheet

    Consonant Blends: "Dr" and "Tr" Printable

    Pictures of the words provide a visual cue, and sound-outs help with auditory cues.
    Consonant Blends: "Dr" and "Tr" Printable
    Worksheet
    Review the Blends Worksheet
    Review the Blends Worksheet

    Review the Blends Worksheet

    Consonant blends are two or three consonants that make a sound when pronounced together. L-blends like cl, bl, sl, fl and 3-letter blends like str, slp are common. This phonics worksheet helps early readers identify words containing two letter L-blends. Students must circle the words then read them aloud.
    Review the Blends Worksheet
    Worksheet


    Reading comprehension and knowledge of consonants in children aged 4-6 are crucial building blocks for literacy development. At this young age, children are typically in preschool or kindergarten, critical periods for laying the foundation for future reading and writing skills. Understanding consonants is a key component of phonemic awareness, which is the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words. This awareness directly impacts a child's ability to decode words when reading.

    Parents and teachers should care deeply about reading comprehension and consonants because these skills enable children to grasp the mechanics of language. Mastery of consonants helps children improve their pronunciation and phonetic skills, which are essential for verbal communication. Comprehension at this stage involves not just the ability to read words, but to understand them in context, fostering a love for reading. Early success in reading comprehension builds confidence and encourages a positive attitude towards learning.

    Investing time and effort in teaching consonants and promoting reading comprehension can prevent future literacy struggles, support academic achievement, and enhance cognitive development. As children grasp these concepts, they become more prepared for advanced reading and writing tasks, setting them on a path toward lifelong learning and success.