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Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+
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Learning Resources

Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+

4.7
Regular price
€42,00
Sale price
€42,00
Regular price
€70,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 40% (€28,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • BUILD early literacy, increase vocabulary, and improve fluency
  • Cards can be used on their own as flash cards for early reading activities
  • Two to 4 kids compete to read and collect the most popcorn pieces.
  • Set includes 100 die-cut popcorn cards (92 with sight words and 8 Pop cards for game play) and storage box
  • For 2-4 players - Ages 5+

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Customer Reviews

Fun and versatile learning game!Perfect game for young readers! My five year old loves this game he received for Christmas although the actual rules frustrate him. We make up our own since the rules say to put back all your popcorn back in the container if you get a "Pop" but we just get up and "Pop"! (jump high in the air). He is learning so fast with this and enjoys it so much better than flash cards. Also when It is my turn to pick a popcorn, I give him a couple seconds for him to guess mine so he can take it from me. After all I want to make it fun for him as he is still learning them and when he is familiar with them I may play with the real rules. Highly recommended especially for the price! 5Worth its weight in silverOne of the hardest things to do while trying to teach your child to read is keep his/her attention. Well this game offers the opportunity to do it. The little popcorns are cute and the box is exciting. The game LOOKS fun. I believe the instructions for the game are pretty straight up. You know, you pick one to read, and then he picks one to read. Whoever has the most when you get tired wins. Also, the instructions say that when a "POP" card is picked, the player loses all his cards. BAD IDEA. That will not make the game fun. Instead, when we find a "POP" card, everyone has to stand up and pop around the room like a popcorn. Now this makes reading the cards exciting. The normal player instructions are a little boring for my 4 year old, too. But throw in his noirsy trash truck that gets to haul off the popcorns he earns, and it becomes a blast for him. Add a few imaginary products (like pink elephants, dog paint, dust mite houses, whatever) that he can buy with his earned popcorn currency, and it gets even better. For an imaginary rabbit my son will read any card he can. Then he wants to read one to get the rabbit food, an imaginary collar, a rabbit hutch, and on and on. With this approach I get tired way before he does.My son is 4 and is reading 1st grade level with absolute ease. This is mostly because of starfall.com and morestarfall.com , but these cards help him with the words that can't be sounded out so easily. These words have to be memorized... like the word "please" and "who" and "where" and "the". Other words in the game are: big, run, ran, if, to, today, what, then, well, ride, see, little, do, this, into, now, and, went, could, on, no, said, pretty, at, my, is, there, fun, all, say, are, under, some, soon, be, he, that, it, a, and an. There are 100 words in all, I think. We generally only play with about 15 at any one time, so there is repetition so he can remember them. I recommend this game if you plan on playing WITH your child, and often. There is no way a kid can learn anything from these all by himself or with another child. 5Great for late bloomer readersMy son was on his way to 1st grade an struggled all of kindergarten with sight words and reading. I was fearful once summer ended an 1st grade started he would be left in the dust by classmates who naturally didnt struggle with reading. Bought this game an really made it fun for him an our youngest son who is 4 years old. We changed the rules an 1st one to say the sight word kept it an if someone got a "pop" they had to put the hardest sight word for them in their pile back in the box (that way they could practice it more). For a few games we had to slowly sound out the letters for our oldest to be able to get the words as he was really behind, but after playing it a few times it just took an he was off on his own! In the end we love this game its quick an great after dinner before bed. 5Fun!We got this about a week ago to use now that school is over. I homeschool and want to keep them learning without them knowing they are learning. :) This is MUCH more fun than flashcards, but the same concept. I have a 5 and 6 year old and we played together. I made up my own rules...when they got 10 words that they read on their own, they'd get a small sticker or piece of candy. (I let them keep them in their hand and it was a great math exercise as well. If they had 7, I would ask, "How many more do you need to get to 10?") They were so excited that they were bouncing on my bed as we played. (Great idea!) So instead of telling them that they can't jump (as most moms do), I told them that if they got a "POP" card that they could jump "X" amount of times on the bed. They loved it! My older two even wanted to play! I got this for seven dollars and some change, but I'd pay full price looking back. Well, worth the money! The box is cardboard, but very durable, so are the popcorn pieces. I agree with the other moms that you should play WITH your child! Some of the words include: (easier ones like) me, in, as, a, but, I, go, ran, if, my, see, but, and, him, for, did, (harder ones like)said, with, some, ride, could, little, down, jump, play, under. So this could easily be adaptable if you are the one picking the pieces for them to read. (Or you could only put those cards in the box if you want them to choose.) You could play with several ages and only pick appropriate "level" words for each child, too. Again, well worth the money as it's fun, educational, and adaptable. So we'll get a full summer's worth of play (and more) out of this for sure! 5Great game but I changed it a bit at homeThis is a great game idea but I did make a couple of changes to the rules so my five-year-old son doesn't get frustrated.First, along with the box of words I have a glass jar full of colorful M&M's. At the end of the game everyone adds up how many sight words they got correct and they get to pull out that many M&M's out of the jar to eat. This makes it a much more appealing game to my son as he's smart enough to know that this is really just a way to do "homework".Second, besides all of the sight word cards there are cards in the box that say POP on them. If you pull one of those out it's a negative thing and means you lose all the points you have earned up to that part of the game. Not the greatest idea for small kids. Because I knew that could make my kiddo really upset I changed the rule so that when anyone pulled out a POP card everyone gets to take one M&M out of the jar and "POP" it into their mouth right then. Now it's exciting to pull out a POP card. I know it's important to teach kids that there are always winners and losers in a game but I wanted this one to be all positive so he would really want to learn those words!I am excited to have a way to work on sight words with my kindergartner and reward him at the same time. 4Such a fun way to learn sight wordsSuch a fun way to learn sight words! My 5 year old loves it. He took it to school, and his teacher loved it so much she ordered her self both sets. We play using a timer so we dont have to keep track of rounds. Started off using no words over 3 letters, now we can use all of them. I wish we would have found these sooner, I definitely recommend them. Update we still love these! My oldest really struggles with sight words, and needs to go over them consistently. These are a fun way to make it seem new and refreshing compared to flash caeds he has for home work. We have now acquired all the sets, and use them for family game night. Being there only laminated cardboard i figured they be destroyed long ago. Both my 6 year old and my 1 year old have used and abused the pieces they still look new (some might be a little sticky ). 5Fun game for the right stageThis is really a cute game and a good idea for learning sight words. There are about 100 cardboard flat popcorn shaped pieces with a word on each one and some that say POP and relate to a game rule but we haven't played it that way.The words are pretty basic, and it is too young for our 2nd grader and our 2 year old of course just likes to play with the pieces during the game (supervised)!I think it would be ideal for kindergartners and early 1st graders. We did have an idea of using a perm. marker in a different color to write a second word on it so the older kids can have harder words but still play with younger kids, or even make the older ones spell things that you call out instead of reading the card.Be aware that babies and some younger kids might put the pieces in their mouths but really I think the danger is more to the piece than the child (but still wouldn't want baby chewing on it of course) 5Fun! A must in your teaching toolkitI came across this product when son was going into Kindergarten. We practiced the sight words according to the game instructions and eventually came up with our own ad-hoc games to keep it fun and creative (pop, pop, shake the box, wild Pop cards, Mom tries 5 words, then kiddo, etc.). Tonight, as a refresher after our 2nd grade reading session, and after the box has sat on the shelf since he knew most of the words, he screamed for glee to try the words again in a new game. I'm back again shopping tonight for the next levels of words seeing how excited he was to play again. I encourage parents to explore new ways of making the 'game' fun and cycle this product in and out of your teaching toolkit to keep kids excited about it. 5Great tool for struggling readersMy son makes up his own games with the pieces. For us, the game play itself is not what is of interest, but the presentation of the pieces is key (it helps that my son LOVES popcorn). For tactile learners and learners with visual processing issues, this is perfect. The letters are bold on a white background, with the engaging shape of popped corn. We use just a few at a time, shuffling them around, making sentences, and adding a few more words every day. He also really likes the box that they come in, as it looks just like what you would get at a carnival (but much sturdier, of course), so it adds to his desire to reach for it and work with the contents. I highly recommend it for struggling readers. 5Pop it up!I bought this and my grand kids loved the game, but they opened both at the same time. One was for letters for the younger ones and one was for sight words for the older kids. They cleaned up after playing with them but the popcorn pieces are all mixed up. hahahaha! We will figure out how to teach them which ones go in which box. This is a good product but not going to play by taking pieces away if they draw a pop corn. Just going to have them jump around for a few seconds like they are popcorn popping. Seemed more fun for the little ones that way. 5
Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+

Learning Resources Pop For Sight Words Game, Vocabulary/Literacy Game, 92 Cards, Ages 5+

4.7
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€42,00
Sale price
€42,00
Regular price
€70,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 40% (€28,00)