The Name Game

The Name Game
Alpha Pig... to the rescue!
Help Alpha Pig spell your name. First, color in the letters of the alphabet.
Then, circle all of the letters in your name. Finally, write your name on the sign below.
Find more games and activities
at pbskids.org/read.
The PBS KIDS logo is a registered mark of the PBS and is used with permission. © 2011 Out of the Blue Enterprises LLC.
SUPER WHY! airs weekdays on PBS KIDS, and is made possible by funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
through a cooperative agreement from the U.S. Department of Education's Ready to Learn Grant. FOR PROMOTIONAL USE ONLY.
Princess starts with P
Princess Presto... with spelling power !
Look at the pictures and say what each is out loud.
Then circle the letter that makes the sound each starts with.
(For example: The word “Fish” starts with the letter...?)
Find more games and activities
at pbskids.org/read.
The PBS KIDS logo is a registered mark of the PBS and is used with permission. © 2011 Out of the Blue Enterprises LLC.
SUPER WHY! airs weekdays on PBS KIDS, and is made possible by funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
through a cooperative agreement from the U.S. Department of Education's Ready to Learn Grant. FOR PROMOTIONAL USE ONLY.
Super Why Says ‘Opposites’
It’s ‘Simon Says’ with a spin!
Y
SUPER WH
SAYS...
HOT!
This game can be played with two or more, so you
can invite friends to play, too!
Directions:
1. One player is chosen to be the leader, ‘Super Why’.
2. Super Why will say a word from one of the columns in
the list of words or choose his own word, and the other
players should act out the OPPOSITE of that word.
(For example: if the leader says “SUPER WHY SAYS...
HOT!”, then everyone could shiver or act ‘COLD’.)
3. But, if the leader doesn’t say “Super Why says” before
the chosen word, anyone who acts out the opposite word
is out and should sit down for the rest of the game.
4. The winner of the game is the last one standing.
That person becomes the next Supery Why.
Learning benefits:
king, learn
Players will practice their creative thin
in action,
look
ds
new words, see how opposite wor
s.
and sharpen their listening skill
Fun with one:
child, as well,
This is a fun game to play with just one
osites’.
‘opp
of
to encourage their comprehention
Find more games and activities
at pbskids.org/read.
The PBS KIDS logo is a registered mark of the PBS and is used with permission. © 2011 Out of the Blue Enterprises LLC.
SUPER WHY! airs weekdays on PBS KIDS, and is made possible by funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
through a cooperative agreement from the U.S. Department of Education's Ready to Learn Grant. FOR PROMOTIONAL USE ONLY.
Sample Opposite Words
big
small
good
bad
hot
cold
short
tall
new
old
up
down
light
dark
young
old
wet
dry
clean
dirty
high
low
in
out
soft
hard
quiet
loud
Wonder Red’s Word Charades Game
Charades is ALL about the words!
‘ALL’ Words
ball
fall
call
wall
small
This game can be played with two or more, so get friends
and family to join in the fun!
Directions:
tall
1. Write each ‘ALL’ word to the right on a separate piece
of paper or index card and place them into a container.
2. Have one player go first by pulling a word out of the
container, reading it silently to themselves, and then
acting out the word for the other players to guess.
3. The first one to guess the right word is the winner
and can act out the next word.
4. The first player should congratulate the new winner
by saying “Wonderriffic! You are terrific!,”
just like Wonder Red would say.
Find more games and activities
at pbskids.org/read.
The PBS KIDS logo is a registered mark of the PBS and is used with permission. © 2011 Out of the Blue Enterprises LLC.
SUPER WHY! airs weekdays on PBS KIDS, and is made possible by funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
through a cooperative agreement from the U.S. Department of Education's Ready to Learn Grant. FOR PROMOTIONAL USE ONLY.
Learning benefits:
Players will be able to read and practice
the
rhyming words in the ‘ALL’ family.
Continue the fun:
Have the children think of other rhyming
words
(for example: Cat, Rat, Sat in the ‘AT’ fami
ly)
to create another charades game.