Description
What It Is:
A short “e” vowel sound matching worksheet where students connect CVC and CVCC words (men, jet, vet, ten, pen, red) to their corresponding pictures. This activity strengthens phonics recognition and decoding skills using simple, clear visuals.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps early readers practice identifying the short “e” vowel sound and improves their ability to match written words with meaning. It supports foundational phonics development, reading confidence, and vocabulary growth.
How to Use It:
• Read each word on the left side of the page.
• Look at the pictures on the right and identify which one matches the word.
• Draw a line to connect each word with the correct image.
• Use as morning work, literacy centers, small-group practice, or independent review.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for:
• Pre-K–K: Introduction to CVC short vowel sounds
• Grade 1: Phonics fluency and reading reinforcement
Target Users:
Early elementary teachers, beginning readers, homeschool families, literacy intervention groups, and ESL learners practicing short-vowel decoding.
A short “e” vowel sound matching worksheet where students connect CVC and CVCC words (men, jet, vet, ten, pen, red) to their corresponding pictures. This activity strengthens phonics recognition and decoding skills using simple, clear visuals.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps early readers practice identifying the short “e” vowel sound and improves their ability to match written words with meaning. It supports foundational phonics development, reading confidence, and vocabulary growth.
How to Use It:
• Read each word on the left side of the page.
• Look at the pictures on the right and identify which one matches the word.
• Draw a line to connect each word with the correct image.
• Use as morning work, literacy centers, small-group practice, or independent review.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for:
• Pre-K–K: Introduction to CVC short vowel sounds
• Grade 1: Phonics fluency and reading reinforcement
Target Users:
Early elementary teachers, beginning readers, homeschool families, literacy intervention groups, and ESL learners practicing short-vowel decoding.
