Loading...
AI-Powered Spelling Education
Loading...
Forget boring worksheets. These hands-on, creative, and digital spelling activities turn practice time into the part of the day your child actually looks forward to. All backed by learning science.
15+
Hands-on activities
34
Digital spelling games
4-12
Ages covered
10-20 min
Daily practice recommended
Multisensory activities improve spelling retention by up to 40% compared to traditional write-and-repeat methods. These use touch, movement, and creativity to make every letter stick.
Spread magnetic letters on the fridge or a baking sheet. Call out a word and have your child race to build it letter by letter. The tactile feel of each letter creates a physical memory trace that worksheets cannot match.
Pro tip: Start with CVC words (cat, dog, pin) and progress to blends (trip, stop) and digraphs (ship, chat) as confidence grows.
Spray shaving cream on a tray or table and let kids finger-write their spelling words in it. The sensory experience engages kinesthetic learners, and the mess-free erasure removes any pressure about mistakes.
Pro tip: Add a drop of food coloring for extra fun. Call out words one at a time and watch them write, smooth, and write again.
Draw a hopscotch grid with chalk and write one letter per square. Kids hop through saying each letter, then spell the whole word at the end. Movement plus spelling equals powerful memory formation.
Pro tip: Use this outdoors on a driveway. Make multiple grids for different words and let kids choose their path.
Write each spelling word three times, each in a different color. First in red, then blue, then green. The color changes force attention to each individual letter, building precise visual memory of the word.
Pro tip: Use colored markers, crayons, or even colored pencils. The act of switching colors slows kids down just enough to notice letter patterns.
Write individual letters on LEGO bricks or wooden blocks. Kids physically snap or stack blocks together to build words. When they can hold a word in their hands, abstract spelling becomes concrete.
Pro tip: Write common letter patterns on multi-block pieces (-ing, -tion, -ed) so kids learn to recognize chunks, not just individual letters.
Use alphabet stamps and an ink pad to stamp out spelling words on paper. The deliberate selection of each letter stamp builds letter-by-letter awareness that rapid writing sometimes skips over.
Pro tip: Let kids stamp words into a homemade spelling journal they can flip through and review. The pride of a stamped collection motivates practice.
Not all screen time is equal. EZSpell turns devices into powerful learning tools with AI-powered spelling games that adapt to your child and reward progress.
Word Scramble, Memory Match, Picture Spell, Hangman, and 30 more games that adapt difficulty in real time. Every game tracks progress and feeds into your child's personalized learning path.
Browse All 34 GamesKids earn XP, level up avatars, unlock skill trees, defeat boss battles, and complete daily quests. The RPG layer transforms spelling practice into an adventure they genuinely want to continue.
Start the AdventureOur spaced repetition engine tracks every word your child practices. Words they struggle with reappear more often. Words they master fade into periodic reviews. No wasted practice time.
Try Adaptive LearningDifferent ages need different approaches. Here is what works best at each developmental stage, with recommended daily practice times.
Recommended: 5-10 min/day
Recommended: 10-15 min/day
Recommended: 15-20 min/day
Recommended: 15-20 min/day