![]() ![]() We’ve created sets of flashcards for your kids to practice the Dolch sight words and the Fry sight words. Dolch looked at words that students in kindergarten to grade 2 were reading and Fry looked at words for the older student group of grades 3 to 9. Dolch and Fry used different sources for their words, which explains the slight differences in sight words.All words on the Dolch 100 list appear on the full Fry list of 1,000 words.Only 9 words on the Fry 100 list are not on the Dolch 220 service words and 95 noun words list.70 of those words are both on the Dolch 100 list and the Fry 100 list.The first 100 words on the Dolch list and the Fry 100 list have a combined 130 words, so we can tell there’s a lot of overlap.That should help you decide which list is right for your children. It also includes a student checklist, a list of words for parents, and a student list of words to use when assessing students. It includes Lessons 1-30 and also the Back to School week before Lesson 1. Rather than give you a straight answer, let us give you a breakdown of where the lists are similar and where they differ. These are printable student flashcards for the 1st grade Journeys sight words (aka words to know or high frequency words ). In learning all 1,000 Fry sight words kids can read about 90 percent of the words in a typical book, be it fiction or non-fiction. The Fry sight words list is larger in size with 1,000 most commonly used words. He later updated that list in 1980 from the most common words that appear in reading materials used for grade 3 – 9. Fry developed an expanded sight words list for grades 1 – 10. Later he added a list of 95 nouns that occur most frequently. He left out commonly occurring nouns and narrowed his list to 220 words that are found in different kinds of written pieces – not just stories. He based the list of the most common words in children’s books during the 1930s and 40s. It contains 220 ‘service words’ and 95 high-frequency words. The list of Dolch sight words is the most commonly used list. Common Core sight words, a new variation that combines Dolch and Fry sight words into new combinations of lists. ![]()
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