Reading (954)

Welcome to Love to Teach's Reading Resources hub, where educators can find a treasure trove of materials to foster literacy skills in their students. Whether you're focusing on phonics, comprehension, or literary analysis, our curated collection has something for every level and interest. Dive into our comprehensive selection of lesson plans, worksheets, interactive games, and more, designed to ignite a love for reading and cultivate critical thinking.


by Deb Lund - Whether you like the T-Rex, the Triceratop or you love trains, the full-color illustrations and animated and action-packed text will take you on a ride that your children will want to read over and over again.
Teaching suggestions, forms, sample book lists, and database: 12 page packet
A packet of information that includes strategies to: Promote phonological awareness Help children associate sounds with written words Enhance book knowledge and appreciation Support print awareness Help children recognize a word as a unit of print Support children's early writing Teach the alphabet
4 page PDF packet: print and practice writing each letter. Includes a picture to color for each letter.
by Don and Audrey Wood - Beautiful full page illustrations engage children as they cheer for the adorable mouse, who frantically struggles to keep his ripe strawberry safe.
by Karma Wilson - Acrylic paintings and rhythmic poetry create a heart-warming story about a hibernating bear and the lovable cast of animals that take refuge in his lair during a winter storm.
by Adam Gamble - An artfully illustrated board book designed to educate young readers as they travel through the seasons on a lake.
by Mary Ann Hoberman - Poetry Foundation: Children’s Poet Laureate, 2008-2010. A heart-warming multi-cultural, rhyming book used to teach children how to be friends, not fighters.
by Janice May Udry - Caldecott Winner (1956). A delightful story, beautifully illustrated, that celebrates the splendor and value of trees.
by Dr. Seuss - Another classic by the master of rhyme – “a Russian Palooski, whose headski is redski and belly is blueski” is a much more interesting animal than a lion.