
Lesson
Rhyme and Rhythm
Students learn to hear rhyme and a steady beat in nursery rhymes.
Rhyme and Rhythm
What students learn
Students learn that rhyme means words sound alike at the end and rhythm means the beat you can hear in a song or poem. Start with Twinkle, Twinkle: Hear the Ending Rhyme to hear the matching ending sounds first.
Why it matters
Rhyme and rhythm make nursery rhymes easy to remember and fun to say. Use Baa Baa Black Sheep: Clap the Steady Beat to help students feel the beat with their hands, then Row, Row, Row Your Boat: Repeat the Chorus to notice how repeating lines keeps a rhyme moving.
Learn the idea
Children hear rhyme when the ending sounds match, like star and are, or sheep and sleep. They hear rhythm when the words fall into a steady pattern. If the child can clap or tap along, they are already noticing the beat.
Try it
Say two words and ask whether they rhyme. Then have the child clap the beat while you sing or recite a short rhyme together.
Parent guide
Keep the work playful and quick. If the child only listens for the last letter instead of the sound, stretch the ending word and say it again. The goal is to hear the sound pattern, not just spot matching letters.