Learning ABCs
University Games Super Why ABC Letter Preschool Game
(Toy) University Games
Release date: 2009-04-15
Based on key reading skills such as alphabet recognition, rhyming, spelling and basic reading
TV Show nominated for an Emmy in 2008
#3 Rated preschool program for children -5
The winner is the first to join each of the four characters and reach finish
Players take on the Powers Of The Super Why
Price:
$19.99
$11.87
Customer Reviews:
-
Super Why is Super Fun!!!
My 30mth old loves this game. A little long to play at his age, but it is designed for a little older age range. The four decks of cards are designed to increase literacy skills. If you draw an Alpha Pig card, you match the lower case letter on the card to the upper case letter on the board,... -
Fun game, but should be marked 4 and up, not 3 and up.
I bought this game for my two girls, ages 3 and almost 5. Both are super why fans. My three year old knows her letters and sounds, but cannot read at all. Nor can she spell. This game was way too difficult for the 3 year old. My almost 5 year old can read and the game was good for her. She...
yes, my now 6yr old learned the zoo phonics thru the preschool she attended. It helped tremendously because the same program was been used at the kindergarten she attended. It helped that she knew it so the transition from pre-k to K was easy in that respect.
How come people are so rudee
How come poeple are so vain
How come people dont have manners anymore
How come they think Pants that show there A.$.$is sexy?
How come they think to get people to like them they have to...
I totally agree...
I miss back in the day when everything was simple...
And I agree with Paris... this world IS sick and cruel.
It's sad how much everything has changed... and it sucks. lol
Gulfport free pre-K expands to Hancock County
Four-year-olds in Gulfport's free preschool program are learning their numbers, ABC's, months of the year, and days of the week. The one-of-a-kind program started three years ago at Lynn Meadows Discovery Center, and now meets at Central Elementary. Project Director Cynthia Minton Walker hopes to one day see it expand to other elementary schools across the coast.
"If we don't educate them early, the research is very clear, we will lose them by seven or eight years of age."
Walker shared that statistic Monday with members of the Gulf Coast Business Council, who came to see what the south Mississippi PreK4Ward Initiative was all about. The highlight of the trip was stepping inside the classroom with some very enthusiastic four-year-olds already enrolled in the free program.
"The children were just phenomenal," Kathleen Shaughnessy said. "It's just fantastic to see the children and their involvement and just everything they've already learned.
University Games Super Why ABC Letter Preschool Game | Kids ...
University Games Super Why ABC Letter Preschool Game University Games Super Why ABC Letter Preschool Game Review

Players practice key reading skills by taking on the powers of the Super Why team! The board and skill-based character cards help children build reading skills by identifying letters, rhyming, correcting silly sentences and learning how to read basic words....
Learning ABC in preschool News
Deadly fire prompts tougher safety rules for Mexican preschoolsFox News - Dec 31, 1969
"Our commitment is clear, we are doing everything that is in our hands to avert, as far as humanly possible, a repetition of events as painful as those at the ABC daycare," Calderon said in a statement. The measure mandates sanctions for daycare andABC News - Dec 31, 1969
The American Academy of Pediatrics is recommending that pediatricians evaluate patients as early as preschool and all the way through high school for signs of the condition.
WLOX - Dec 31, 1969
Four-year-olds in Gulfport's free preschool program are learning their numbers, ABC's, months of the year, and days of the week. The one-of-a-kind program started three years ago at Lynn Meadows Discovery Center,Hope Star - Dec 31, 1969
By Stephanie Harris The preschool classes of Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs. Irby in Hope had a "Fancy Day." This was part of instilling learning the alphabet letter "F" , according to thier teachers. The girls had thier fingernails painted by a parent Amber

