I'll solve this "Color the Digraph" worksheet for you. Let me break down the task and explain the solution.
First, look closely:
This is a coloring worksheet designed to teach children about digraphs - two letters that work together to make one sound. The main digraphs featured are "ch", "sh", "th", and "wh".
The worksheet has 8 images with their corresponding words:
1. couch
2. wheat
3. inch
4. throne
5. whisk
6. shoe
7. thread
8. cherries
Next to each image/word, there are several digraph options (ch, sh, th, wh), and the student needs to color in the correct digraph that appears in each word.
Next, find information:
I need to identify which digraph is actually present in each word.
Let me go through each word:
1.
couch - contains "ch"
2.
wheat - contains "wh"
3.
inch - contains "ch"
4.
throne - contains "th"
5.
whisk - contains "wh"
6.
shoe - contains "sh"
7.
thread - contains "th"
8.
cherries - contains "ch"
Then, review the findings:
I've identified the correct digraph for each word. Now I can provide the solution.
Solution:
Here's which digraph should be colored for each word:
-
couch: Color "ch" (the "ch" at the end of the word)
-
wheat: Color "wh" (the "wh" at the beginning of the word)
-
inch: Color "ch" (the "ch" at the end of the word)
-
throne: Color "th" (the "th" at the beginning of the word)
-
whisk: Color "wh" (the "wh" at the beginning of the word)
-
shoe: Color "sh" (the "sh" at the beginning of the word)
-
thread: Color "th" (the "th" at the beginning of the word)
-
cherries: Color "ch" (the "ch" at the beginning of the word)
This exercise helps students recognize and distinguish between different digraph sounds in words. The digraph "ch" makes a /tʃ/ sound (like in "church"), "sh" makes a /ʃ/ sound (like in "ship"), "th" can make either a voiced /ð/ sound (like in "this") or unvoiced /θ/ sound (like in "think"), and "wh" typically makes a /w/ sound (though in some dialects it may sound like "h").
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of digraph worksheets.