The list changes every week
Kindergarten and first grade sight word practice often follows the words assigned by the teacher, not a fixed online game.
Online sight word games from your own list
Paste your child's sight words, classroom list, worksheet words, Dolch words, or Fry words. WordyKid turns the words into short online games kids can play right away.
Start with the exact words your child needs this week. Use school words, homework pages, printed lists, or early reading words instead of another fixed printable list.
Why this page exists
That is the problem. Your child usually needs to practice the words from this week's class list, not a random list from a printable or game library.
Kindergarten and first grade sight word practice often follows the words assigned by the teacher, not a fixed online game.
Editable PDFs and worksheet games can help, but parents still need to prepare, print, cut, explain, and repeat the activity.
A child can play a sight word game and still miss the words they were actually asked to learn for school.
Use the words already on the table
Add the words from a classroom list, homework sheet, worksheet, reading page, Dolch list, Fry list, or high frequency word list.
WordyKid keeps the practice connected to the real words your child needs, then turns them into short online games that are easier to repeat.
The goal is not another printable. The goal is a small practice routine your child can actually start and finish.
From worksheet to game
Some children need Dolch words. Some need Fry words. Some need the exact classroom words written on a worksheet.
WordyKid is built around that real-life situation. Start from the words your child has now, then repeat them through short game rounds.
This makes the practice useful for home review, classroom lists, homeschool reading work, and extra fluency support.
What makes it different
The search results are full of editable games, printable boards, worksheets, cards, and activity ideas. WordyKid is built for immediate online practice.
Practice paths
One child may need a kindergarten word list. Another may need first grade sight words, high frequency words, Dolch words, Fry words, or a classroom worksheet.
Start small with early words and short game rounds that protect confidence.
Use the weekly list from class when reading expectations start moving faster.
Repeat common words that slow down fluency inside short interactive practice.
Progress that parents can see
Sight words usually need repeated exposure. A single review is rarely enough.
WordyKid helps families return to the same words, repeat the hard ones, and see progress over time.
Who this is for
Use the sight words your child brought home and turn them into a calm practice routine.
Turn a classroom word list into games students can repeat without another worksheet.
Build sight word practice around your own reading plan, not a fixed library.
Real product usage
Families use WordyKid for short learning games, repeated word practice, and saved progress. The numbers below are shown because real product activity matters more than generic promises.
Questions parents and teachers ask
Yes. You can use your child's school word list, homework words, worksheet words, Dolch words, Fry words, or any sight words your child needs to practice.
Yes. WordyKid turns the words you use into short online games that children can play in the browser without installing an app.
Yes. Printable games give you a file or worksheet. WordyKid creates interactive online practice from the words your child actually needs this week.
Yes. WordyKid works well for kindergarten sight words, first grade sight words, high frequency words, Dolch words, Fry words, and classroom lists.
Yes. If the photo is reasonably clear, WordyKid can help use words from worksheets, printed lists, homework pages, and reading pages.
No. WordyKid runs in the browser on phones, tablets, and computers.
Yes. The games are designed for short, simple practice sessions that children can repeat with light parent support.
Yes. Practice history and progress are saved, so parents can see activity, wins, and vocabulary growth over time.
Yes. WordyKid is designed as a calm, ad-free practice environment for children.
Most families can start with 10 to 15 minutes a day. Short, repeated practice is usually easier to keep than long study sessions.
Start with the list your child already has
Paste the words, use a worksheet, or start from a school list. Keep the practice short, focused, and easier to repeat.