Hands-on phonics activities make abstract sound patterns concrete for young learners. The -at word family crafts packet combines craftivities with word building practice, giving kindergarten students multiple ways to interact with these foundational CVC words. When students build a word family crown, assemble a watch craft, or create a word family house, they’re not just doing a fun activity. They’re practicing reading and writing -at words in a way that sticks.
This post shows you exactly what’s included in the -at Word Family Phonics Crafts Packet and how to use these Science of Reading aligned activities for word building, bulletin board displays, anchor charts, and literacy centers.

What’s Included in the -at Word Family Crafts Packet
This comprehensive activity packet includes multiple craft options and activity pages so you can differentiate for your kiddos:
- Word Family Crown Craft (3 options) with -at words and pictures that students color, cut, and wear
- Word Family Watch Craft featuring -at words on the band that wraps around students’ wrists
- Word Family House Crafts + Posters with interactive word windows
- Activity pages (multiple options) including trace, write, map, and build formats
- Mix and match craft topper options including a cat and hat to customize activities
- Phonics games with spin and cover formats for center activities
- Color and BW versions so pages can be used as hands-on activities or displayed as anchor charts
The variety means you can use different activities throughout your -at word family unit without students getting bored, and you can easily differentiate based on where each student is in their phonics development.
Word Family Crafts That Build Word Reading Skills
The Word Family Crown
The crown craft is a student favorite. Kids color the crown pieces featuring -at words with picture support, then cut and assemble the crown to wear. As they work, they’re reading bat, cat, hat, mat, rat, and sat repeatedly. The crown becomes a wearable word family reference they’re proud to show off.
Here’s what makes this work for word building:
- Students read each -at word multiple times during assembly
- Picture support helps struggling readers connect words to meaning
- Three crown options let you differentiate (pictures with words, pictures with words to trace, and pictures with space to write words)
- Students can practice reading their crowns to partners throughout the day
- The physical act of assembling reinforces the words in memory

The -AT Word Family Watch Craft
The watch craft wraps around students’ wrists with -at words displayed on the band. This craftivity is perfect for kindergarten because it combines fine motor practice with phonics instruction.
Why the watch works:
- Compact format focuses attention on the -at pattern
- Students wear their watches and read words throughout the day
- Quick assembly means more time for word practice
- Makes a great take-home activity for family reading practice

The Word Family Houses
The house craft is the most interactive option. Students create a house with the -at word family living inside, with words displayed on the windows. One version includes lift-the-flap windows where students match words to pictures hidden underneath.
The house craft builds skills through:
- Interactive flaps that turn reading into a game
- Multiple words displayed together to reinforce the -at pattern
- Visual representation of words “belonging” to the same family
- Options for both simple assembly and more complex interactive versions


Craftivities: Turning Worksheets into Crafts
One of the best features of this packet is the mix-and-match system. Activity pages become craftivities when you add a topper, giving you flexibility in how you use the resources.
How the Craftivity System Works
Pick the activity style your students need (trace, write, map, or build), then add a craft topper to turn the activity into a finished word family craft. This means you can:
- Use the cat topper with a tracing page for students who need letter formation practice
- Use the hat topper with a word mapping page for students ready for phoneme segmentation
- Use the house topper with a word building page for students working on encoding
Activity Page Options
The pack includes multiple activity page formats:
- Pictures only where students cut and paste -at pictures into boxes
- Trace the words with dotted letters for students still developing fine motor skills
- Write the words with picture support for independent encoding practice
- Word mapping pages with sound boxes for phoneme segmentation (Science of Reading aligned)
- Word building pages for students to build -at words with cut out letters
Each activity page comes in both color and black and white versions. Use the color versions as anchor charts and the BW versions as student activities.



Using Crafts as Anchor Charts and Bulletin Board Displays
Creating Anchor Charts
The phonics posters included in this packet make perfect anchor charts for your word wall or phonics display.
Display these during your -at word family unit, then keep them posted as reference tools. When students are writing and need to spell an -at word, they can look at the anchor chart for support.
Anchor chart tips:
- Print the color version on cardstock and laminate for durability
- Display at student eye level for easy reference
- Point to the chart during phonics lessons to reinforce the visual
- Add the chart to your word wall section for CVC words


Bulletin Board Display Ideas
Student-created crafts make engaging bulletin board displays that showcase learning and create a print-rich classroom environment.
Bulletin board ideas:
- “The -at Family Lives Here” featuring student house crafts arranged as a neighborhood
- “Hats Off to Word Families” displaying craftivities with hat toppers
These displays do double duty: they celebrate student work AND serve as interactive word walls students can read during transitions or free moments.

-AT Word Family Activities for Literacy Centers
The phonics games included in this packet are designed specifically for center activities. The spin and cover games work perfectly for independent or partner practice.
Spin and Cover Games
Three game formats are included:
- Spin a word, cover the picture where students read -at words and find matching pictures
- Spin a picture, cover the word where students identify pictures and find the written word
- Spin a picture, tap, map, and cover which adds phoneme segmentation practice
Center setup:
- Print and laminate game boards for repeated use
- Provide spinners (or use a paperclip and pencil)
- Add counters, mini erasers, or plastic chips for covering
These games build reading fluency through repeated practice while feeling like play. Students stay engaged longer than with traditional worksheets.



Whole Group Lesson Ideas
Day 1: Introduce with the Poster
Display the -at word family poster and introduce the word family. Read through each word together, emphasizing the -at ending. Have students echo read, then practice blending each word sound by sound.
Day 2: Crown Craft
Complete the crown craft as a whole group activity. Model each step, then have students work while you circulate. As students work, engage them in reading their -at words aloud.
Day 3: Interactive House or Watch
Choose the house craft (for more complex practice) or watch craft (for quicker assembly). Focus on reading words fluently as students assemble their crafts.
Day 4-5: Differentiated Craftivities
Use the mix-and-match system to assign different activity pages based on student needs. Students who need tracing get tracing pages with toppers. Students ready for encoding get word building pages.
Differentiation Built In
This -at word family crafts packet makes differentiation simple:
For Students Who Need More Support
- Start with picture-only activity pages
- Use tracing pages before moving to independent writing
- Provide the crown craft with full picture support
- Use color versions as visual references during activities
For Students Ready for More Challenge
- Use word mapping pages with sound boxes
- Assign word building pages requiring independent encoding
Why Phonics Crafts Work
Craftivities aren’t just engaging. They’re effective for phonics instruction because they:
Build in repetition. Students read the same words multiple times during assembly, building automaticity without boring drill.
Add fine motor practice. Cutting, gluing, and coloring develop the hand strength and coordination kindergarteners need for writing.
Create pride and ownership. Students value their crafts in a way they don’t value worksheets, which transfers to valuing the content.
Provide visual anchors. Displayed crafts become reference tools students use during reading and writing.
Support multiple learning styles. Visual, kinesthetic, and auditory learners all benefit from hands-on phonics activities.

Phonics crafts transform word family instruction from abstract pattern work into concrete, memorable experiences. The -at word family craft packet gives you everything you need: craftivities for hands-on learning, posters for anchor charts, activity pages for differentiated practice, and games for engaging literacy centers. With color and BW versions plus multiple activity formats, you can use these resources throughout your entire -at word family unit.
Ready to add engaging phonics craftivities to your word family instruction?

Pin for Later
Save this post to reference later! Pin it to your teaching board for easy access when you’re planning your phonics lessons.



