Supports spoken language milestones — ages 0 to 5
Before a child can read, they need to hear language — its rhythms, its patterns, its music. Nursery rhymes are not just entertainment. They are the earliest and most powerful form of language instruction a parent can offer, training the ear to hear the sounds inside words that reading is built on.
Parent Pack A surrounds your child with classic rhymes, playful rhythms, and the kind of repetitive, joyful language exposure that builds the oral foundation every future reader needs.
What your child gains by the end of this pack
A strong sensitivity to rhyme and rhythm, the ability to predict and complete familiar language patterns, improved sequencing skills, and a love of language that makes every subsequent literacy milestone easier to reach.
Inside the pack
Four beautifully illustrated books — This Little Piggy, The House that Jack Built, Hickory Dickory Dock, and a Nursery Rhymes collection
Parent Pack A Parent Guide — activities, sequencing exercises, coloring pages, and step-by-step guidance for how to use each book with your child
Beautifully printed cut-outs for interactive play during waiting times, car rides, and bedtime
A nursery rhyme read-along video your child can watch and revisit — repetition is the point
This pack is right for you if
·Your child is between birth and 5 years old
·You want to build a rich oral language foundation before introducing letters or words
·You have 20 minutes a day to read, sing, and play with your child
Frequently asked questions
Can I use this with a newborn? Yes. Hearing language from birth is the beginning of every milestone in this timeline. The earlier you start, the stronger the foundation.
Do I need to use the packs in order? Packs A, B, and C can be used in any order or alongside each other. Each one builds a different dimension of oral language.
What comes next? When you're ready to introduce letters and the alphabet, Parent Pack 1 is your natural next step.
Rhyme awareness is one of the strongest early predictors of reading success. A child who can hear that "cat" and "hat" sound alike is a child whose brain is ready to read.
Next in the sequence: Parent Pack B — Music and Movement