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2025-08-27 11:31:44
My autistic son loves them.
Julie D Curtis
2025-08-11 11:52:45
My 6 yr has autism and loved playing with these and using his numbers and colors to match his favorite video (of popcicles with numbers).
pamsan
2025-07-15 12:40:26
This is such a wonderful learning tool. The colorful alphabet popsicles come apart into 2 sections and one has a word that starts with that letter. My 4 year old autistic grandson has played with these for hours…lining them up and repeating the letters and words. He makes his own games out of them! Highly recommend!
Frequent buyer with these treats. So delicious!
2025-06-27 12:24:09
I’m a speech therapist and use this toy regularly during my sessions. So bright, colorful, and educational.
Shaila Auferoth
2025-05-09 17:33:45
This is a simple set for matching letters to their sound and uppercase to lowercase. Each popsicle ‘shell’ has the uppercase letter, each popsicle has a picture of a word that begins with that sound and the word underneath it all in lowercase. You could also sort these by color (red, orange, green, blue, purple, pink, brown).I wanted to include more than one sound for some letters (like ‘g’, ‘c’ and the vowels) so I used a paint pen and added the lowercase to each shell and added a picture to the backside of each popsicle wi th more than one sound. While the pictures included all work well there was no consistency on which sound they used. Some of the vowels came with the ‘long’ sound (I is Ice), but the rest of the vowels were the ‘short’ sound (a- apple, e- elephant, o- owl, u-umbrella). I wanted at least 2 vowel sounds (short and long) so I customized mine.These are fun, simple, store well, have some limited self correction (colors match), and the only picture that I’m not fond of for a letter sound is y- yacht (because it’s a horrible word for beginning phonics and most kids aren’t familiar with that term, ‘yo-yo’ or ‘yak’ or‘yuck’, ‘yawn’, ‘yell’, ‘yellow’, or ‘yogurt’ or almost anything else would have been better). Unlike so many of these types of toys they use the hard ‘g’ sound for ‘grapes’ instead of the soft ‘g’ of ‘giraffe’- which I much appreciate. If you are only going to do ONE sound for each letter then pick the hard ‘g’ instead of the soft sound. X is x-ray, instead of the common ‘xylophone’, which again, if you are only going to do ONE sound per letter is I believe the correct choice, as that’s the sound it will make most of the time as they begin reading!It’s held up well, is the right size for an American girl doll (or any other 18 in. doll, just a happy coincidence) and feels comfortable in your hands. The shells all slip on and off well, tight enough to stick but not get stuck. Loose enough for child use, but not so loose they fall apart.Regis is a good tool for beginning phonics and because the backs of each are blank you could customize for your classroom use, which utilizing the included storage. This is a win all the way around.
Alektoro
2025-02-14 15:47:57
This popsicle alphabet game is fun for the kids. It is very sturdy and good quality. The pictures are clear and so are the letters. My child really enjoys playing with this activity and a great way to talk about letter names and sounds.
Cargilper
2025-01-24 18:13:19
I homeschool my 4 children and I am always looking for toys that stimulate (sensory/cognitively) and reinforce what wee are currently targeting to learn. These ABC pops are ok but could definitely be better… The first thing I noticed is that they are not double sided so you have to face the pops all in the same direction. Though it can be its own color recognition challenge for non-readers, I didn’t buy this for that. Also, the inside picture is not double sided. There is a missed opportunity here for having the lowercase letter on the other side of the picture. Also and this is my gripe with all these ABC toys is that they use long vowel sounds for some vowels not all… I teach my children short vowel sound first so it’s really very hard to find manipulative, toys, posters, even books that are consistent with their short (or long) vowels in the 26 letters.These pops are a dupe for the Learning Resources Mini ABC Pops and cost the same. I am a fan on Learning Resources so between the two, I will always go for what I know. However, I did give these a chance thinking they would have that double sided lowercase letter but they didn’t. Honestly, I don’t see myself using these as a reading tool, which was the main reason I bought it! But I can always use for color recognition, cardinality, and pretend play so it’s not all lost.
gail
2025-01-06 13:00:44
I got these for my grandkids (3 and 6) to play with at Grammys house. They love playing ice cream shoppe so I knew that a popsicle theme would be of high interest to them. Plus, I am a sucker for any educational toy, so they are almost as much fun for me! I didnt have stuff like this when I was a kid so this is like going to the toy store for me.Very sturdy plastic, bright colors, its own storage container ( a big thank you for that!), lots of different ‘flavors’, something to pull apart and put back together….this is awesome in so many ways. Hands on learning that seems like a game? Yes please!I absolutely love this educational toy and know that it is going to get a lot of use. I love having new things in the drawer system that the kids can discover at will. They think its a toy, I know that it is more than that….the perfect combination!
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