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Ages 5+

Type your first words — keyboard game for 5 year olds

A free keyboard game for 5 year olds. Match pictures to letters and type first words. Builds letter-sound association before formal typing begins.

🔤 Type the Letter 📝 First Words 🔬 Phonics-backed
What they're ready for

What a 5-year-old is ready for

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Full letter knowledge

Most 5-year-olds know most or all letter names and are beginning letter-sound correspondence — connecting letters to the sounds they make.

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Simple word decoding

Many 5-year-olds can decode three-letter words (cat, dog, sun). First Words mode puts this skill to work in a physical, hands-on way.

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Fine motor precision

Most 5-year-olds can press individual keys accurately and write recognisable letters. They're not ready for touch-typing, but phonics-based keyboard games work well.

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Phonemic awareness

Age 5 is when phonics understanding begins to solidify. NAEYC research shows children who grasp letter-sound relationships before kindergarten are significantly better prepared for reading.

Mode 1

Type the Letter: phonics through key presses

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A phonics lesson disguised as a game

A picture appears — a duck, an egg, a lion — and the child presses the key for the starting letter. They must: hear the word, identify the starting sound, connect it to a letter, find that letter on the keyboard, and press it. Each correct key press reinforces phoneme-grapheme correspondence in an active, physical way.

This multi-step process is one of the most research-supported predictors of reading success — and each key press makes it stick because it involves the body, not just the eyes and ears.

Mode 2

First Words: the bridge to reading

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Building words letter by letter

First Words asks children to type short, phonetically regular words letter by letter. Each letter is highlighted in sequence as the child types it. This reinforces that words are made of individual letters in a left-to-right sequence — the same sequence that reading follows.

Occupational therapy research on pre-literacy activities notes that physically constructing words strengthens the neural connections that reading depends on. First Words mode builds word awareness in a way that directly supports kindergarten reading instruction.

Parent tips

Tips for keyboard time with a 5-year-old

  • Let them try Type the Letter independently — 5-year-olds often surprise parents with how much they know.
  • For First Words, spell the word aloud together as each letter is typed: "C... A... T... cat!"
  • Do not correct single-finger typing or hunt-and-peck — at this age, it is appropriate and effective.
  • Link keyboard activities to books they are reading: "You typed 'cat' — let's find that word in your book."
  • Sessions of 10–15 minutes are appropriate for most 5-year-olds.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Should I start with Type the Letter or First Words? +
Start with Type the Letter. It requires recognising only one letter at a time, which is simpler than building a whole word. Once your child moves through Type the Letter confidently, First Words is the natural next step — it adds the sequencing and memory challenge of a full word.
Will this interfere with learning proper typing later? +
No. At age 5, hunt-and-peck is developmentally appropriate — fine motor control for proper touch-typing technique typically develops at 6–7. Using a keyboard freely at 5 builds familiarity with key locations, which actually makes formal typing instruction faster to learn when the time comes.
My 5-year-old already reads — are these modes still useful? +
Yes. Even early readers benefit from keyboard familiarity and the motor experience of typing words. First Words mode in particular reinforces the left-to-right directionality and letter sequencing that underlies both reading and spelling. It also gives them ownership of the keyboard as a tool before formal instruction begins.
What comes after ToddlerKeys? +
Once a child knows their letters, letter sounds, and is comfortable with the keyboard, they are ready for formal typing instruction at around age 6–7. Tools like Typing.com and TypingClub are built for that next stage. ToddlerKeys has done its job: building the foundation that makes formal typing faster to learn. Read more about what age kids should start formal typing.
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Keep exploring

Try Type the Letter and First Words

Free, no login, no ads. Open ToddlerKeys and choose the mode that matches your 5-year-old's current level.

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