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Free keyboard practice for kindergarten

Free keyboard practice for kindergarten classrooms. No login, no ads, COPPA compliant. Works on any device with a physical keyboard — Chromebooks included.

No login required No ads COPPA compliant Works on Chromebooks Free forever
Classroom design

Designed for classroom use

Built for the teacher, not just the child

No account creation, no password resets, no app installation, no permission slips for data collection. Open a browser, go to toddlerkeys.com, choose a mode, and hand over the device.

It works on any device with a physical keyboard — Chromebooks, Windows laptops, Mac laptops, iPads with keyboard cases. The on-screen keyboard diagram is also touch-friendly, so it functions on tablets without a physical keyboard attached, though a physical keyboard provides the richer learning experience.

Privacy

No login. No ads. No data collected.

COPPA (the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act) requires special protections for websites directed at children under 13. ToddlerKeys is COPPA compliant by design, not just by policy. There are no user accounts, no email addresses, no IP address logging, and no third-party advertising or tracking scripts. The only data stored is the child's preferred mode and optional name, saved locally in the browser and never transmitted anywhere.

For teachers, this means no parent permission forms for data collection, no concerns about ad content appearing alongside the game, and no district IT review required for account creation.

Setup steps

How to use ToddlerKeys in learning centers

1

Set the mode before children arrive.

Choose the mode appropriate for your class (or for individual rotation groups). The mode stays set until it is changed — children do not need to navigate menus.

2

Assign 5–10 minutes per rotation.

ToddlerKeys is designed for short, focused sessions. It works well alongside other literacy centers — playdough letters, magnetic alphabet boards, decodable reader bins.

3

Differentiate by mode.

If you have rotation groups at different levels, set a different mode for each. Free Play for children still developing letter names; Find the Letter for beginning recognition; Type the Letter for phonics; First Words for early decoding.

4

No transition instruction needed.

Children can start and stop without teacher assistance. The game is intuitive enough for kindergarteners to use independently after a single demonstration.

Standards

What it teaches and how it aligns with kindergarten standards

ToddlerKeys targets the pre-keyboarding skills identified in Common Core foundational standards for kindergarten: letter recognition (RF.K.1d), phonological awareness (RF.K.2), and phonics and word recognition (RF.K.3). It does not replace explicit phonics instruction, but provides meaningful independent practice that reinforces classroom teaching.

🔍

Find the Letter

Letter name recognition, visual scanning, keyboard familiarity. Aligns with RF.K.1d (recognise and name all upper and lower case letters).

🔤

Type the Letter

Letter-sound correspondence, phonemic awareness. Aligns with RF.K.2 (phonological awareness) and RF.K.3 (phonics and word recognition).

📝

First Words

CVC word construction, left-to-right directionality. Aligns with RF.K.3b (associate the short sounds with the common spellings for the five major vowels).

🎹

Free Play

Letter exposure, cause-and-effect understanding, keyboard familiarity. Appropriate for early-year kindergarten or students who need additional letter name practice.

FAQ

Frequently asked by teachers

Does it work on our school's Chromebooks? +
Yes. ToddlerKeys is a standard web app — no Chrome extension, no installation, no app store. It runs in any modern browser. Chromebooks, Windows laptops, and Mac laptops all work. The only requirement is a physical keyboard, which all Chromebooks have.
Do I need to get parent permission for data collection? +
No. ToddlerKeys collects no personal data. There are no accounts, no cookies for tracking, and no third-party analytics. Nothing leaves the browser. There is nothing to consent to.
Can students use it independently? +
Yes, once a mode is set. The teacher chooses the mode before students arrive at the station, and the game handles everything from there. Students press keys, receive immediate feedback, and do not need to read any instructions.
Do I need district IT approval to use this? +
There is nothing to install and no student accounts to create, so the typical IT review process for software does not apply. It is a website — the same as visiting any other educational website. That said, if your district requires approval for all classroom websites, check with your IT coordinator.
Related guides

Keep exploring

Set up your keyboard center today

No login, no installation, no IT request. Open the browser, bookmark the page, choose a mode. That is the entire setup.

Open ToddlerKeys