Posts Tagged ‘preschool activities’

Diary of an Emerging Reader: Fun & Games

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

One of the things I like best about the Bob Books is how they progress sequentially, introducing different concepts in handy, easy-to-hold books. Lately I’ve been using the My First Bob Books: Pre-Reading Skills with Wilson, our emerging reader. Because he knows his shapes pretty well, we’re now breezing through the first three books (which cover learning simple shapes, finding hidden shapes and matching shapes) and are spending more time on the other three groups (sorting, patterns and sequencing). We’re having fun with each book beyond the text, asking questions, finding hidden objects and playing games.
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My First Bob Books are not only intended for you to read to your child (whereas the foundation sets are intended for your child to read to you) but they are full of fun learning games that you can play with your emerging reader. For example, in “Fix It” (book 5) kids are asked to identify certain shapes that will enable the broken toys to get fixed. The illustrations contain additional shapes (triangles on the curtain, a smiley face on the flag), which I asked Wilson to identify and count. In “Get Ready” (book 10) the illustrations are spaced on the page as to give kids clues to what happens next. I turned it into a game by asking Wilson which toys he would play with first, second and last. Wilson loves blocks so we had a lot of fun with “Block Town” (book 7), which introduces simple patterns. I had him repeat all of the shapes in the pattern (“square, rectangle, rectangle, square”) and then we got down on the floor and created our own pattern – using the Bob Books!

My emerging reader has an extremely short attention span so our reading sessions progress at their own pace. Once he gets wiggly or starts throwing books on the floor, it’s time to move onto something else. Still, I can definitely tell that each time we pick up the books, he’s putting into action the concepts that we learned in previous reading sessions. Which is pretty exciting.
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Do you have a reading success story or guest blog you’d like to share? Let us know.

Guest Blog: Reinforcing reading skills with fun “sticky sticks” activity

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

We have begun using the Bob Books learning to read curriculum and I love how repetitive and easy the books are for new readers. My daughter is flying through the first four books! The first book covers the short a sound along with the consonants m, s, and t. To help reinforce her learning we used our sticky sticks to trace the letters “at” and “am.” I had written the endings of the words on a sheet and we’d form the additional letter to make the word we were reviewing. In the first book the words we covered were: Sam, Mat and sat. As my gal is really kinetic we traced the letters after we made them . . . and then we did silly things like make the sticks into “wands” to point at the words.
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A tip for encouraging word blending:

My friend Kristen gave me some terrific advice. For a while, my daughter was stuck at the “s-a-t” stage, where she would sound out the letters individually but had a hard time realizing they formed a word. Rather than sounding out each letter independently, sound them out in blends. “s-a-t” becomes, “sa”+”at.” My daughter totally “got it” the after a round of sounding out our words with this new method!

–Rachel M. is a mom to three preschoolers blogging at Quirky Momma.
http://quirkymomma.com
@Quirkymommasite

Trick or Treat! Halloween Books and Activities That Go Boo!

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

In the spirit of spooky good fun, we thought we’d dedicate this week’s blog to Halloween. Some of our favorite pumpkin and Halloween-themed children’s books are listed below. We also asked our friends on Twitter and Facebook to provide some of their favorite activities. Enjoy!

Halloween Books

Boo! Made You Jump! (Charlie and Lola) by Lauren Child (Grosset and Dunlap, 2007)

It’s the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown by Charles M. Schulz (Running Press Kids, 2008)

Inside a House That Is Haunted by Alyssa Satin Capucilli, illustrated by Tedd Arnold (Scholastic, 1998)

The Littlest Pumpkin by R. A. Sherman, illustrated by Betina Ogden (Scholastic, Inc. 2001)

Pumpkin Soup by Helen Cooper (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005)

Room on the Broom by Julia Donaldson, illustrated by Axel Scheffler (Dial Books, 2001)

Five Little Pumpkins Rhyme & Activity (from Pierce County Library)

Rhyme

Five little pumpkins sitting on a gate.

The first one said, “Oh my, it’s getting late!”

The second one said, “There’s a chill in the air.”

The third one said, “But we don’t care.”

The fourth one said, “Let’s run and run and run!”

The fifth one said, “ I’m ready for some fun.” Then, whooooo went the wind

And OUT went the lights

And five little pumpkins rolled out of sight…

Activity

Bring in 5 real mini pumpkins. Have your kids act out the rhyme (rolling the pumpkins, shivering, running (where appropriate) and turning out the lights.

Eerie Eco Bats (from Discount School Supply)

What You Need: Clean, empty cardboard egg cartons

Paint cups with washable tempera paint in various colors

Paintbrushes, scissors, wiggly eyes, glitter, construction paper, scissors and glue.

What You Do:

1. Cut out small sections of the egg cartons for the children to use; they can be in sets of 3 cups or 5 cups, depending on how large the final bats will be. Finally, pre-cut pieces of yarn or string for hanging.
2. Demonstrate how to cut the outside cups with a zigzag pattern to look like bat wings, making sure not to cut the cup in the center (which will become the face/body).
3. Have children paint their egg carton bats. Encourage them to be creative with the colors and to design their bats any way they like.
4. Once the bats are dry have the children decorate with the collage materials provided. Children can cut vampire “teeth” using construction paper to glue to their bats’ faces.
5. Show children how to gently poke a hole in the top of their bats’ body and thread one of the pre-cut pieces of yarn through for hanging.

Have a great idea you’d like to share? Let us know!

What is Early Literacy?

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

It’s the mother who sings to her infant. The baby who chews on the board book! The toddler who asks for his favorite stories to be read to him over and over again. Sound familiar? Early literacy is what children learn and know about reading and writing before they actually read and write.

As you’re most likely already aware, early literacy skills develop in the first 5 years of life. According to recent brain development research, children are born with 100 billion brain cells. By the time a child is three, his or her brain circuitry is basically developed, which is why it is important to form positive learning experiences and attachments as early as possible.

You make such a difference to your child’s early learning successes. When you read, talk or play with your child, you’re stimulating the growth of their brain. It’s that simple! Even if a child or baby doesn’t appear to be learning, they are. Hearing stories, handling books, playing with blocks—it all adds up to early literacy. With each interaction, your child is learning important pre-reading skills such as vocabulary development, sound awareness, reading comprehension and letter recognition.

Here are a few tips to engage your child in early literacy activities:

Read to your child every day. Even if it’s just for a few minutes. Even if your toddler forces you to skip pages or chews on the corner of the book.

Talk about the pictures. Ask: what’s happening and why?

Talk about the story. See if your child can tell you what happens next.

Point to words. Run your finger along the words as you read them.

Make it a game. Ask your child to point to certain objects. Use funny voices or make sound effects when telling the story. End story time with tickle time.

Let us know if you have any tips you’d like to share!

Diary of an Emerging Reader: Appreciating the Unexpected

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

What do you get when you put one highly exuberant 2 year-old, a literate yet bossy 7 year-old, and 24 books in one room? A little bit of everything, I have to say…

We started off with a refresher on My First Bob Books: Pre-Reading Skills. Last week, Wilson (our reader in training) had a bit of trouble recognizing his shapes, not to mention holding his attention span. This week? “Triangle! Square! Circle!” he shouted when he spied Tanner the Triangle, Seth the Square and Sally the Circle. We read through the first three books with relative ease. Wilson sat still and pointed to the shapes without prompting.

Elizabeth (age 7) then read the first two books from the My First Bob Books: Alphabet set to her younger brother. “What does this letter say?” she asked, pointing to the letter A. “6!” replied Wilson. “No, Wilson, it’s the letter A,” she corrected him in a mothering tone. “What is this letter?” she asked, pointing to the letter B. “B!” shouted Wilson, resulting in a congratulatory “yes!” from the rest of us. Elizabeth read through a few more pages but then–don’t ask me why– things went downhill after that. Both kids began jumping on the bed, giggling uncontrollably and dumping books onto the floor. Then Wilson bit his sister on the arm. “Okay,” that’s it” I said. “Help me get these books back in their boxes.” Putting the books back in order and according to each set was a terrific task to assign to Elizabeth. “Wilson, you put all the red ones together,” she said… and he did! “Now the yellow ones,” she instructed. Amazingly enough, he was able to complete that task as well. Yay, he’s getting better with his colors, I thought. But wasn’t this supposed to be a reading exercise? Then I realized that working on early learning and pre-reading skills such as colors, numbers and shapes doesn’t have to be an organized activity, it can happen on the go; anytime, anywhere.

Got a pre reading tip to share? Let us know.

–Allison

A is for Alphabet Games

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

The best thing for teaching preschool literacy skills is to have the “lessons” be part of every day activities, such as riding in the car, eating, reading, or playing with alphabet puzzles. Also, simply talking about letters, words and sounds in everyday conversation makes words and letters part of your world. This way reading becomes a natural extension of other play and the many different ways kids learn is respected; whether by imitation, puzzling out letter or word clues, or as a way to share loving attention with a parent.

We’ve come up with activities, below, that are geared towards children ages 3-6. Have a game or idea you’d like to share? Let us know.

Alphabet “Soup”
This is a fun activity that you can do with older preschool-age kids.  The “soup” is made from everyday items and objects you have around the house.

What you’ll need:
Magazines, newspapers, junk mail
Scissors
Bits of yarn or string (for “noodles”)
Miscellaneous objects (non choking hazard-size)
A bowl
Large spoon or ladle

What you’ll do (part 1):
Instruct your child(ren) to find all the letters of the alphabet within the magazines and newspapers. Larger print is best, although not necessary. Cut out each letter (smaller children will need assistance) and place inside the bowl. Your cut out letters can also be used for labeling household items, finding a match in a particular book you might be reading or spelling new words.

What you’ll do (part 2):
Next, spend some time going through the papers in search of food items they would like to include in the “soup.” Cut those out as well, and place in the bowl.  Now add the “noodles” by cutting up medium-sized pieces of yarn or string, and add anything else (miscellaneous household objects) your children would like to add to the soup. Mix everything together and stir. Now the soup is ready to serve!  You can either move onto part 3 or save the “soup” for a rainy day.

What you’ll do (part 3):
Give each child a large spoon or ladle and ask them questions about each spoonful: What are the letters in your spoon? What sound does each letter make? What else is in the soup? What letter does it start with?

R is for Road Trip: Are We There Yet?
This activity is great for would-be backseat drivers and/or bored kids in the back of the car.

What you’ll need:
Construction paper
Popsicle sticks (washed)
Crayons or pens
Glue or heavy-duty stapler

What you’ll do:
Prior to your trip, work with your kids to make the “road signs.”  Using construction paper and crayons or markers, create the correct shape and size for popular signs such as “stop,” “yield,” “merge,” etc.  Alternatively, each child could make a sign using a few of their favorite letter(s) of the alphabet. Glue or staple the signs onto the Popsicle sticks. While on the road, instruct your children to wave their signs every time they see a matching road sign, and have them say the name of the sign. For the next few miles, ask them to look for other signs that contain words with the same letter, i.e. Look for all of the signs with the letter S in them, such as State Park, Rest Stop, Museum, etc. Repeat the words back and talk about what sound the letter makes in each word. Don’t have time to make signs? Simply make a game out of looking for different letters on road signs or pointing out the words on signs that they know.

P is for Pool
Teach the alphabet and rhythmic breathing at the same time.

What you’ll need:
Access to swimming pool or other body of water
Swimsuit
Goggles (optional)
Supervision (mandatory)

What you’ll do:
Learning how to blow bubbles and hold one’s breath under water is a critical water safety skill. Swimming instructors will frequently have kids “bob up and down” in the water as a way to teach rhythmic breathing (and get their heads wet- also an important swimming skill.) Make it a game by adding in the alphabet. Every time your child comes up for air, have them say a letter of the alphabet. Older kids/advanced swimmers can recite the entire alphabet (in order) or spell out simple words, such as C-A-T, D-O-G or S-W-I-M.