Monday, March 10, 2014

Going Green!


What better way to go green than to help your child appreciate the concept of re-using materials and to create some St. Patrick’s Day shenanigans at the same time! Even if you don’t have a much-loved leprechaun book, you can enchant your child with a story. Describe the antics of a leprechaun who hides treasure in your neighborhood, school, or town. Make it fun by using your child’s name in the tale. Encourage your child to picture the story as a movie in his or her mind. It is important that children learn to appreciate the art of storytelling, especially in our world of constantly streaming videos.

Then really go green by asking your child to collect materials from both inside and outside your house to create a trap for the mischievous leprechaun. This is a wonderful way to get your child excited about re-using and recycling in a developmentally-appropriate way.

This child collects fallen pine needles to re-use in a leprechaun trap.
Encourage problem solving and creative thought by letting your child design the leprechaun trap.

Use your collective imaginations: What can be a trap?
Problem solve: How can this be put together?
Ask your child to determine where the invention should be set. You may even want to think about leaving your child a note or a “treasure” from the leprechaun inside the trap!

Encourage your child to think creatively and to explain his/her thinking about how to catch a leprechaun!
And the best part of going green for St. Patrick’s Day? Taking a walk to look for leprechauns or other signs of a green spring in your neighborhood!


Sunday, March 2, 2014

Science Meets Verbal Skills: Day Sky/Night Sky


We are constantly striving to help you make the natural world a part of a child’s everyday experience. Nature is a classroom that is age-appropriate and meaningful for our preschoolers. As we develop a child’s observational skills and abilities to compare and contrast, the world outside of a home or school becomes a wonderful classroom.

Talk with your child about the ground and the sky. Have children point to the day sky. Together, name what can be seen such as the sun, clouds, or even precipitation. You can take this further and discuss the way the air feels (hot, warm, cold) and what this means for the clothes we wear.

Encourage children to describe what they see in the day sky.
Peek out the door or stand in the yard at night. Encourage your child to see and listen. What can be seen? What can be heard? Your budding scientist is improving her/his oral communication skills by describing the night sky.

It can be a wonderful bonding experience to share observations about the night sky. Use the word observation, too! Children delight in knowing "difficult" vocabulary words.
 
Later, have your child use art to “report” their findings. Provide paper, cut out stars, clouds, a moon, and sun.  Encourage your child to create pictures that accurately depict what was observed. Have fun by conversing about the experience. Encourage contrast statements like, “I saw a sun in the day sky. There was a moon in the night sky.”

Talking about the art is important!

Children can observe the moon every night and marvel in its changing shape!
Finally, connect to literature by sharing books such as Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown or nonfiction text about your area such as Chesapeake Bay Walk by David Owen Bell.

Favorite childhood books are more meaningful when children can connect personal experiences to them.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Alphabetic Principle


Have you heard the term alphabetic principle? It simply means that your child can name letters. This important skill is being tested more and more as children enter school. While we are not big fans of testing, we do recognize that children show a curiosity for those “mysterious” symbols on the page. That’s the reason for your preschooler to learn letter names – not because of testing (at least in our opinion). And what better letters to begin with than those in a child’s name!

We like to show children their name in print.  Together point to the name and say, “This word is your name.” Run your finger under the name in a continuous motion while you say the name together.

Next say, “These are the letters in your name.” Point to the individual letters.


Children are eager to learn when the material has a personal connection.

Finally point to each letter and say, “This is a B. This is an e,” and so on. You can even make up a funny song or sing-song chant with the letters and sing/say it while walking, riding in the car, or preparing food. Anytime is learning time as long as it’s fun!

To reinforce the letters in a child’s name, write the letters on paper plates or pieces of paper.  Have your child throw a ball, beanbag, or other small object at the letter as he/she says the letter name. When your child is comfortable with this, you call out a letter and have the child throw the object at the correct letter.

Encourage your child to find letters as you say them.

You can also take this game outside by writing the letters with chalk on the pavement. Have the child find letters in his or her name or jump from letter to letter! Make it fun and remember to use "outdoor voices!"

Help children find their special letters - those in their name!

Do you have magnetic letters? Ask your child to find the letters in his/her name and put them on the refrigerator, cookie sheet, or board.  In a role-reversal, let your child “play teacher” and point to the letter while asking you its name. Have fun by making mistakes and let your child correct you!

Encourage your child to "play teacher." This different "avenue" for naming letters helps children check their own understanding.

Put old newspaper or advertising circulars to work by having children find the letters in their names in printed material. They can point to the letters and say them or circle letters.

Use junk mail as learning material!

See how fun and easy alphabetic principle can be! Your child will think of "Alphabetic Principle" as a game and may begin naming letters everywhere.

This child started impressing his parents by naming letters on the menu!

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Make Writing Meaningful – Part 1


Your child watches you write everyday.  You make a grocery list, sign a credit card bill in a restaurant, or sign for a package delivery. Families and teachers can take advantage of these experiences to help children understand that the marks we make on a page have meaning. For example, when signing your name on a credit card bill at a restaurant, talk to your child. Tell your child that these marks are the way to write your name.  

This child mimics his parent by writing on a receipt.
Extend the idea that writing is meaningful whether at home or in school. Have children play restaurant. Set up stuffed animals around a table. Have your child decide what food he or she would like to serve in their restaurant. Invite your child to create a menu. Remember, it doesn’t matter if the markings on the “menu” resemble words or even the alphabet. (See our post from July 16, 2013: Encourage Writing). The important concept is for children to connect writing and meaning.

This preschooler is making "random marks" on his menus. This is a developmentally-appropriate way of writing.
Encourage your child to hand the newly created menus to their restaurant guests.

Children learn that the marks on a paper have meaning.
By taking the “orders” from the animal customers, children further their understanding that writing is talk written down!

The literacy "play time" is complete. The child takes food orders!
We love when imaginative play and literacy combine in a developmentally-appropriate way!

Monday, February 10, 2014

We Love to Talk about Hearts!


Valentine’s Day is the perfect chance to encourage lots of oral language, especially the use of school vocabulary. This academic language can often be confusing to children. Make it a natural part of your play, as children love using new words. Praise them! Encourage them! Use the opportunity to make their vocabulary grow!

Cut out a heart. Fold it in half. Have your child hold it against a mirror. Talk about how half of the heart is a mirror image of the other half. You are using two important math words: half and mirror image.We will talk more about these key words below.

We like to cut around the letters so children have a visual of tall letters, letters with tails, and even letter with dots.

We suggest cutting the word apart. This helps develop Concept of Word.
While we're cutting hearts, talk about the concept of half (or fractions). Some elementary teachers believe that children have a discernible aversion to fractions because of the language used to introduce them to the concept. We often say, “Give your sister half of the cookie.” Or we might tell a child, “Break the candy bar in half and only eat part. Save the other half for later.”  This gives children a negative view of the half.
Not every child likes to share half of a cookie!
Give children a positive feeling about half. Look in the mirror while holding up half of the heart. Talk about how the half looks like a whole heart while looking in the mirror. Talk about mirror images. While this is only an introduction to mirror image, it does give your child important background for later geometry work.

Holding a folded heart to a mirror helps children understand the concept behind fractions: two halves make a whole. And this seems like play!
Reinforce school vocabulary such as bigger and smaller by cutting out a series of hearts in various shapes. Have your child order them from biggest to smallest and smallest to biggest.  Encourage talk such as, “This is the biggest heart. This heart is a little smaller,” etc.  This is necessary school readiness as primary teachers often use vocabulary such as big and small and assume children can order objects.


Turn your vocabulary/math lesson into art! Make a Funny Valentine person. Use several of the hearts. Make one a face. Ask your child to draw a face on this heart.


Cut out two long strips and two short strips. Notice the important vocabulary that you can use with your child when showing him/her the strips. Explain that these will become the arms and legs of the Funny Valentine.  Show or help your child fold these strips accordion style so they are bouncy. Use words such as back and forth as you fold.


Finally, glue or staple the face onto a big heart body. Add the accordion strips.
Develop fine motor skills by letting your child practice with markers and glue.

Have your child talk to or dance around with his/her new Valentine friend! We love to have children retell how art was created. Why not have your child whisper to the Valentine Friend the sequential steps that resulted in this new buddy!





Sunday, February 2, 2014

Marshmallow Math


It's a marshmallow world in the winter
When the snow comes to cover the ground…

Those song lyrics became reality this past week for so many children who don’t normally experience snowy weather.  Children were excited to roll snowballs, stomp in the powder, and make snowmen with “carrot faces.”

We are always fans of connecting children’s excitement with the goals of pre-school. Use the fun of marshmallow math and art to recreate and enjoy the wintry experience.

Show children pictures of snowmen in books or walk around your neighborhood to look at snowmen.


Ask them to describe how snowmen are made. As you do this focus on three balls of snow. Ask them to find other groups of three: 3 houses, 3 swings, 3 shovels, etc. The key is to verbalize an understanding of 3.   

When you get back in the warmth of your home or school, ask your children to count out 3 large marshmallows and build a marshmallow snowman. To make it sturdier, an adult might help by putting a toothpick through the marshmallows. Be careful!


Extend the experience by having children make 3 snowmen, with 3 marshmallows. Ask, “How many marshmallows in all?”  When we provide concrete experiences like this we are setting the stage of beginning multiplication!


To continue the marshmallow/snow theme, put miniature marshmallows in a bowl.


Ask your child to reach in and grab a handful.


Ask your child (children) to estimate how many marshmallows he/she has in hand. Then count them.


Next ask your child to try and grab more marshmallows. Some children may even use 2 hands! Count to check that the estimate is correct.


Finally, integrate art into your snowy day fun. Draw an outline of a cup. Have your child use a brown crayon, marker, or paint to make hot chocolate.


Ask your child how many marshmallows he/she would like to put into the cup. Have the child count this number. Then glue them into the cup to make a 3D art presentation of a snowy day treat!





Monday, January 27, 2014

Groundhog Day: Real or Make-Believe?


Fiction or nonfiction? Real or make-believe? Fact or fantasy? These are all phrases for an important early learning concept: Could this really happen? And what better time to encourage child thought about make-believe events versus real-life occurrences than Groundhog Day!  

You can introduce your child (or children) to this key idea by asking him or her to look at books you have in your home, classroom, or during a trip to the local library. Use books to begin the conversation, “Could this really happen?” We like to encourage children to sort books into 2 piles: “It Can Happen” and “It Can Not Happen.”

This book can happen.
This book is pretend. There is a talking bear.

After this, you can introduce your child (or children) to Groundhog Day. Tell the story of the little creature, Punxsutawney Phil. We encourage you to use the name, Punxsutawney, as our experience tells us that young children often delight in saying unusual multisyllabic words. Practice this with them and watch the joy when they share this name with others!

Discuss that a real groundhog will come out of its hole. Ask children if the groundhog can really tell us what the weather might be for the next several weeks. Some children may have valid reasons for answering yes. We encourage you to accept any reasoning. The key component is for children to verbalize support for a position. It is important to remember that children should learn to give reasons for what they think.

As you look forward to the big day, have children make their own groundhog, popping out of a hole. Use a cup for the groundhog burrow. I use white cups for snowy areas and brown cups for other spots. You can cover the cup with brown paper from a recycled bag as shown below.

Cover any disposable cup to make it brown or white.

Give children an outline of a groundhog or have them draw one of their own.

Children can draw their own animal or you can help them.

Cut out the animal. Next, poke a hole in the bottom of the cup and tape the groundhog to a craft stick or pencil. Your child can move the groundhog up and down to peek out of its hole. Remember, this is a valuable opportunity for children to experience the concept of up and down or in and out.

The groundhog is in its hole.

The groundhog is out of its hole. It is up.

Encourage verbal skills by asking children to explain Groundhog Day as they show their art creation. You can add to the fun by reading and rereading the following poem:


February Second

What animal gives us the weather report,
Right there from his snowy winter fort?

He wiggles his nose up from the ground,
And looks at the scenery all around.

If his shadow he suddenly sees,
Into his burrow this fellow flees.

Then snowy, icy winter stays,
For 42 more freezing days.

But if this creature runs about,
Then “Spring is here!” we all can shout!

Yes, the groundhog is legendary,
For weather advice in February!