Monday, 10 March 2014

FREE Printable Art Collages

Free Printable Art Collages

4 Free Art Collages for your child to practice their art skills! Includes Build a City, Build a Farm, Create an Ocean, and Create a Face. Includes both color and black and white cut-outs.

There are 3 levels of difficulty depending on your child's age and skill level:
1. Parents cut out the colored pieces for the child to glue.
2. Parents cut out the black and white pieces, the child glues them and also colors the picture at the end. 
3. The child cuts out the pieces, glues them and then colors them in. They practice cutting, gluing and coloring at the same time!



For more art skills practice, take a look at The Ultimate Art Skills Pack for ages 2.5-6 years. This is a unique set of 20 printable activities that help kids practice cutting, gluing, tracing, coloring and drawing!
The Ultimate Art Skills Pack

Wednesday, 5 March 2014

FREE Daylight Savings Time Board Game

Free Daylight Savings Time Board Game
 
Teach your child about Daylight Savings Time, clocks, seasons, numbers and counting in this fun game for the whole family!
Each player moves clockwise across the board, traveling through the 4 seasons, and moving the hand on the clock. If you land on the "spring ahead" or the "fall back" spaces, you also move the clock an hour ahead or an hour back.
 
Ages 2+. Simple enough that a 2 year old can play but fun enough for older kids and adults to join in.
 
Includes Board Game, Playing Instructions and 2 Paper Cubes.
 

Monday, 3 March 2014

15 FREE St. Patrick's Day Printables for Toddlers and Pre-K

Free St. Patrick's Day Printables for Toddlers and PreK

This is a fun activity pack for toddlers and preschoolers featuring number recognition, number quantity, shapes, patterns, sorting, alphabet letter cases, letter sounds, visual discrimination, coloring, tracing, and scissor skills practice.

 
Download the Updated Pack here!

Friday, 28 February 2014

Painting Activity for Babies

Baby Finger Painting
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Finger painting with babies might start out with fingers... but it can quickly turn into full body painting! Yes, this may seem very messy (and it is!) but the end result is a masterpiece that you can hang on your wall and your guests will think it's a modern art piece you bought at the gallery. Well, maybe not quite.. but you'll have some great wall art for your kid's room.

When my daughter was 8 months old I started painting with her. I placed an old sheet on the floor to contain the mess, then I laid down one of my large canvases. I squirted some finger paint on the canvas, one color at a time, and she eagerly went to work. She started spreading the paint around the canvas with her fingers, then proceeded to crawl all over the painting and use her whole body as a paintbrush. The result was impressive!

Baby Finger Painting
Baby Finger Painting
 
Baby Finger PaintingPainting made by baby
 
Baby Finger PaintingBaby Finger Painting

Tips:
1: Make sure your child is at least 6 months old and is able to sit up on their own. If your child does not crawl yet you can rotate the canvas for them or place the child on different parts of the canvas. If your baby is crawling, let them crawl all over the painting. It might seem like the canvas is bending or caving in, but it should snap back into place later.

2: My daughter started out in a t-shirt onesie but I quickly learned that it was much easier if she paints without any clothes, just a diaper. This makes it easier to quickly place her in a bath right after the activity. Also, the diaper actually creates some interesting designs when it is dragged across a painting!

3: Start by squirting one color on one part of the canvas. Let the child finish spreading that paint around. Then squirt another color somewhere nearby and let the child work on that. Keep doing this until the painting is complete.

4: Let the child complete the painting at their own pace - some babies might be done in 5 minutes and decide to crawl away in search for the next adventure, while other babies might sit and paint for quite a while.

5: You may know from experience that complementary colors (colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel. example: red & green, blue & orange, yellow & purple) will turn a lovely shade of brown when combined. In order to keep the painting bright and colorful and minimize brown areas try to avoid using complementary colors next to each other.

6: Yes, babies put everything in their mouth. These Crayola finger paints are non-toxic, but if you prefer you can make your own homemade finger paints with this simple recipe.

 

Sunday, 23 February 2014

Alphabet Sorting Game with Free Printable

 
Free Printable Alphabet Sorting Game

I'd like to share a fun activity that I do with my daughter to help her learn letter sounds! This also builds alphabet awareness, early vocabulary, sorting and fine motor skills.
 
For each letter of the alphabet there are 6 cards: four cards with pictures of objects, one card with the uppercase letter and one with the lowercase letter.
 
Free Alphabet Sorting Game
 
Free Alphabet Sorting Game

All you need is a few baskets, cans or containers and you label each container with a letter of the alphabet.


Free Alphabet Sorting Game
 
I had my daughter sort the cards in the correct containers.
 
 
Toddler Alphabet Sorting
 
 
Toddler Alphabet Sorting
 
Depending on your child's age and skill level you can choose how many letters to do at a time. I recommend only doing 2 or 3 letters at one time for beginners. You can also add challenge by using letters that are not in alphabetical order, example x, m, and r.
 
Free Alphabet Sorting Game
 
You can download the FREE cards HERE!
 

Friday, 17 January 2014

How to Teach your Toddler Geography


US Geography Regions Learning
Toddler Geography Puzzle Toddler Geography Game
 

  How to teach your Toddler Geography

It is important to start teaching young children about where they live, maps, and the world around them. As children come to understand location they begin understand how they are a part of that location and how that location is a part of the world.  Children two years and up can learn about what state they live in, what states surround their location, the name of the country they live in, and the continent. Here are some fun ways to teach children geography:

1) Start by teaching children what state they live in. Get a United states map and circle the state they live in with a dry erase marker. Tell them this is "New Jersey" and point at it, for example. Then the next day you can ask them "where is NJ?" if they don't point to where it is show them. Keep asking them where they live everyday.
 
US Geography Learning

2)  Use stickers to place on the states to help them remember location. Ask them again where they live and then ask them to place a sticker on top of that state. Place stickers on other states surrounding that one and tell them the names. If you have family members that live in surrounding states or there is a fact, monument, landmark that is special about that state tell them about it. It helps them make a connection with that state.
 
Toddler Geography LearningUS Geography Learning
 
3) Have them complete puzzles of the U.S
 
Toddler Geography Puzzle


 
4) Help them memorize the U.S. 50 states by teaching one region at a time. This breaks up the U.S. by 4 regions that are easy to learn: The North East, The South, The Midwest, the West. Focus on one region at a time.
US Geography Regions Learning
 
5) Play state bingo!  Call out the state and have the child place beans or bingo chips on the state.
Toddler Geography Game
 
6) Have the child do a coloring page of the region and talk about the states they are coloring:
US Geography coloring page 
 
For a complete toddler region geography activity pack with printable maps, puzzles, games, and fun, hands on activities, plus a memorization technique to learn all 50 states, click below:
 
United States Geography Activity Pack for Toddlers & PreK

        Geography toddler pack!

          Instruction manual with daily schedule included!
    Grades PK-3rd








     

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Teaching Tools for Babies


Research shows that the first five years of a child's life is the most critical period for brain development. In this period, brain cells make connections that lay the foundation for all future learning. These pathways must be maintained, through repetition and consistency, in order for the connections to be preserved. The network of connections influences intellectual capacity, memory, problem solving, and language. Most of these connections are made in early childhood, especially in the first year of life.

Starting from birth, the most important thing a parent can do is to interact with their baby as much as possible. You are your child's best teacher. A baby's brain is designed to learn best from human interaction. Experts recommend talking to your baby a lot. The more that a baby hears the patterns of language, the easier language learning becomes. By age 3, kids spoken to more frequently have an IQ that's 1.5 times higher than that of children who weren't. By the time they're in elementary school, they have much stronger reading, spelling, and writing skills. You should narrate your day, meaning talk about everything you are doing and everything that is happening. Once your baby starts babbling, you should have "conversations" with the baby. Ask the baby a question then pause and wait for a reaction. This kind of interaction will help to develop social and emotional skills. It is also recommended that parents read to their child every day, starting from birth.

Infant Stimulation Cards (newborns - 5 months):

Because vision is one of the least developed senses at birth, it is a good idea for the parent to offer stimulating images to aid in the baby's development. At birth, a baby’s retina is not fully developed. An adult retina can distinguish many different shades of light and color, but a newborn retina can only detect large contrasts between light and dark, or black and white. I used to notice my baby staring at high contrast objects such as the dark framed mirror or the dark curtains up against a white wall.

Infant stimulation cards are black and white patterned cards that you hold up in front of your baby as a visual stimulation tool. Research shows that infant stimulation cards will help calm and soothe your baby as well as increase concentration skills, enhance natural curiosity and stimulate the creation of brain cell connections. You can download 10 free infant stimulation cards,
click here! The best distance to place the card is 8 to 12 inches from your baby's eyes. You can tape it to the side of the crib, the wall next to the changing table, in front of your car's baby seat, or just show it to your baby and let the baby look at it until he loses interest. These cards are good for newborns up to around 5 months. Make sure baby is alert and active while showing these cards.


Infant Stimulation Cards Free
Infant Stimulation Cards Free










The file contains 2 cards per page, you can laminate them and make 10 cards or 5 double-sided cards.

Baby Flash Cards (5 months and up):

Once your baby starts to stay awake and alert for longer periods, around 5 months, a daily exercise you can do is to use flash cards to aid learning. You can download free alphabet flash cards A-Z and numbers 1-10,
click here! These high contrast black and white images are best, and you just want to flash each card for a second while saying the letter sound. This exercise should last no longer than a minute for the whole set of cards. Do this while your baby is alert and in a high chair or seat. Consistency is the key, so if you do this every day you will significantly impact your child's reading potential. The child will quickly learn the letter sounds which is the first step in learning to read phonetically. Give your baby a head start in reading!

Your baby will also learn to recognize numbers by using the number cards. You should also try to count things in every day conversation. Count the baby's fingers and toes, count the number of steps in your staircase, etc. Soon the baby will be counting everything too!

Note: Teaching your infant with flash cards should not be time consuming and should always be fun. To be used in addition to lots of meaningful interaction and play with your baby. If your baby is not interested, try again at a later time. Also, if you do not start at 5 months, don't worry it is never too late to start. Your child will benefit regardless.


Baby Flash Cards Free

The file contains 6 cards per page, just laminate and cut out. You can also hole punch and put them through a ring to hold them together and quickly flip through them.

Baby Flash Cards Free


Baby Learning Flash Cards



Baby Learning Flash Cards