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Archive for the 'Early Childhood Education' Category
The key to teaching counting to your child is to make counting entertaining.
Start teaching your child about numbers and counting in their early childhood activities. They can begin learning how to count in their everyday play, long before they even realize that they are being taught. You must be interactive when you play with your child. These techniques can even work long before your child can talk.
Here are some everyday play activities that you can do to help teach counting skills.
Playing with Blocks – Childrens Educational Toys: 
When you are playing blocks, count them as your stack them together. You child will be entertained, because they will 9 times out of 10, knock the stack down. Smile and say, “oh no”, and then stack them together again as you are count them.
Ask your child to hand you some blocks and as they do – count them.
Sort out the blocks by color, shape, design, or size. Count how many of each you have.
As your child advances, alternate who stack the blocks together. You can place the first block and count 1, then have your child stack the next block and count 2, etc…
You may even find things like flash cards, dominoes, or a wooden bead abacuses with beads that are different colors and shapes, very useful to teach your child their counting skills.
Around Your Home, Store, or Restaurant Games – Arithmetic Games
As you dress your child, count their fingers, toes, arms, legs, eyes, etc… Count the buttons or snaps on their clothes.
As they eat their favorite foods - grapes, pepperoni, french fries - you can count how many they ate.
Count the stairs as you walk up and down them.
When you are at the store, count the number of products that you put into the cart. Tell your child that you need three boxes of cereal and count them as they load them into the cart.
Singing and Counting
Children love singing and dancing around. Use songs to help your child learn about counting and arithmetic skills. Start out by singing songs like: “5 Little Monkeys Jumping in the Bed” and then move into other musical tunes. There are many CD’s or DVD’s that are focused on math skills like counting, addition, and subtraction. Listen to them at least once a day.
As mentioned earlier, the key to teaching counting to your child is to make counting entertaining. This can be achieved by using these early childhood activities and arithmetic games. Remember to count out loud to them when they are young, and to do these activities thoughout the day to reinforce these mathematics and counting skills.
Everyday we hear about obesity in the news and the health issues that it causes. Let’s help our children learn about nutrition with fun and meaningful activities that introduce health and wellness concepts.
Start out by using the new food pyramid for personalized nutrition needs based on your child’s age, gender, and physical activity. Then, choose foods according to the USDA’s MyPyramid to practice good hygiene and healthy food choices.
Encourage your children to use fun songs (sipping cider through a straw to “Apples and Bananas”) or other hands-on activites like board games, word searches, photographic food cards, and matching activities to help them learn about and appreciate the variety of fabulous foods that we enjoy every day, while exploring nutrition.
Weather affects everyone, everyday! ( Droughts, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, etc…)

A good way to help children understand how weather affects us everyday is to have them make observations about sunlight, rainfall, wind speed, wind direction, and temperature. Chart their observations, and explain other weather terms like: evaporation, isobars, jet streams, and wind chill factors.
Launch scientific investigations of severe weather phenomena using recent disaster events. Discuss interesting weather facts and set up group research projects and lab activities to simulate volcanoes, hurricanes, tornadoes, and lightning.
Understanding and following the weather can be fun and educational.
A young child can increase his or her speech skills by singing songs, chants, and rhymes!
To make singing fun and entertaining for children, introduce them to rhythm instruments. Encourage them to be interactive when they sing by playing along with a musical instrument. Children can make the sound of ocean waves using shakers, pretend to be a train using sand blocks, create a rainstorm with rhythm sticks, and pretend to perform circus tricks with jingle bells. 
(What is your favorite song, chant, or rhyme?)
Here are some sample songs:
The ABC Song: A,B,C,D,E,F,G,- H,I,J,K,L,M,N,O,P, – Q,R,S,- T,U,V,- W,X,Y,Z now I know my ABC’s, next time won’t you sing with me?
The Itisy Bisty Spider: Itsy bitsy spider went up the waterspout. Down came the rain and washed the spider out. Out came the sun and dried up all the rain. And the itsy bitsy spider went up the spout again! (Repeat)
Shoo Fly: Shoo, fly, don’t bother me – Shoo, fly, don’t bother me – Shoo, fly, don’t bother me – For I belong to somebody. I feel, I feel, I feel like a morning star. I feel, I feel, I feel like a morning star.
Row-Row-Row Your Boat: Row, row, row your boat. Gently down the stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily. Life is but a dream. (Repeat)
As we get deeper into winter, I know that I am longing for spring.
Until that time, I would like to encourage you to use indoor creative sand play activities using indoor sandboxes or sand & water tables. 
For us parents or teachers that want a mess-free experience, use a sealed sandbox where the sand is completely enclosed. Your child can use magnetic wands to push magnetized creatures and vehicles through the sand and make trails.
A sand and water table will allow your child to have a sensory experience with a large variety of educational play activities. They can use plastic sand toys and molds to turn playtime into learning time.
Either way, your child will enjoy hours of creative play indoors.
Don’t worry, spring will be here soon and we will all able to enjoy the beach and the sand again!
Sometimes we need to look at things like a young child. Early in childhood development, a child begins to see things that we think are very basic, in a very complex way.
They don’t know about shapes, colors, and designs. Everything is new and exciting to them in a very complex way. In their early learning, a child begins to learn about shapes and patterns like circles, squares, rectangles, and triangles, and explore how they can fit together to make different shapes. A house is a square and a triangle, a bus is a rectangle and two circles, and a flower is a circle and triangles for the leaf petals.
Using pattern blocks as a hands-on early childhood activity will help teach a child sorting, classifying, and ordering, in an entertaining way. Children will love to play with pattern blocks to design and build things. During their play, they will develop their visual perception, early geometry, logical thinking, and problem solving skills.
Encourage your child to explore and play with pattern blocks today!
Keep your child actively playing with this Fun-A-Saurus!
This 5 piece puzzle-like play structure can be assembled and disassembled to allow your child to have hours of fun.
They can assemble all 5 pieces together and create a dinosaur-like character (like Puff the Magic Dragon) and they could imagine riding it to mystical places.
They can attach the head and tail pieces to one center piece to create a sitting rocker!
The 3 middle pieces can be assembled to create a ring (measures 34″ outside diameter and 22″ inside diameter) that can be used for other creative play activities or for your child to sit in.
Construction Grid Blocks are heavy-duty low maintenance construction blocks that are perfect for young builders to use either indoors or outdoors. These 12″ durable blocks are just right for your child’s hands and attach easily together allowing them to imagine and build their own castles and tunnels.
After the construction is done, they can have hours of fun playing with their own creations.
Your children will love to learn about basic mechanical concepts by playing with Gears! Gears! Gears! These early childhood toys will provide your children with hours of entertainment as they increase their color skills, small moter skills, and eye-hand coordination.
Your children can learn the value of money by playing money-related math board games. They will also increase their arithmetic skills as they use coins and bills to pay for purchases, compute change, handle allowances and gifts, collect earnings, and make deposits into college savings accounts.
Math board games like Making Change Octominoes, Managing My Allowance, or Presto Change-O will help your children learn how to save money and take advantage of sales. Your chldren’s lives will be enhanced because they learned these skills.




