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Many cognitive skills have already been covered in other areas. Others are covered here including some requested by parents and by kindergarten teachers.
- Color identification - there are 3 steps to learning colors. They are:
- Color matching.
- Using 2 sets of crayons, hold one color up and ask your child to find the other one that is blue (red, green, etc.).
- Using a group of colored shapes or color bears, let your child sort them into piles by color.
- Show your child a red (yellow, etc.) shape and ask him/her to find other things in the room that are that color.
- Let your child find matching colors on their own and other children's clothes.
- ONLINE ACTIVITIES: Practice matching colors with A Rainbow of Frogs and So Many Different Colors.
- Color identifying (being able to find a color when you name it).
- Use color names often during your daily interactions with your child.
- Sing songs using color names.
- Play games requiring different activities according to the color the child holds.
- Color bingo.
- Color card games like "Go Fish".
- Using one set of crayons, ask the child to show you the green color
- Play "I Spy".
- Color naming (being able to see a color and name it with no clues).
- Continue the above games, songs, and activities.
- When your child is mastering the skill, reinforce it by letting him/her be the leader of the games so they can practice the skill.
- Knowing concepts.
- Use the concept words often in daily conversations.
- Play games naming opposites (hot - cold, up - down, empty - full).
- Your library will have books on concept words.
- Sort shapes and objects in your home by size.
- Compare objects in your home for length (short or long; long, longer, longest).
- Compare objects to learn opposites (fast - slow, wet - dry, etc.)
- Melt ice to show liquid - solid.
- Have your child move (fast - slow, lightly - heavily, forwards - backwards).
- Weigh objects on your home scales to see if they are heavy or light.
- Discuss objects by use (shovel=outside, plate=inside).
- Discuss objects by where they may be found (land, sea, sky; library, home, school, beach).
- ONLINE ACTIVITY: Explore concepts such as "in", "out", "above" and "below" with our Spatial Concepts pages.
- Building memory skills.
- Review the events of the day with your child at bedtime.
- Repeat a simple nursery rhyme daily until your child can say it with you.
- Ask your child what they did yesterday.
- Show your child 4 objects on a tray; cover the tray and remove 1 object; uncover the tray and ask what is missing.
- Play a concentration game with cards (pick 5 sets of matching cards and turn them face down. Try to turn up 2 that match. Use more cards when ready). ONLINE ACTIVITY: Click here for 6- and 8-card matching games.
- ONLINE ACTIVITY: Remember and match images using our hats matching game.
- Ask questions about their favorite things to do .
- Read predictable books and have your child tell the story back to you.
ONLINE ACTIVITY: Our story, But That Wasn't The Best Part will work well for this.
- Developing critical thinking skills.
- Ask questions that have many answers whenever possible.
- Set up choices which involve your child in making decisions.
- Lead them to discover other ways of performing a task.
- Ask your child's opinions about things and then ask them why they think that way.
- Ask your child what they know about a subject and then help them to learn more.
- When your child has to make a decision, help them see all of the choices and consequences.
- Completing assigned tasks
- Give your child chores to do (clean up a spill, pick up toys, etc.)
- Notice and comment when the child has finished the job.
- If the job is not finished, give reminders and have patience.
- Catch your child doing chores on his/her own and thank them.
- Let your children take turns being a leader to build leadership skills.
- Be sure to thoroughly explain any task given to your child.
- Knowing their parent(s) name (kindergarten teachers request this because so many parents and children have different last names).
- Ask your child your name every day until they can say it.
- Knowing their address and phone number.
- During the day mention your child's address several times when you talk to them.
- Let your child draw a picture of your house and you write the street address on the picture. Look at it each day and say the address.
- Write your child's address and phone number on the top of a piece of paper and have them dictate a story about their house - read it back often and repeat the address adn phone number each time.
- Using a nursery rhyme, sing a song about your child's address (e.g. "Sing a song of George's house, 290 Cross Street" to the tune of "Sing a Song of Sixpence".
- Clap the syllables of your address while saying it.
- After a few days, ask the child their address - if they don't know it keep working on remembering it.
- For the phone number, use the activities above.
- Look for the numbers in your phone number in magazines and books.
- Let your child cut and paste the numbers in their phone number.
- Knowing the days of the week.
- Each day talk about what day it is and what you will do today.
- Read the book Today is Monday together.
- Plan a menu together and ask your child to name his/her favorite Monday food or Tuesday food, etc.
- Talk about which days they go to school and which days they stay home.
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Copyright 1998, 2005, Susan Jindrich. All rights reserved. Revised 4/4/07
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