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What
follows are activities that you can do with your
child to help build the skills, attitudes and behaviors
needed for school success. There is no one "right"
way to do the activities. You should make changes
and shorten or lengthen them to suit your child's
attention span. You might want to use them as a
starting point for some activities of your own.
If you don't have some of the resources listed for
an activity, remember that most public libraries
offer free use of books, magazines, videos, computers
and other services. Other things that you might
need for these activities are not expensive.
Age
levels for the activities are indicated at the start
of each activity:
Ages 5-7
Ages
7-9
Ages
9-11
Keep
in mind, however, that children don't always learn
the same things at the same rate. You are the best
judge of what your child may be ready to try, so
use the age levels as guides as your child learns
and grows, not as hard and fast rules. For example,
an activity listed for children ages 7-9 may work
well with your 5-year-old. On the other hand, the
same activity may not interest your child until
he is 9 or 10.
As
a parent, you can help your child want to learn
in a way no one else can. That desire to learn is
a key to your child's later success. Enjoyment is
important! So, if you and your child don't enjoy
one activity, move on to another. You can always
return to any activity later on.
Can You Top This?
For
children ages 5 to 7
Learning
to take turns helps your child build spoken language
skills as well as learn to work with others.
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| Working with others, listening
to what they say and making good contributions
are all valuable in helping children
to complete school projects. |
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What to Do
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With your child, make up a story for the two of you to
tell together, taking turns saying one sentence
at a time.
- Begin by deciding on a
topic, such as pirates.
- Say the first sentence:
"Once upon a time a pirate lived in . .
."
- Continue taking turns with
your child making up and telling parts of the
story until you decide to end it—maybe after
eight or ten sentences.
·
Take turns beginning and finishing a story. Ask other
family members and friends to join in.
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Listen!
For
children ages 5 to 7
Listening
to and giving directions helps your child to sharpen
listening and speaking skills.
What
You Need
- Any small object, such as
a ball or a photograph
- Objects that can make noise,
such as keys, water glasses, spoons and decks
of cards
What
to Do
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| For success in school, children
need to learn to listen carefully, to
see and hear details and to follow and
give clear directions. |
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·
Hide a small object. Give your child directions
to find it such as, "Take five steps straight
ahead. Turn right. Keep the lamp to your left. Bend
down and look to the right." Next, have your
child hide the object and give you directions to
find it.
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Have your child close his eyes. Use something to make
a sound, such as rattling your keys, tapping a spoon
against a glass or riffling a deck of cards). Ask
your child to guess what's making the sound.
·
Clap your hands to tap out a rhythm. Have your child
listen and then clap that same rhythm back to you.
Make the rhythms harder as he catches on.
·
Take a walk with your child. Find a place to sit for
a few minutes and both close your eyes for 30 seconds
or so. Tell each other what you hear: a baby crying,
an airplane, a bird singing, cars on the street,
leaves rustling.
·
Take a walk with your child. This time, take turns telling
each other what to do: cross the street, turn left,
look down.
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It's a Match
For
children ages 5 to 7
Sorting
and classifying helps your child to pay attention
to details and recognize how things are alike and
different.
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| Being able to identify how things
are alike and different and to place
objects and ideas into categories are
important school skills that are used
in almost every subject area. |
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What You Need
- Dishes, flatware, glasses
- Laundry
What
to Do
·
As you empty the dishwasher or wash and dry dishes, ask
your child to make stacks of dishes that are the
same size, to put glasses that are the same size
together and to sort forks, knives and spoons.
·
As you empty the clothes dryer, ask your child to match
pairs of socks or to put all white things together,
all blue things and so forth.
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Let's Read
For
children ages 5 to 7
Reading
is the single most important way for your child
to develop the knowledge needed to become successful
in school.
What
You Need
- Children's books that your
child can read
- Books of riddles, tongue
twisters and silly rhymes
What
to Do
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| When reading is a regular part
of family life, parents and families
send their children a message that it
is important, enjoyable and a great
way to learn. |
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Read with your child. Take turns, with you reading
one page or paragraph and your child reading the
next. You might also read the parts of different
characters in a story. Be enthusiastic about reading.
Read the story with expression. Make it more interesting
by talking as the characters would talk, making
sound effects and using facial expressions and gestures.
Encourage your child to do the same.
·
Help your child to read new words by having him use what
he knows about letters and the sounds they make
to sound out the words.
·
If he is unsure of the meaning of a word, help him to
use the surrounding words or sentences to figure
it out. If this doesn't help, just tell him what
the word means and keep reading.
·
Buy a children's dictionary—if possible, one that has
pictures next to the words. Then start the "let's
look it up" habit.
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Author! Author!
For
children ages 5 to 7
Reading
and writing support each other. The more your child
does of each, the better he will be at both.
What
You Need
- Pencils, crayons or markers
- Writing paper
- Cardboard or heavy paper
- Construction paper
- Safety scissors
- Yarn or ribbon
What
to Do
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| Writing helps children to organize
their thoughts and gives them an important
way to communicate with others. |
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Write with your child. Talk with him about your
writing so that he begins to understand that writing
means something and has many uses.
·
Hang a family message board in the kitchen. Offer to
write notes there for your child. Be sure that he
finds notes left there for him.
·
Help your child write notes or e-mails to relatives and
friends to thank them for gifts or to share his
thoughts. Encourage the relatives and friends to
answer your child.
·
As your child gets older, he can begin to write you longer
stories. Ask questions that will help him organize
the stories. Answer questions about spelling.
·
Help your child to turn his writing into books. Paste
his drawings and writings on pieces of construction
paper. For each book, have him make a cover out
of heavier paper or cardboard, then add special
art, a title and his name as author. Punch holes
in the pages and cover and bind the book together
with yarn or ribbon.
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Now You See It, Now
You Don't
For
children ages 5 to 7
Doing
simple science experiments at home can prepare your
child to learn important science concepts—and the
need to be patient.
What
You Need
- 2 ice cube trays
- Clock
- Small bowls
- Paper and pencil
- Water and other liquids,
such as fruit juices
What
to Do
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| Careful observation and note taking
are valuable school skills. |
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Give your child a pencil and paper and tell her
that she is going to be a scientist and take notes
about what she observes in some experiments.
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Together with your child, fill one ice cube tray to the
top with water. Fill the other tray only half full.
Put both trays in the freezer. Have your child record
the time. Tell her to watch the clock and check
every 30 minutes or so to see if the water in each
tray has frozen (if not, wait until it has frozen).
- Ask your child to write
down how long it took the water in each tray
to freeze.
- Ask her which amount of
water froze faster? Invite her to explain why
she thinks this happened.
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Have your child take one ice cube from each tray and
put them in separate bowls to melt. Ask her to write
down which cube melts faster—the larger one or the
smaller one.
·
Put one ice cube in a window and another in the refrigerator
(not the freezer) and have your child write down
how long they each take to melt.
·
Freeze samples of liquids such as different kinds of
fruit juices. Have your child compare their freezing
times to that of water. |