Showing posts with label process art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label process art. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

10 Embedded Pre-Literacy Activities... Here's some ways we've been doing it!


1. Play with SOUND! So much of decoding words in the future starts with careful listening in early childhood.


2.  SOUND Explore Tables: this table had all things beginning with the /b/ sound. Simply naming the objects in the Explore Table produces natural opportunities to HEAR alliteration.  Some of the things in this set up included "beach sand," books, bears, bugs, butterflies, balls, buttons, large beads, flashcards with B words and letter, and blocks.


In addition to objects beginning with the /b/ sound, hidden magnet B letters and wooden letter B's were in the "beach" to be found and touched as well.  Finally, as we played, we made stories with the toys, like: "The blue bears sit on buttons around the bead table. They are having bumblebee soup!" or "Bugs are riding on the bus all the way to the beach!"

3.  Chatting with friends! It's true that this is a pre-literacy skill because conversation with peers and adults help children's vocabulary grow which is required for reading comprehension in the future.


Role play isn't a waste of time!  It's a natural opportunity to talk, assume the role/feelings/behaviors of another person or animal, and develop cognitive and language skills.

4.  Rhyming pups: we love playing with puppies and kitties! These toys made by Learning Resources allow us to make mis-matched rhyming pups which are terribly silly!  When we fix the pups, we HEAR two words that rhyme correctly.  (See how much hearing factors into literacy?)

5. Letter names, recognition, and shapes: Letters are symbols for SOUNDS, and as children develop, they memorize the names and sounds of each letter.  Pre-literacy includes being able to see different kinds of lines that make up letters. Some letters have "holes." Some letters are completely curvy.  Other letters are made up of straight lines that go in different directions. This peg toy by Coogam helps children look at what kinds of lines make up a letter, and focus their attention on which direction those lines are going.

6.  Read a book, and act it out! Caps for Sale became a huge hit for our kids last week, and we used our rug cushions to pretend to be cap peddlers.  Acting out a story demonstrates the ability to recall the order of events in a story, and understand the plot of the story. Both skills are critical for reading comprehension.


7. Read for fun! During Work Time, the children often choose to look at books or invite the teacher to read them individually.  Young children can identify the difference between pictures and texts, tell their own version of the story based on pictures, and ask for help to know "what do these words say?". 



8. Gross motor development: This seems to be an unusual skill set to include with pre-literacy development, but they are connected. The brain learns to integrate information from multiple senses (visual, tactile, vestibular, proprioceptive, and even auditory) through gross motor opportunities. As the senses become more integrated, the child develops the ability to focus their eyes on targeted words on a page, track words across a page, and even keep letters oriented and in the correct order while reading.  Without well developed coordination and balance, decoding and tracking words becomes SO laborious for the reader, that reading comprehension becomes nearly impossible.

So climb, and dance, and run, and crouch, and jump as much as possible.


9. Scanning: this Melissa and Doug toy is intriguing to young children because they enjoy the cause and effect of dropping in the spool and see it spin down the ramp, but this also helps the children develop the ability to track an object moving left to right and back again.

10.  Drawing: The children have free access to the Art Area during Work Time and are provided multiple choices for mark making (paint, markers, crayons, pencils). The advantage of free form mark making is that it engages more areas of the brain than tracing does. Here is a sample piece of art done by one of our two-year olds that demonstrates she is developing the ability to draw curves, straight lines, circles, and dots.  These are all lines she will later learn to associate with letter shapes, and are a precursor to writing.  Furthermore, she is learning that marks have meaning.


It seems like "just play," but each of these distinct (yet related) methods of developing pre-literacy skills are fundamental for children to experience prior to formal academic education.  How can you bring more of these ideas into your home and environment? :)

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Christmas Elves Give from the Heart


The school friends at Harmony's House know what Christmas is all about: bringing joy to those around you, and sharing in it too!  These are the ways our "Christmas Elves" gave from the heart this season:


Each school friend made ornaments for their families, from helping to roll out the dough, selecting cookie cutters, and painting them with glitter when dry.

They hung ornaments on the trees with great precision and care.  


Some friends reverently arranged the stable to create a Christmas scene, reflecting on who was there, what happened so long ago on a very special night, and what this means for us today.

Some friends made festive decorations to ready the house for a big Christmas party!


The "bakery" was busy with little elves making Christmas cookies and cinnamon toast, and other yummy treats!



And finally, we celebrated all together with songs of joy, yummy Christmas tree snacks, and fellowship.



 Merry Christmas to you from us at Harmony's House!  We'll see you back in the new year!

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Fun on the Playground



The weather has been wild this month, but we've made the most of it anyways!  Did you know that for young children, 90% of verbs are learned while actively participating in action?  This is only one benefit of outdoor play.





We received a donation of these wonderful log stumps that have been used to make climbing structures, gates barring the "big bad wolf," drum sets, and even a campfire.  It's likely the imaginative plans will continue to grow as the children use their big muscle groups and their creativity together.





The large stumps have been fun, but small tree biscuits and small logs have also been used endlessly this month as well.



The playground is also a fantastic place for artistic expression.  Children love to color on walls, and with chalk outside, they CAN!


Probably the best part of the playground is the muddy puddles that form with heavy rain!






No matter the weather, get outside and have some fun.  The vitamin D from the sun will do the body and the mind some good!



Remember, there's no such thing as wrong weather... just wrong clothes.  :)  

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Preschool Party Halloween Style

Do you want to know how we had the "BEST Halloween party EVER???"  Of course you do!  Harmony's House wants to share our spook-tacular ideas so you can have the most fun too!

Large boxes painted into haunted houses are super fun, especially when orange and black bandannas hang down from the roof!

Art should be done on an outstanding scale, with witches brooms, of course.



Don't let that spider out!  He's enormous!  Just throw your rings at him!  He might catch one or two!


Water beads, eyeballs, creepy critters, colanders, and ladles made the brew station a sensory sensation.  We made witch brew in different ways over and over again!




Believe it or not, "Screwing a Pumpkin" was a favorite activity that children returned to again and again.  Getting the screws in the pumpkin was a bit tricky, so Ms. Harmony prepped this activity by screwing all the screws in.  The children explored ways to turn the screw driver to make the screws go up or down.  Some children even got the screws all the way out!



Eat a book, or read one... whichever suits the little monster.  ;)



These blocks were filled with real bones from an opossum!  It was neat to combine them with mirror blocks, and talk with the children about what parts of the body each set of bones came from.




Play in the Vampire Lair, or the Mummy House, or the Witchy Woods!


And don't forget to trick or treat!

We appreciate all of the parental involvement in pulling this off!  We couldn't have done it without you!







 That's a wrap on how we party hard in the preschool!  <3

What's with the "Names?"

For new readers of the blog, this post is an explanation of the "names" Ms. Harmony uses when she writes about the school happe...

Read More!