Pre-K Problem Solving Cards

Saturday, 31 October 2015

Mavi didn’t like math.  When he was around 5yrs old, he would rather read books than work with math.  He’s excuse would always be “I’m tired” or “it’s difficult”.  I can truly understand him though. I didn’t enjoy math when I was younger.  Until I stepped into secondary school and discovered why we need math.

So instead of forcing him to solve arithmetic problems and giving him number activities, I exposed him to real life problems so he can appreciate math.  I made him understand WHY WE NEED TO LEARN NUMBERS AND MATH.  We would go to the groceries and count our items all together, doing addition and subtraction in between.  Of course, he’s not aware we’re doing math, all he knows is that he’s helping Mommy do some groceries.  At home, I secretly incorporate addition and subtraction by counting his missing pens, his toys and how many books he has read.

He loves the real life math! He can’t stand arithmetic problems but he enjoys real life problems.  So what I did was create a bunch of colorful cards for us to work on, making sure there’s pictures (and we mostly use counters as well) to make it attractive.  In the problems, I used his friends’ name so he’ll like it, and of course he finds it funny!  He kept asking for more, more questions as he liked solving the problems.    And that was the game changer.  

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Through these problem solving cards, he was able to appreciate math, and could now understand why he needs to practice arithmetic.  He loves to solve math problems these days  on his own and still loves solving problems. 

So I created these problem solving cards for Pre-K students.  It contains:

  • 1 step problem solving for addition and subtraction
  • 12 unique questions for addition within 10 (with pictures)
  • 12 unique questions for subtraction within 10 (with pictures)
  • 12 fill-in questions for addition to let the parents change the numbers for more practice (for advanced students, based on the questions with pictures).  You can use counters for this.
  • 12 fill-in questions for subtraction to let the parents change the numbers for more practice (for advanced students, based on the questions with pictures).  You can use counters for this.

L0AddSub copy

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Mavi worked on these cards when he was 5-6yrs old.  Though this is intended for 5-6yrs old children, older or younger kids can still use the cards as a practice material. Hope you like it and find it useful like we do.  Thanks!

Investigating Animal Tracks and {Learn & Play Link Up}

Wednesday, 28 October 2015

** contains affiliated links **

Animal tracks

We are continuing on our study of animal identification and learning more about their characteristics.  After watching Deadly 60 series of Steve Backshall, we discovered that you can also identify animals by the tracks they make!   So we used our favourite Schleich animal figures to test this.  We randomly dipped the animals in the black paint and freely made tracks. Vito’s helping as well!

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The tracks and trails an animal leaves can tell us the type of animals it is and whether it was walking or running, and you can also tell if it was by itself or with a group of other animals.

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Footprints of animals are very tricky to identify unlike that of humans! But by thorough investigation, you can tell if the animal is hoofed or with paws or toes.  To learn about the footprints of these animals, one must have a proper observation for these unique characteristics.

Animal tracks to note:

  • Did the animals walk on 2 or 4 feet?
  • Does the animal left a large or small track?
  • Was it walking or running?
  • Was it just one animal or followed by another?

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Using our printable and the actual tracks, Mavi grouped the animals according to the characteristics of their footprints:

  • Raccoon and bear have 4 toes front and 5 toes rear, they have claws.
  • Dog, fox and wolf have 4 toes front, 5 toes rear and produces an egg shaped track
  • Lion, lynx produces a round track with claws, 4 toes front and 5 toes rear
  • Deer, elk have heart shaped tracks and has 4 toes front and 5 toes rear

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And the highlight of this lesson is for them to see how their footprints look like!

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Materials Used: 

Thank you for taking time to read this post!  You might as well visit our Zoo Animal Tracks post for another activity that involves playdough. It’s a not as messy as black paint Open-mouthed smile

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Don’t forget to PIN for later!

tracks

Welcome to the Learn & Play Link Party!
Here are the featured animal-themed activities for this week!
 
AnimalsLinkUP
 
Learning About Caves from Natural Beach Living
H is for Hibernate from In Our Pond
Squirrel Activities for Tots from Every Star Is Different
 
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Now it’s time for this week’s link party! This is a BRAND new link up for all blog posts that include learn and play activities and hands-on education for kids. We are excited to read your blog posts and to see what you have to share! Please link up below and grab our button to display on your blog.
If you are a blogger, share your family friendly posts here. We are looking for things which include:
  • Montessori Education
  • Homeschool
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  • Tot and Preschool Trays
  • Fine and Gross Motor Activities
  • Kids in the Kitchen
  • Healthy Recipes for Kids
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Natural Living
  • Free Educational Printables
  • Family-Oriented Activities
  • Healthy Living
Your post will be featured on each of our blogs where we will pick our favourite posts every other week. That means there is more of a chance that you will be featured!
Everyone, please meet our link party hosts:
learn and play party hostesses
Christian Montessori Blog ~ Please visit our CMN FB group ~ Pinterest

GUIDELINES FOR LINKING

  • Please link up 1-3 posts
  • Follow each of the hosts on social media
  • When you link up, please add our button and place it at the bottom of your shared posts or link back with text link.
  • By entering a link, you’re giving us permission to feature an image on our blogs. Proper credit & links will ALWAYS be given.
  • Please visit a couple of shared posts and leave a comment for them
  • Remember that you must link back in order to be featured
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Letter N: Going Nuts!

Tuesday, 27 October 2015

I love nuts! We’ve got plenty around the house, thus I decided to come up with activities for Vito since he’s been seeing them around the house and loves to play with my walnuts.

Letter N Object Basket.  Reinforce literacy, letter ‘n’ symbol and phonics,  vocabulary, and verbal skills.  In the basket we have: nine, upper and lowercase N/n, necktie, DIY sandpaper ‘n’, nuts.

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Hammering Peanuts.  This is a practical life activity that develops hand and eye coordination, and develop those hand and arm muscles.  I first set it up in a tray, but the peanuts were slipping so I had to put cling film to hold them. Vito loves physical activities so he enjoyed this. The only drawback is that the hammer that we used were so tiny Open-mouthed smile 

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Letter N Craft.  I always make sure to include crafts in our weekly activities.  My main goal here is for Vito to practice his manual dexterity like squeezing the glue, picking up small objects or pencils.  Now that he’s familiar with glue, I gave him a glue with small opening for him to squeeze it. 

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Here he is applying peanut shells on the letter N. Improves pincer grasp through picking up small objects.  Note to parents: always supervise your children when dealing with small objects. 

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Color Green. I’m introducing letter green this week.  I gathered a few objects from his toys and place them all in a basket. 

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And we painted green in an A3 paper.  Working with one color a week works for him.

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When they dried up, we place them on the wall for everyday viewing.

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Nut Matching. For visual discrimination (difference in objects), widen vocabulary and concentration.

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Counting Walnuts.  Builds early number and counting skills.

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Forming Shapes using Nuts.  Teaches shapes, fine motor skills and hand/eye coordination. This is Vito’s idea!  I made a circle using the walnuts then he took the circle puzzle and place it in the middle, matching them together. Brilliant!  We practice some more by drawing shapes on a piece of paper and he would trace the line using the peanut shells to form the shape. He enjoyed it!

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And that’s about it! And what I happened to the nuts? I’m still consuming them LOL. 

Follow us on Facebook, Pinterest, Google Plus, Instagram or Twitter for updates!

And you might as well PIN this post for future reference.

LetterSoundN

Simple Experiments: Solubility of Different Substances

Saturday, 24 October 2015

Mavi and I got the chance to work on some experiments last weekend due to bad weather.  First we started off with a simple test of which substance dissolve in water. 

Solubility TestB

Objectives:

  • Discovering which substance dissolve in water
  • Why the said substance dissolve faster in water

Materials needed:

  • salt, sugar, flour, chalk powder
  • 4 bottles of water
  • teaspoon
  • stirrer

Procedure:

 

Findings:

  1. Salt and sugar easily dissolved in water after stirring.  They have grainy texture and are crystalline thus making it soluble in water.
  2. Flour and chalk powder partially dissolved, most of the powdered portion resides at the bottom of the bottles.  They have powdery and dry texture, thus making it hard to dissolve in water.

 

FOR OLDER KIDS

Now, for older children who can grasp complex explanation… I prepared a visual and hands-on demonstration for Mavi to understand how the substance are soluble, partially soluble and insoluble.  Make sure though that when you try to discuss this with your kids, he/she is already familiar with the elements in the periodic table and can understand what “attraction” means, similar to the concept of magnetism.  The link I provided is the one where I introduced the Periodic Table to Mavi in a fun and interesting way.

Anyway, here’s how the chemicals of the substance interact to water when mixed.

SOLUBLE SUBSTANCE

I used plasticine to demonstrate the chemical composition of salt and water to Mavi. 

Salt is composed of: sodium (Na+) in green  and chloride (Cl-) in purple.

Water is made up of H2O, hydrogen (H+) in white and oxygen (O-) in red.

When mixed with water, the salt molecules are easily “attracted” to the water molecules.   It’s like the positive and negative attraction in magnetism (polarity).  Thus, sodium (Na+) is attracted to oxygen (O-), while chloride (Cl-) is heavily attracted to the two positively charged hydrogen (H+).

Because of the heavily attraction between molecules in the two substances, salt is easily dissolved in water.

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PARTIALLY SOLUBLE

For partially soluble substance, the molecules that made up the flour or chalk have weak attractions with the molecules of the water.  Thus some have dissolved but most of it didn’t and the result are the residues found at the bottom of the bottles.

 INSOLUBLE SUBSTANCE

For insoluble substance (don’t dissolve in water) like oil, the molecular contents are NOT attracted to water.    This means they do not mix with water and if you combine them, you will definitely see the separation.

Though some advanced students can explain that this is because oil is a non-polar substance and can only be dissolved with another non-polar substance, they way I explained it to Mavi is that oil molecules are just so heavy that water molecules can’t “bond” with it.

Insoluble

This was a fantastic activity for both Mavi and I.  More experiments coming up! So follow us on Facebook, Pinterest, Google Plus, Instagram or Twitter for updates!

And you might as well PIN this for reference. Thank you!

SolubilityofSubstance

Continent Fact Cards Game and {Learn & Play Link Up}

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

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Mavi can’t get enough of these facts cards from my Nutshell series! He wants us to play this when in the car, or just by walking home.  I would ask him a questions based on the facts and he’s going to tell me the continent or the country it’s connected to.  We developed a scheme of giving him 3 clues (mostly letters from the answers) and I am PROBIHIBITED to give the answer. It’s amazing how both Mavi and I enjoyed it.  So happy that we found a new way to use these cards!

These cards are from:

Asia in a Nutshell

Europe in a Nutshell

Africa in a Nutshell

South America in a Nutshell

Welcome to the Learn & Play Link Party!
Here are the featured activities for this week!
 
LinkUp
 
Halloween PreK Fun Pack from The Multitasking Mom
 
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Now it’s time for this week’s link party! This is a BRAND new link up for all blog posts that include learn and play activities and hands-on education for kids. We are excited to read your blog posts and to see what you have to share! Please link up below and grab our button to display on your blog.
If you are a blogger, share your family friendly posts here. We are looking for things which include:
  • Montessori Education
  • Homeschool
  • Sensory Play
  • Tot and Preschool Trays
  • Fine and Gross Motor Activities
  • Kids in the Kitchen
  • Healthy Recipes for Kids
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Natural Living
  • Free Educational Printables
  • Family-Oriented Activities
  • Healthy Living
Your post will be featured on each of our blogs where we will pick our favourite posts every other week. That means there is more of a chance that you will be featured!
Everyone, please meet our link party hosts:
learn and play party hostesses
Christian Montessori Blog ~ Please visit our CMN FB group ~ Pinterest

GUIDELINES FOR LINKING

  • Please link up 1-3 posts
  • Follow each of the hosts on social media
  • When you link up, please add our button and place it at the bottom of your shared posts or link back with text link.
  • By entering a link, you’re giving us permission to feature an image on our blogs. Proper credit & links will ALWAYS be given.
  • Please visit a couple of shared posts and leave a comment for them
  • Remember that you must link back in order to be featured
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Classifying Vertebrate Animals

Tuesday, 20 October 2015

** Contains affiliate links **

I love unplanned activities.  Mavi would always resort to this activity whenever he’s bored on Fridays (swimming lessons were moved on Saturdays).  I like that he can do this activity independently, while learning the important characters of animals that belong in each group.

VertebrateAnimals

I believe that it is important for the child to have a clear and defined idea of the classes of the animal kingdom and its division.  What’s important to me is to have him gain the knowledge with this activity rather than reading and memorizing the difference in books. 

Just by looking at the animal cards or the figures it is obvious that birds differ from fish or that the turtles differ from mammals because only mammals nourished their young by milk through the breast of the mother.

So this is what I usually do, we either work on picture cards as seen above, or work using our basket of animal figures and have Mavi sort them as he describes why that animal belongs to mammals, fish, birds, reptiles or amphibians.  This is a wonderful activity on rainy days or winter!  How fascinating that my son is glued every time he does this.

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Easy to prepare yet fun to perform!

Animal figures used are from Schliech and Safari toob.  The cards are from Vertebrate Sorting Cards file.

Don’t forget to PIN this for future reference!

VertebratePIN

Exploring Fruits for Toddlers

Sunday, 18 October 2015

Vito is 23 months old. 

** Contains affiliate links **

After, the zoo, farm animals and parts of the body, I decided to do a fruit unit for this little boy as he loves to name fruits whenever we are in the supermarket.  I like to come up with themed activities as it helps the child to expand their knowledge of certain objects and occasions, practice communication skills and improve their vocabulary.

FruitActivities

 

Beginning Sounds. We’re using Hape Lowercase Puzzle.

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Apple Prints. Color recognition and sensorial activity.

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Bagging Fruits. A practical life activity that develops hand/eye coordination, concentration plus helping Mommy tidy up!  We’re using Learning Resources Fruit Counters.

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Matching Real Objects with Pictures. Developing early discrimination skills (difference between objects), hand/eye coordination and concentration.  I made the fruit cards and you can get a copy from here or here.

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Fruit Color Sorting using a Tong. Improving fine motor skills, pincer grasp, concentration and color recognition.

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I love this tong from Ikea

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As of the moment, our color sorting activity involves two colors, but I introduce one (new) color at a time.DSC_0767

He’s seriously concentrating.  Goodness!

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Slicing a Banana. I was with him the whole time he’s doing this, reason why I don’t have an actual photo of the activity.  Another great practical life activity to introduce to kids.  This is an introductory activity of actual “slicing”, though we’ve done a lot of this using playdough.  He still has difficulty coordinating his hands.  We’ll get there though… need to practice more Smile

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And that’s about it! Thanks once again for taking time to read through the post.  Don’t forget to PIN this for your reference.

Fruit

Check me out on Pinterest for more toddler and themed activities.