I have a new blog, hillmade. You will be redirected, after 5 seconds, to this same post on that blog. Please follow along with me there!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Isn’t that how you spell rainbow? ROYGBP totally equals rainbow. Or it should. Because that’s what I taught Hailey.
Ok, that’s not really what I taught her, but it kind of looks like it.
I quickly made some activity pages for Hailey with outlined letters on them. One for each letter of the rainbow. ROYGBP. Get it? Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple. Ah, yes. ROYGBP does equal rainbow!
Anyway, we ripped up our construction paper into little bits of paper, rubbed glue all over our letter and pressed on our pieces of paper.
I’ve seen this activity done in different ways all over the internet. Thank you pinterest. I’ve seen moms using different small things that can be glued onto paper, glitter for the letter G, sprinkles for the letter S. I don’t have any fun things like that immediately on hand, but I do have an abundance of construction paper.
I thought this would be a fun activity to teach her about the colors of the rainbow and some letters. Hailey already recognizes all of the letters, so we focused on what each of these letters say. We did this activity way back in October. And she still knows what sounds the letters r, o, y, g, b, and p say.
Using a glue stick was also a fun way to help her get a feel of how to write the letters. With my help, she traced the letters while applying glue to the page.
Hailey wasn’t super interested in decorating her letters. I did most of it, and tried to encourage her to help. Hailey was focused on coloring with the glue stick. She totally missed the point of the glue. I hindsight, I wish I had bought the glue sticks with the colored glue that dries clear. That way she could see where the glue is on the page and then maybe it’d be easier for her to figure it out.
I saved up all of the ripped paper that we didn’t use, thinking I’d use it for something else sometime. The other day I came up with another way to use that paper.
I took my small muffin tin with 6 spots and placed one piece of paper, each a different color, in each spot. I then spread out other ripped up bits of paper and had Hailey sort the colors. She did surprising well with this. She even got a little silly and put the pieces in the wrong places on purpose. It didn’t keep her attention super long, but it’s an easy activity for us to pull out for a few minutes every few days.
I’m thinking about doing this with other objects. Letters, numbers, shapes, pictures… you name it.
Renae, you are SUCH a good mom! This warms my little kindergarten teacher heart. I have some students who still don't know their letters. Hailey is going to be so far ahead in school!
ReplyDeleteYou amaze me. Sometimes I feel like I have NO idea what I should be doing with Libby right now to teach her. I'll have to keep this in mind for a few months down the road!
ReplyDeletePlease keep posting about these kinds of activities. You r an amazing mother!
ReplyDelete