Greetings readers! I have a Teeny Tot Tuesday post for you today, and we’re working on the Letter D for Dinosaur!

Coloring: Even though I absolutely LOVE our school room, it’s kind of nice to get a change every now and then. And since it was so nice out this week, we decided to change it up a bit and do a little “trampoline” school…that’s where the kids get to take their work out and lay on the trampoline and do it. It was a little bright out so the Teeny Tot dawned her sporty sunglasses and got down to business coloring her dinosaur.

IMG_6393

 

Counting Skills: I brought out the dinosaur number cards for her to play with today too. I used them with my Learning Resources Math Links, and had the Teeny Tot put on the correct amount of links on each dinosaur. She also color coded them which I thought was nice.

IMG_6514

 

Letter D shapes: Today I pulled out my Large Letter D print outs and had the Teeny Tot make a pattern using Learning Resources Color Cubes. Okay, she was supposed to make a pattern, but just ended up putting blocks along the letter shapes which was fine.

IMG_6548

 

Since we already had our Learning Resources Color Cubes out, I went ahead and tried some of the easier Creative Color Cubes Activity Cards with her. I had to help her a little, but she seemed to catch on pretty quickly. These games are great for logical & spatial skills!

IMG_6551

 

Pre-Writing Practice: I laminated my pre-writing pages and then the Teeny Tot used dry-erase markers to practice tracing along the pre-writing shapes. This is excellent practice for the handwriting that will come later on.

IMG_6524

 

Next I pulled out my wooden Magnetic Color Cubes Activity Cards. The teeny Tot used them with our Orb Factory Magnetic Color Cubes. (The tray is from a KidWords Activity kit I found at a used curriculum fair, I found the entire kit here too if it helps any!)

IMG_6554

IMG_6436 IMG_6437

I made 8 cards for her to play with, I printed them double sided (so I only used 4 sheets of cardstock) then I laminated them for durability. Here’s a peek at the cards:

promo

Click here to download the Magnetic Color Cube Cards.

 

Magnet Page: This activity is great for one-to-one correspondence. We use them with the small round Power Magnets, please be careful with them though as they’re surely a choking hazard! We also use them with our pom-pom magnets which are fun and easy to make, here is a great tutorial from Mama Jenn.

IMG_6527

 

Size Sorting: Next up was our Dinosaur size sort. She didn’t particularly want to do this one, so I told her we could do the Large Floor Numbers after she did the sizes. It seemed to appease her, so she did her dino’s. I told her to get the biggest one first, then the next biggest, etc. After she was done I had her point to the biggest, smallest, and medium dinosaurs. Then she counted to see how many she had.

IMG_6529

 

Large Floor Numbers: As promised, her large floor numbers were up next. She loves this game, probably because she gets to hop all around. We lay them out in order usually, then call the numbers as she steps on them. It helps with number recognition. Later we’ll call a number and have her hop to it, but for now it’s easier for her to go in order.

IMG_6415

 

Letter Matching: This game is great for letter recognition, once she gets used to the capital letters, we’ll make it a little more challenging and have her match lowercase letters to uppercase letters.

IMG_6534

 

Do-A-Dot Activity: She also worked on her Do-A-Dot page with our Dot-A-Dot Markers, she’s actually getting really good at keeping the dots in the actual circles on the page…previously she’d do a few dots, then proceed to cover the entire page with different color dots!

IMG_6429

 

Nesting Blocks: Next up, and not really related to the Letter D, but she got out our Guidecraft  Nesting Sort & Stack Cubes. These are fun, they can build towers, sort by size and color, and since they’re hollow then can stack or nest the blocks.

IMG_6388

 

Lacing Activity: Next up we have our lacing card, I still haven’t figured out why, but all of my kiddos have loved this activity. As a matter of fact as soon as the Teeny Tot is done with her lacing, Turbo always snags it and does it himself. Waiting close behind is Tinker Bell.

IMG_6412

 

Pattern Activity: The concept of a pattern is still a little beyond the Teeny Tot, so Strawberry Shortcake calls out the items for her and she picks what should go next. It seems to work pretty well to do it together for now.

IMG_6413

 

 

Blokus: This was a request by the Teeny Tot herself. She got out our Blokus game and made a cute face using the pieces. It’s easy to use it like a puzzle for the Teeny Tot, and also a wonderful logic game for older kids.

IMG_6420

 

Poke Page:  I found this HUGE push pins at a Target and we use them for this activity all the time. They are sharp, but she knows to be careful. Her goal is to poke little holes along the letter lines. It’s great for fine-motor skills, patience building, and also letter recognition. She sings “The D says ‘d’ the D says ‘d’ every letter makes a sound the D says ‘d’” as she works on it.

IMG_6424

 

After she’s done, she gets to hold her poke page up to the window and see how she did! An excellent job if I do say so myself!

IMG_6426

 

Scissor Skills: The Teeny Tot absolutely loves to cut things up. Previously she would cut her scissor skills pages into a billion tiny pieces, so I was very pleased today when she actually cut along the lines quite well!

IMG_6428

 

And that’s it for today’s Teeny Tot Tuesday post!

This is just a SMALL portion of our Letter D activities, you can download all of my Letter D for Dinosaur activities free, or you can also grab the whole Letter of the Week curriculum.

13 Comments

  1. there are a lot of your files that when I go to download them are leading me to a 4share page. I don’t want to install whatever 4share is. If you could tell me what that site is, that would really help.

    dawn brock

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.