I have some creative time telling activities to share and free time telling worksheets.
Teaching time telling is a gradual process.
In the formative years, introduce your child to fun clocks so they understand its associated with time.
For example, point out the two types of hand. One is a long hand and the other is a short hand.
Too, some kids don’t understand what we mean by hand. I had a few of mine looking for actual hands.
So, it’s important for them to know that is what we call the long and short arrows.
Gradually, as your kids move from kindergarten to second grade, introduce more detailed concepts.
For example, illustrate how long a second is. I always had my sons blink their eyes.
Next, illustrate a minute. Since I had boys, everything related to running and moving.
A couple of mine wanted to run so we did that.
Last illustrate an hour by timing a cobbler, reading time or lunch time. This gradual process makes this part of math fun.
HOW TO TELL TIME BOOKS AND RESOURCES
Also, look at some of these time telling books and resources to add to your day.
9 Time Telling Books for Kids Who Love to Read and Be Read To
Add some of these resources to your day for telling time.Your kids will love hands-on games and ideas.
Describes the weight clock and the spring clock and how they work.
Educational Details: The clock face has large red numbers to match the hour hand, small blue numbers to match the minute hand, and a segmented color disk to help kids visualize "quarter
past" and "half past
Why do some plants blossom only during the day? How do certain birds know when and where to migrate? Why are some people "early birds" and others "night owls"? In this easy-to-read volume, Seymour Simon examines the inner biological clocks of people, animals, and plants and explains what makes them tick.
TIMES UP: Learn to tell time in this fast paced, fun and cooperative game. The goal of this Perfect Timing card game is to get the clock to the right place just in time.
Jumbo 12-sided dice/manipulative to reinforce basic time-telling skills. Contains 2 dice: (1) yellow with blue numbers 1-12 to designate hours. (1) yellow with red numbers: 00 -: 55 to designate minutes.
The hands of all thirteen clocks stand still in the gloomy castle on a lonely hill where a wicked Duke lives with his niece, the beautiful Princess Saralinda. The Duke fancies he has frozen time, for he is afraid that one day a Prince may come and win away the hand of the Princess—the only warm hand in the castle. To thwart that fate, he sets impossible tasks for Saralinda’s suitors. But when the bold Prince Zorn of Zorna arrives, disguised as a wandering minstrel, and helped by the enigmatic Golux, the cold Duke may at last have met his match.
Orphan, clock keeper, and thief, Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric, bookish girl and a bitter old man who runs a toy booth in the station, Hugo's undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message from Hugo's dead father form the backbone of this intricate, tender, and spellbinding mystery.
Man has always found a great need for measuring time. This book begins with very early time-keeping, and goes through water-clocks, sundials and early clocks to modern ones. At the end is the Atomichron, which may be the accurate time-keeper that will go with rockets into space.Early mechanical clocks were worked by heavy weights, and had only an hour hand, as seen in the old clockmaker's shop used on page 4. At that time people did not feel the need to know the exact time, nor had they made a clock accurate enough to tell it. In this age of science, time must be measured exactly. The Atomichron should lose only one second in three thousand years.
- Unlock the joy of learning time with our practical and functional Montessori toys for babies. Enhance kids' clock learning to tell time with our toy clock.
Then move into concepts harder to grasp.
I don’t believe in kids being ready at exact grade levels, I believe as they’re ready teach them the next concept.
Grade levels are just to give you a goal to aim for.
CONCEPTS TO TEACH FOR TIME TELLING
After you teach the basics, look at some of these concepts to teach.
- Teach what o’clock means
- Also, half past the hour and explain the minute hand is on 6. They need to know it half of an hour.
- Move on to quarter past the hours.
- And quarter to. So quarter past and quarter to are easier to explain by a hand held clock. I showed you how to make one below.
- Compare analog and digital time.
- Explain what is digital time and how to read it.
- Before you do this go over counting by 5s. If a child struggles with skip counting, time telling will be difficult.
- Then move on to a.m. and p.m.
HANDS-ON TIME TELLING ACTIVITIES
Next, look at these hands-on math activities for learning to tell time.
- Tick-Tock! How to Make a Hands-on Time Cool Paper Plate Clock
- Upcycled Clock: A Color Matching Activity
- 7 Time-Telling Fun Hands-On Time Activities and a Simple Watch Craft
- Time Puzzle
- Make A Rock Sundial
- Hourly Telling Time Bookmarks
- Learn to tell the time clock craft
Finally, look at how to grab the free time telling worksheets.
HOW TO GET THE FREE TIME TELLING WORKSHEETS
Now, how to grab the freebie. It’s a subscriber freebie.
That means when you sign up to follow me, you get my emails in your inbox and you get this freebie.
1) CLICK HERE ON THIS LINK TO SIGN UP ON MY EMAIL LIST & TO GET THIS FREEBIE.
2) Grab the freebie now.
3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!