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preschool

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

November 29, 2022 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, you’ll love these cute and simple snowman story stones for winter art activities for preschoolers. Grab my other ideas for a winter unit study.

I am all about learning through play as much as possible, especially when it comes to younger children.

Story stones are fantastic tools that can be used to teach your children so many early literacy skills and more.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

They are inexpensive, easy to store and easy to use.

Too, they offer an open-ended learning experience that has many benefits for young budding readers.

First, in creating the story stones your child gets a chance to express themselves artistically.

In addition, they can work on fine motor skills and hand eye coordination.

Benefits of Storytelling Through Hands On

Then, in the storytelling there is so much that the story stones help build and improve.

For example, communication skills, language skills, listening, vocabulary, memorization, recall, imagination, creativity, and critical thinking.

Story stones also help children express their feelings, thoughts, and ideas.

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These open-ended winter themed story stones are sure to spark some fun and interesting tales that will entertain both you and your little one for hours.

You can use these story stones in so many ways to change up the learning.

14 Ways to Use Your Snowman Story Stones Creatively

  • Have your child blindly draw 4 or 5 stones from a bag and tell a story using the prompts on the stone.
  • Ask your child to choose 3 stones for first, next, last and tell you about it.
  • Use the stones for young children to work on positional words. For example, put the hat ON the snowman and put the snowman NEXT to the tree.
  • Draw a simple winter scene on a large piece of construction paper and encourage your child to place some stones around the scene and tell you about it.
  • Place them in their small world or sensory bin play and let creativity take over.
  • Start a story with “once upon a time”, pull a stone and give a couple sentences, the next player pulls a stone and continues the story, repeat.
  • Use in co-op in small group settings, take turns telling a piece of a larger story.
  • Tell a story using the picture prompts, present some sticky situations to your child, like the sun coming out, and ask your child to finish the story with solutions.
  • Use the stones to sort living and nonliving items.
  • Show the pictures on your stone and have your child tell you the beginning letter, sound, how many syllables, etc.

  • In the reverse call out a letter and have your child find a stone that starts with the letter.
  • Choose one stone and ask your child to describe it.
  • Practice writing the words for the pictures on the stones on paper, a chalk or led board.
  • Have your child practice stacking the stones as high as they can to work on fine motor skills and they can tell a story about the objects as they stack as well.
Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

Next, look at some more winter unit study activities.

More Winter Unit Study Resources

Look at these other winter unit study resources and more winter art activities for preschoolers.

  • Winter Craft Ideas How to Make Fun Pinecone Flowers
  • How to Make an Adorable Toilet Roll Snowman for Winter Crafts
  • Easy and Fun Pinecone Snowy Owl Winter Craft for Kindergarten
  • Free Amazing Winter Unit Study and Winter Lapbook for Kids
  • Easy Hands on Snowflake Winter Craft for Kids Who Don’t Have Snow
  • Winter Nature Craft: How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders
  • 3 Fun Cocoa Winter Hands on Science Activities
  • How to Make an Easy Build a Snowman Kid’s Game (free printable cube)

Too, here are some fun ideas of what to paint on your stones.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

Of course the best pictures are ones your little ones love, but here are some ideas too.

Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers Storytelling Stones Ideas

  • A frozen pond
  • Snowmen
  • Hats
  • Trees
  • The sun
  • Spring flowers.
  • Animals
  • Childs favorite items like football, doll, bike, etc..
  • Snowflakes
  • A road
  • Letters or numbers
  • Your child’s name

How to Make Snowman Story Stones

You will need:

  • Large smooth river rocks. You want them large enough so there is enough surface area for your child to work on them.
  • I use acrylic paint /paint pens and sometimes both. Acrylic paint is easy to use, durable, and inexpensive. It is a great choice for this project.
  • Paintbrushes
  • Any matte clear sealing spray or you can brush on a couple coats of modge podge.
Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

First, wash and dry your stones well to remove dust and dirt.

I got mine at a local landscape company but you can also find them on Amazon or at craft stores if not in your area.

Draw on your designs with a pencil until you are satisfied with them.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

Then, use small paint brushes or paint pens to fill in your designs and allow them to dry completely and keep wet q tips on hand to tidy up your lines as needed.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

You can also use a paint pen.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

Or fabric paint, these have a great small tip for little hands but do come out thick.

Once the designs are dry spray well with a coat or two of clear sealer to preserve them or alternatively you can use paint on modge podge to seal.

Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers

Let dry according to directions on the can.

Store the story stones in a pretty basket on a low shelf to invite your curious creative little ones to use them.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Preschool Tagged With: crafts, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool preschool, homeschoolinginwinter, preschool, winter crafts, winter season

25 Fun Learning Apps and YouTube Videos for Little Learners

May 10, 2020 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Learning apps and YouTube videos have exploded since I started homeschooling my kids 25 years ago. Now that I’m helping to homeschool Munch King in preschool I’m keeping a list of my favorite learning apps and YouTube videos to use with him.

Moreover, a lot of the learning apps and YouTube videos which I rounded up here can be used for kids up to third grade, but there are some you can use for older kids too.

25 Fun Learning Apps and YouTube Videos for Little Learners

Because Munch King has limits on screen time, I want apps and YouTube videos at my fingertips when we need him to keep learning. Whether you need grandma to entertain the kids when you’re away or you’re taking care of a little or the bigs, you’ll want to save this list.

Additionally, not all apps are educational so I’ll update the list as I find more learning apps and YouTube videos that are worth saving.

Educational Apps For Young Learners

You may want all the DragonBox apps. You’ll love grabbing these even for your older learners. “DragonBox is an award-winning series of educational math apps that are designed to engage and excite children about learning.” Yep, math can be exciting.

Tinybop is another one where you’ll want all the apps.

Plants Tinybop

Reading Eggs. Prepare your child for learning the fun way with a great range of fun interactive mathematics and reading apps specially designed for early learners.

Reading Eggs

Award-winning learn-to-code platform for kids, ages 5-9

codeSpark Academy is the most used home coding program for kids 5-9! 

SnailBob2 The puzzle everyone loves.

SnailBob

Your kids will love this series of apps MarcoPolo Learning, Weather, and World School

MarcoPolo Ocean
MarcoPolo Arctic
 

Khan Academy Kids.

Children can learn reading, language, writing, math, social-emotional development, problem-solving skills, and motor development.

Khan Academy Kids
Mammals Tinybop
Space Tinybop

Phonics With Phonograms by Logic of English. A phonogram app that drills all the sounds for each phonogram.

Logic of English

Duck Duck Moose is another one where you want just about all the apps. Fish school, Word Wagon, Park Math, Moose Math, Draw and Tell and More!

Fish School – 123 ABC for Kids

Skybrary is a carefully curated, ever expanding interactive library of digital books and video explorations designed to engage young readers and foster a love of learning.

Skybrary by Levar Burton

Educational YouTube Videos for Kids

The Dr. Bincos Show. From volcanoes to carnivorous plants your kids will be sure to find something educational.

The Brave Wilderness. “The Brave Wilderness Channel is your one stop connection to a wild world of adventure and amazing up close animal encounters!“

Homeschool Pop. “Our goal is to make fun, exciting learning videos for elementary students. We are called Homeschool Pop because our lead narrator and writer is a homeschool dad. (Pop is a fun way to say “dad”).”

We Love Puzzles. “We’re two sisters that, with their parents, make amazing puzzles that are both cool and educational! We often use fun materials such as Play-Doh and glitter to create our puzzles making them even more interesting and fun!”

Maddi Geography TV. “Hi, I’m Maddi and I am here to teach you and your kids fun facts about countries around the world. Every week I do a video about a different country focusing on geography, the food people in that country enjoy, as well as the indigenous animals. At the end of each video there is also a section about quirky and weird facts about that country.”

Kratts Creatures Different featured animals.

Operation Ouch. “Operation Ouch is packed with incredible facts about the human body and fronted by identical twins Dr.Chris and Dr. Xand van Tulleken who experiment and explore their way through the fascinating world of medicine and biology. This channel will de-mistify hospitals for younger viewers.”

Science Max. “Have you ever done a science experiment and wondered “What would this be like if it were HUGE?” Welcome to Science Max, the exciting new series that turbocharges all the science experiments you’ve done at home.”

Jack Hartmann Kids Music Channel. “Our songs for kids and educational videos will help your children learn counting, numbers, reading and language skills, nursery rhymes, science, physical fitness, dance and movement.”

Kids Learning Tube. “Kids Learning Tube educates kids through music and animation in a fun and unique approach to learning.”

Online Learning Resources

Peep and the Big Wide World “Peep and the Big Wide World gives wings to the innovative idea of teaching science to preschoolers.”

WordWorld. “Welcome to WordWorld, the first preschool series where words are truly the stars of the show! Come along for an adventurous romp into a vibrant world of words with the WordFriends—animals whose bodies are made up of the letters that spell the word they are.”

Caillou – WildBrain. “Meet Caillou, the lovable 4 year old with a big imagination! Caillou experiences all the wonders of being a child that audiences around the world can relate to; first day of school, caring for a pet, learning a new sport or spending time with family.”

Hooked on Phonics.

Have Fun Teaching. “HFT offers free worksheets, songs, videos, and resources for teachers, parents and kids!“

These fun apps and YouTube videos are great ways to keep your little learners engaged, but also entertained and are educational.

25 Fun Learning Apps and YouTube Videos for Little Learners

Look at these other resources:

  • How to Teach Homeschool Preschool From the Inside Out (And Preschool Skills)
  • How to Know What A Homeschooled Child Should Learn Yearly?
  • BEST Curriculum by Homeschoolers for Homeschoolers
  • How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading
  • Awesome Reading Aloud Tracking Time Homeschool Form
  • How Early Should I Begin Homeschooling My First Child? (and checklist)
  • The BEST Resources for Teaching Art at Home (K to Gray)

Did you find or two you can use now?

Hugs and love ya,


Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Preschool Tagged With: apps, elementary, homeschool preschool, online learning, preschool, YouTube

How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading

June 19, 2019 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Nothing is more thrilling than hearing the sweet voice of your first homeschooled child reading. Also, look at my page Kindergarten Homeschool Curriculum for more tips.

That is something only another homeschool educator can fully appreciate.

Teaching my first homeschooled son to read set me up for success in teaching his younger siblings.

Twenty plus years later, I’m here to tell you the reading process is the same as it was then.

Don’t be overwhelmed by the push of the educational word into thinking that teaching reading has to be difficult or overly structured.

How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading

Striking a balance between using play to teach reading to a child and using a developmental approach to curriculum to guide a homeschool educator is absolutely vital.

Here are six solid how-tos for getting your kids to read successfully and quickly.

6 Solid How-Tos Tips for Teaching New Homeschooled Readers

1. Understand the reading program parts. It has at least two parts.

2. Knowing the names of ALL the letters is not necessary.

3. Teach the sound the consonant represents; begin with the short sound for vowels.

4. Introduce consonants and vowels in a strategic order so a child reads sooner than later. Do not introduce letters in ABC order.

5. Multiple letter sounds should be introduced at one time.

6. Search play vs. structured teaching approach for PreK and Kindergarten levels.

I’m diving into this first point which is to understand the vital parts to a balanced reading program.

The Key Parts to a Beginner’s Reading Program

In the past I’ve shared what I did to teach my first son to read which was to purchase Dr. Maggie’s phonic readers from a teacher store.

What I learned from the Dr. Maggie set of phonics readers was that reading has two parts which are the very basics of any reading program.

One component is a systematic way to teach phonics and the second component is a way for your child to practice reading his new learned skill.

Both of these components I learned while using the phonics readers.

This is what I noticed in the readers and that will help you as a new teacher.

  • Dr. Maggie’s phonic readers had a book devoted to most of the vowel and consonant sounds.
  • The books progressed in order so your kid could start reading right away while learning letter sounds.
  • I learned that not only did a child need the introduction to the sound, but putting the sounds together to form words can happen right away.

A laid out reading program pairs a phonics reader with the sound being introduced. You can easily do that.

Look below at a few choices I listed for the two components.

Best Books to Get Kids Learning to Read

Create Your Own Reading Program
OR
Choose one phonics program AND choose one or more set of phonics readers.

Phonics Programs
Get Ready for the Code.
Explode the Code.
Modern Curriculum Press Phonics: Level A.
Adventures in Phonics Level A Workbook.
Spectrum Early Years: Phonics Readiness, PreK.
Carson-Dellosa Spectrum Phonics Workbook, Grade K.

Phonics Readers
Bob Books.
Alpha Phonics Readers.
Horizon Kindergarten Reader, Set.
Christian Liberty Beginning Readers.
Dr. Maggie’s phonic readers.
Free I See Sam books have been around for a while.
Free Sizzy books by Fun Phonics.
Dick and Jane Level 1 Readers.

Also, you can purchase a curriculum where your reading program is laid out. And be sure you’re subscribed to my YouTube Channel How to Homeschool EZ.

How to Choose a Laid Out Reading Program.

1. Know That Letter Names Are Not Important In the Beginning

The second point is to understand that your child doesn’t need to know the names of letters.

All About Reading Pre-reading

Although I drilled the alphabet and names of the letters with each of my readers, I soon learned that knowing all of the letter names is not necessary to begin reading. Identifying sounds of letters is the first place to start.

Don’t wait until a child knows all of his letters to begin teaching him to read.

Eventually readers learn the letters; they become important when learning to spell.

Besides, learning to spell is a skilled learned later. A child reads long before he can spell.

2. Why Teaching the Sound of Consonants Is First

Pointing to a plastic letter tile like “D” and mouthing the sound /d/, then doing the same with plastic letter tile “o” and plastic letter tile “g” helps your child to begin decoding right away.

By introducing the short sounds of vowels, kids learn to read right away.

3. Create a Strategic Order for Consonant and Vowel Introduction

Reading should be rewarding. Even budding readers understand the concept of intrinsic value.

In the beginning, my mistake was not having a specific order in which to teach the letters.

Teaching the letter sounds in alphabetical order was my mistake.

Teaching the consonants and vowels in a planned order which allows your child right away to blend sounds and make easy CVC (consonant, vowel, consonant) words is how to do it.

I concentrated on consonants used most often and introduced a vowel right away because every word has a vowel in it.

The vowels are a ,e, i, o, u and sometimes y.

At this point, focus only on the short sounds of a,e, i, o, and u.

Easy Reading Lesson Plans

Here is a sample of what I do.

  • introduce /k/ for c, /b/, /m/, /h/, /t/, /r/, /p/, and /s/ sounds;
  • introduce the short sound of the vowel a;
  • introduce the “- at” family; and
  • introduce the sight word “The” (more on this in a minute).

Can you see right away that a child can read the word “at” from blending the sounds?

Next, take each of the consonant letter tiles c, b, m, t, r, h, p and s.

Place each letter tile at the beginning of “at” and say each word.

Finally, tell your new reader that when he knows one word he knows many. Rhyme the words for him.

The last step is taking a word that he can recognize by sight like the word “The” and put that word in front of each word — cat, rat, hat, and bat.

For free lists, look at this page for free lists of sight words.

Because reading does involve recognition of some words without decoding, add the sight words in slowly with each lesson.

Reading easy sentences like “The cat”, “The hat”, and “The rat” gives immediate rewards. You now have a budding reader.

How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading

Reading Pace Matters

Here is another example of a word family.

I choose another short vowel like o and I’m planning intentionally to create CVC words with my consonant choices.

For instance with the vowel o, choose the following consonant letters to introduce.

  • /l/, /g/, /d/, /p/ and “Go” as a sight word.

Review the consonants your child learned in earlier lessons and put with these new consonant sounds to work on the sound /o/.

You can now create these words: log, dog, top, hog, got, pot, rot, mop, dot, bog, and hot.

Can you create more? Make sentences like “Go dog”, “Go hog”, and “Go rat”.

Using the word rat from your previous lessons reinforces what he was introduced to.

Keep using CVC words previously introduced as you build his reading vocabulary.

Keep Your Reading Pace Moving

The next seasoned veteran tip I want you to know is that there is no need to study a letter a week.

A child can move a bit faster, but you don’t want to overwhelm a budding reader.

Each child is different in how fast you want to introduce sounds.

For example, when my son was four years old, he learned to read.

However, our reading time was in short spurts throughout the day.

Fifteen minutes here and there throughout the day are normal. Introducing at least two sounds a week is fine. Go slower as needed.

If a child is closer to six or seven years old which is still right on target for learning to read, you may be able to spend closer to thirty minutes before he is ready for a break.

As you’re introducing new consonant sounds, review letter sounds you previously taught.

Don’t be discouraged if a child seems to remember the sounds one week and forget them the next. Constant review and interaction with the sounds will help him to master them.

20 Best Tips for Teaching Reading and Spelling

Teaching at this age is like putting together a puzzle.

You’re constantly looking over new pieces and adding them to your framework.

Developmentally Appropriate Means Making A Child’s Development Priority

For many years, I’ve read dialogue back and forth between the camp of overly structured teachers and teachers who feel this age should be play all day.

I’ve learned that a combination of both approaches is needed.

First, understanding the natural inclination children have to play should have you include ideas for teaching reading that are play.

Too, the structured curriculum is for the teacher, NOT the child. Most new homeschooling teachers want a direction in how to introduce reading to their child.

Reading aloud is the single most important thing I did with all my children.

It teaches them to love words and by the inflection of your voice they learn to let their imaginations soar.

Forcing a child that age to sit at a table for long hours or do worksheet after worksheet does not recognize a child’s development.

Use teaching skills where a child learns through play while developing fine and gross motor skills is imperative.

The bottom line is that using a formal curriculum with PreK and Kindergarten is excellent as long the curriculum recognizes the child’s need to learn through play.

Learning Through Play Resources

Huge letters work great and you want to be sure you have lots of lowercase letters too.

Learning CVC words should be hands-on too.

Although these letter tubs are more pricey, if you have multiple budding readers you get your money’s worth. Using these tubs for two or more years with each reader saved my sanity.

I ordered these tubs and they’re perfect for teaching each new reader a letter along with corresponding objects which represent the letter sound.

More Tips for Beginner Readers

  • 12 of the Best Books For Beginner Readers Being Homeschooled
  • How To Determine The Best Beginner Reading Books For Kindergarten & Recommendations
  • 6 Boy Approved Books Which Spark the Love of Reading
  • How To Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading
  • 10 Best Homeschool Phonics Curriculum For Kindergarten

I have more tips to share with you on learning through play, but wanted to be sure you understood how the reading process unfolds. Does this make sense?

Look at these other tips:

  • Awesome Reading Aloud Tracking Time Homeschool Form
  • What You’ve Got To Know About Teaching Reading Comprehension
  • 5 Easy Steps to Putting Together Your Own Homeschool Phonics Program
  • How to Know What A Homeschooled Child Should Learn Yearly?
  • How Early Should I Begin Homeschooling My First Child? (and checklist)
  • Homeschool Colorful Reading Journal to Motivate Kids
  • Teaching Homeschooled Boys How to Read – When to Panic!
How to Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading. CLICK here to grab these AWESOME tips from a seasoned veteran and grab free phonics readers too.
How to Get Your First Homeschooled Child Reading. CLICK here to grab these AWESOME tips from a seasoned veteran and grab free phonics readers too.

1 CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Language Arts, Teach Homeschool Preschool Tagged With: homeschoolreading, preschool, preschool skills, read aloud, reading, readingcomprehension

Kinder Gardening to Celebrate Nature and Science

May 23, 2019 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today I’ve rounded up some fun things to get the next generation of green thumbs digging in the dirt. I wished I had started gardening earlier with my kids, but your littles will love these kinder gardening resources to celebrate nature and science.

Kids Garden Unit Study Resources

Look at this adorable Radio Flyer big-kid wheelbarrow. Your kids will love to haul their own plants or just dirt. No intimidation here when they have their own kid-sized wheelbarrow for hauling.

Also, grab these fun crocs which are easy to clean and your littlest gardener is ready for his big kid project – well almost!

One thing that held me back from putting my kids in charge of their own garden was the lack of room in one place we lived while homeschooling.

When we got to move out to the more scenic and country areas where we had wide open spaces, gardening was easier.

It wasn’t so easy to do a fun science garden unit study when we lived in the city or in our smaller home which is why I loved these next fun things.

Kid Science in the Garden

These adorable growing your own herb kits are just the perfect kid-sized project. This raised bed is the perfect working height for little kids.

A huge plus is that you can take all of these things with you or move them around as you need to.

Then sneak in some fun ways to learn about gardening with this this flower families go fish game.

Add in some bug bingo for a creative way to learn about bugs from all over the world and you’ve added in a touch of geography.

You can also add in fun boxed craft ideas like this greenhouse from Groovy Lab in a Box.

Then, of course no unit study about gardening is complete without fun books.

With Seedfolks you can add in cultural awareness into your unit study which is a nice twist while learning about nature and science. Grab the Teacher’s Guide to the book and you’ll have a ready-made unit study.

Including a good amount of nonfiction living book ensures that a kid will find science in the garden fun as you avoid boring textbooks.

Not only will your kids love doing what they naturally like doing at this age which is being outside digging in dirt and playing with water, but it teaches kids valuable life skills.

Independence to care for their basic essentials and a sustaining food source are life skills you want your little kinder gardeners to have.

You’ll love these other unit study ideas and activities to add to your own study.

  • 6 Fun and Free Nature Studies to Beat the Doldrums
  • Easy Seed and Gardening Unit Study for Kids (Middle – Upper Elementary)
  • How to Easily Make Fun Seed Tape With Kids
  • How to Make a Fun Kids Root Viewer
  • How to Easily Garden Plan With Kids Using LEGO

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science, Science Based, Teach Homeschool Preschool Tagged With: garden, gardening, homeschool preschool, kindergarten, nature, nature study, preschool, science

How to Teach Homeschool Preschool From the Inside Out (And Preschool Skills)

November 28, 2018 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What does it mean to teach homeschool preschool from the inside out? Any change or growth whether it’s physical or mental starts from the root or inside and comes to the surface.  After 20+ years of homeschooling, I’ve come to appreciate deeply that teaching preschool is a similar approach.

I’ll give you a bird’s-eye view of preschool skills, but more than anything I want you to understand that unless you work from where your child is on the developmental rung and go up and out your teaching efforts could be in vain.

Even more important than perhaps wasting your time is that unintentionally you could be holding back your preschooler from higher learning instead of giving him a solid framework to build on. A hate of learning can then emerge with burn out in only second grade. You can avoid it. I’ll show you how to put the odds in your favor of succeeding at homeschooling from the very beginning.

Homeschool Preschool First Things First

What does it mean to teach homeschool preschool from the inside out? Any change or growth whether it's physical or mental starts from the root or inside and comes to the surface.  After 20+ years of homeschooling, I've come to appreciate deeply that teaching preschool is a similar approach.

Most parents are overly worried about having a child that will be behind. It’s a valid concern. Key to reining in that fear is understanding how a preschooler learns. It’s differently than other ages.What I’ve learned after homeschooling three homeschool graduates and now helping to mentor my fourth preschooler is that foundation is everything. And the foundation at home looks a LOT different than public school with all of its research-based reports. More on that in a minute.

What does homeschool preschool curriculum look like?

I’ll say it once, okay, maybe not. I will say it many times. Homeschool preschool is not about worksheets. I know you’re wanting a guide. Some guideline to follow to be sure your child is on track is really useful.

Here is the problem with choosing structured formal curriculum. Most of it is not developmentally appropriate. A lot of curriculum use worksheets as the spine. A spine is the framework for which all learning is based. From the beginning, you can set up your preschooler to have problems because worksheets are not age appropriate.

That is a key phrase to remember when homeschooling preschool from the inside out. Why? Because kids this age learn primarily through play. They learn through being with YOU. They learn by you modeling what you want your preschooler to learn.

Your role is not just vital, but it’s essential in how a preschooler learns. Research-based reports can leave out that significant component.

Bottom line: You’re teaching pre-reading skills, pre-writing skills, learning through dramatization, fine and gross motor skills as well as a whole set of skills dealing with cognitive development.

At this age, a child needs to learn how to remember things, learn how to think about thinking which is also called meta-cognition (not as easy as one may think), along with how to plan, take care of their needs, and organize.

I’m don’t want to overwhelm you, but to empower you and inform you by pulling back and looking at this from a bird’s-eye view. Preschool skills like coloring and cutting aren’t a waste of time, but were valuable precursors to the beautiful cursive and handwriting my kids had later.

Repeating Old Goose nursery rhymes over, over, and over again are not foolish childhood dawdle and rereading the same Dr. Seuss book for what seems the fiftieth time are ways to train my kids to hear the subtle differences in words.

Without hearing the subtle differences in sound there will be spelling struggle later. Not making time to read aloud beautiful literature to a preschooler now could mean hitting a brick wall with a kid who is book hater.

Teaching preschool does not mean you shouldn’t have or use some laid out programs. I’m not saying that.

I will be sharing more of the components I hand picked for teaching preschool, but one I love is ABCmouse. You get ABCmouse.com – First Month Free – Click here!

Munch-King can do this on his own for short periods of time.

The key to remembering how to use it is that it means YOU teach and model. The program should recognize how a preschooler learns which is through play, hands-on, and moving.

Homeschool Preschool Foundations

What does it mean to go out on the developmental rung? Hint: It’s knowing the value of enrichment and not just skill-based teaching.

A colossal mistake of many homeschoolers is constantly pushing ahead to the next grade or level. They don’t know the immense value of pushing out and away from the same level a child is on.

It reminds me of how a tree naturally grows. As a tree is growing higher, it also widen flourishes out. That is the exact thing that should happen to kids as they grow.

What I want you to know is that unless a child has special needs, he will go up in his development. What he may not do without your guidance is go wide or branch out. Anything that does not grow out as it grows up is stunted.

Going sideways on the same rung is just as vital as going on to the next level. Here is why.

Not IF but WHEN a child has a slow time in development, he can still grow and be enriched on the same level he is at. This enrichment is vital to being a well-rounded learner. Slowing down is a natural way for a child’s mental development to catch up.

Enrichment is a test in self-respect, self-worth and pursuing passions. When kids are constantly graded or taught from a skill-based approach, they learn to compare their advancement to others.

Teaching a child how to learn from observing, experimenting, expanding, and deepening his knowledge on a topic gives him time to master it. Becoming a master scholar happens when a child is allowed to delve and dwell on topics at hand, but peer at them in a close up manner.

Bottom line: Homeschooling is self-education. Let me repeat that again – homeschooling is self-education.  A preschooler loves to learn, but as a child grows older his love for learning wanes. It doesn’t have to IF we allow them to explore trails, discover new twist and turns on information they already know. They are learning to self-educate. This skill will last them through to high school and beyond as they take a college or career track.

Homeschool Preschool Skills

Now that you understand how important it is to work with a child’s developmental stage, not set up a formal environment, and to allow a child to stay at his level until he feels mastery, you want to know what skills to teach a preschooler.

I’m sharing a few of the things I’m using as I watch for signs of developmental delays and developmental milestones. In addition, these help me to lay a foundation for Munch King’s next developmental level.

I’ll be sharing more of how I’m using them, but here is a partial list:

  • Slow and Steady Get Me Ready For Kindergarten: 260 Activities To Do With Your Child From Age 0 to 5
  • IQ Booster Kit: Developing the Early Learner Levels 1-4.

Also, look below at a good rule of thumb guide that I’m using. Remember, just like you waited for readiness before your child crawled or walked, this stage of learning is the same. Be ready with arms open to help him as he reaches for the next rung.

  • Context Clues
  • Visual Discrimination
  • Numbers
  • Phonics
  • Vocabulary
  • Rhyming Words
  • Comprehension
  • Fine Motor Skills
  • Counting
  • Graphing
  • Writing
  • Action Words
  • Gross motor skills
  • Simple chores
  • Explore the world around him
  • Music
  • Nature
How to Teach Homeschool Preschool From the Inside Out (And Preschool Skills). What does it mean to teach homeschool preschool from the inside out? Any change or growth whether it's physical or mental starts from the root or inside and comes to the surface.  After 20+ years of homeschooling, I've come to appreciate deeply that teaching preschool is a similar approach. CLICK HERE for the tips!

In some upcoming posts, I have some pointers to share on additional things we’re using for preschool to help you lay a foundation that is as unique as your child.

You’ve GOT this and I’ve GOT you all the way to High School and a bit beyond! With me?

You’ll also love these other tips:

  • Help! I Can’t Teach My Homeschooled Child How to Read – 5 Step Checklist
  • What Makes Reading Painful for Homeschooled Kids. Let Go of Busywork to Raise Lifelong Readers
  • Teach Your Homeschooled Child How to Read in 20 Easy Lessons
  • Homeschooling Kindergarten : What Subjects to Teach and For How Long?

Hugs and love ya,

2 CommentsFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Preschool Tagged With: homeschool preschool, preschool, preschool skills

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