It's Tot School Tuesday, and today I'll be talking about sorting activities. These are some of the first activities I introduced to Zeke when he was around 18 months old, and he still enjoys them at 3 years old!
WHAT IS SORTING?
Sorting is classifying objects based on their attributes. The most common categories of sorting for toddlers and preschooler are sorting by color, shape, and size.
WHY IS SORTING IMPORTANT?
When your child sorts they are actually working on beginning math skills. Learning to sort objects is important because your child is comparing similarities and differences in the attributes of objects and grouping like objects together.
This is also a great visual discrimination exercise! Visual discrimination skills are important skills to have when your child begins learning math and reading. It's important for your child to be able to decide which objects belong in sets.
WHAT SHOULD MY CHILD SORT?
You can literally sort anything! Household objects are great for sorting activities because it brings real-life into play. Sorting laundry, utensils, or canned goods are all easy ways to work on this skill.
I'm also going to list some ideas for each of the three top sorting categories I mentioned above - color, shape, and size.
SORTING BY COLOR
This is the first sorting activity Zeke did, and I introduced two colors at a time for him to sort. It did take a few tries before he understood what to do, but it wasn't long before he was sorting the six main colors.
A few ideas for sorting by color:
- counting bears
- linking cubes
- crayons or markers
- pom-poms
- craft sticks
- toy cars
- buttons
- plastic animals
- pom-poms
- craft sticks
- rocks
- buttons
- fruit
- blocks
- Magformer Magnetic blocks (triangle, square, hexagon)
- buttons
- legos (rectangle, square)
- foam stickers
- felt pieces cut into shapes
- pattern blocks
- plastic gems
- pieces from a shape-sorter
No comments:
Post a Comment