Archive for July 2011

Like reading, writing is a process that brings together a bundle of skills that all need to develop in order for your child to write with ease . Below are some of these skills and easy fun activities that help develop them. Worksheets aren’t the only way and certainly not the first step in teaching your child to write. Some children love worksheets and I think no matter what we are teaching our children if we build on what they love half the battle is won, so do not take them away if your kids enjoy them, just add some of these activities below too.

Write on Vertical Surfaces

Yes writing on the wall is a good thing, hopefully that marker is washable ! The reason for this is because when kids write on vertical surfaces like walls, chalkboards, and easels their wrists naturally bend back in the proper form for writing.You can :

*Make Your Own Chalk Board *Write On The Wall with a Mini Mural

Fine Motor Skills

While writing my craft tutorials I often tag things as a fine motor activity because many crafts offer great fine motor practice.  Fine motor skills start in infancy while picking up finger food to eat but practice is so important as children learn to write. To encourage the proper grip you can try giving your child a small broken piece of crayon, it’s tiny size naturally encourages the proper grip. Also you can use up those tiny pieces! Thanks Teri for the suggestion.Practice doesn’t have to be work. You can :

*Have fun lacing and beading
*Make marshmallow  and toothpick house

*Lock and Key Match

Develop Hand , Arm and Wrist Strength

In order to work the way they want them to your child’s body needs to develop and just like we work out our bodies to work the way we want them to, for endurance and strength. To build strength you can :

*Climb and Play On Playground equipment ( especially monkey bars, climbing walls)
*Use Spray Bottles To Paint*Cutting - Yes I mean Scissors.  Don’t worry they don’t need to be sharp.
*Ripping is great too.
*Use tongs instead of your hands to pick things up in sensory tubs.

Hand Eye Coordination

I don’t think this section is given the status it deserves, hand eye coordination is so important and usually the part of the equation that frustrates my beginning writer the most. To work on these skills you can:

*Throw to a target – like we did with our Angry Birds Game.
*Hammer Golf Tees in like a pro!
*Sort things with tools , pour liquid into containers at a Water Tableor while cooking with an adult in the kitchen.

More Pre-Writing Letter Awareness

This is the playing with letters, learning their shapes , and understanding their general purpose. You can :

*Make letters out of playdough and draw them in sugar. *Make Letter Crafts to introduce and play with letters.
*Play Letter Games like memory , fishing games and letter hunts.
*Read.  Yes reading with your kids will help them with writing. So grab a book !

There are many strategies to help kids get a grasp on writing , these are just a few. Try not to push your young child, usually when they push back it’s because they aren’t ready for what you are pushing, so try a new approach.  Writing is a process and kids develop at different rates. Have fun with it and do not stress about what the kid next door is doing or what your mom says you were doing at your child’s age .

Happy 4th of July! We are watching a parade, drinking lemonade and spending time celebrating as a family. I hope you have a wonderful holiday if you are in the States. For everyone else check out my Summer Activities , Books About The Beach and Outside Fun posts for fun things to do today!

I hope you have been keeping busy so far this summer, taking a break for your regular schedule with your kids. Can you believe I’ve already seen back to school supplies in stores?!  I am not ready for back to school yet, though I am ready to see all the amazing creative posts you have to share so link up  your best from the week and show them off!  Remember to link back here so your readers can see all the great links that others leave. I am telling you this is by far the best place to start planning fun summer activities for kids. A few clicks here and you are set for the week.

Wow!  It’s just barely July and already you and our other No Time For Flash Cards readers have sat down and shared over 8000 books with their kids. I am so excited to see such amazing numbers coming in week after week.

If you haven’t joined our Summer Reading Challenge yet you are not too late. All the details are here but the gist of it is that you read with your kids, tally up how many books you have read, submit a tally sheet once per submission period ( see below) and then you are automatically entered to win a $50 Amazon.com gift card at the end of the summer. Pretty cool!

Submission Periods :

June 3-9th , 10th -16th , 17th- 23rd , 24th-30th

July 1st-7th , 8th-14th, 15th- 21st , 22nd-28th

July 29th – August 4th

August 5th-11th , 12th-18th , 19th -25th.

The winner will be drawn on the 26th of August.

Submit Your Tally Here

Happy Birthday Canada! My homeland turns 144 today and to celebrate we made this Canadian flag craft out of Starbucks coffee sleeves. My son loved the sound of the crayons on the corrugated paper, and said it tickled his hand. Obviously it’s a fun multi-sensory project whether you celebrate Canada Day or not.

  1. Gather your materials. You will need 2-3 coffee sleeves, a red and grey crayon, glue, scissors ,pencil  and either a talent for drawing or a cookie cutter in the shape of a maple leaf .
  2. Start by tracing the leaf with a pencil.
  3. Time to color with red. I loved the reaction to this , he was kinda shocked at first then the giggles started. My daughter who was chillin’ eating watermelon in her booster started giggling too. It was a moment.
  4. Make the pole by coloring another grey.
  5. Time to cut.
  6. Add the glue.
  7. Pop the pieces on
  8. Let dry.
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