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Preschool Activities

Beginning Letter Sounds Bat Matching Activity

October 23, 2019 By Trisha

A bat themed activity is great for Halloween. You could also use it as part of a night themed unit studying nocturnal animals.

Try our beginning letter sounds bat matching activity for toddlers and preschoolers as part of your bat theme or as a stand-alone Halloween activity.

Practice the alphabet and letter sounds with this fun Halloween beginning letter sounds bat matching activity that is perfect for toddlers and preschoolers.

Beginning Letter Sounds Bat Matching Activity

Supplies Needed for the Bat Matching Halloween Game

Bat cutouts (or black cardstock and scissors)

Silver marker

Painter’s tape (optional)

Flashlight

Practice the alphabet and letter sounds with this fun Halloween beginning letter sounds bat matching activity that is perfect for toddlers and preschoolers.

How to Set Up the Beginning Letter Sounds Activity

Determine what letters you want to work on. I recommend working on just a handful of letters at a time. Choose 3-4 words for each letter. I used Halloween themed words. Here’s a list of Halloween words for inspiration. (Use this same idea with older kids for spelling or sight words.)

Write your chosen letters and words on the bat cutouts. I used a combination of foam bats from Hobby Lobby and bats I cut out of cardstock. I simply traced a foam bat and cut it out. You can often find bat cutouts at Target (in the Dollar Spot) or at Michael’s as well.

I chose to write uppercase letters for my letter bats as a bonus letter matching activity. You could use lowercase letters instead.

Now you have the makings of a simple matching game.

How to Play the Beginning Letter Sounds Bat Matching Game

Place your letter bats in one location in your room. You could lay them on the floor, place them on table, or tape them to a wall. (Be sure that your tape won’t harm your wall. Painter’s tape is usually safe on most painted surfaces. Just don’t leave it on there for long periods of time. Take it down when your game is over.)

Now hide your bats around the room. I taped mine to the walls in my sort of dark hallway. You could also lay the bats on the floor or on different pieces of furniture if you don’t want to use tape.

The goal of the game is for your child to take a word bat and match its first letter to the correct letter bat.

Here’s the extra fun part. Use a flashlight. (Talk about flashlight safety with your child and how we don’t shine lights in people’s eyes – including his/her own.)

Bat Matching Alphabet Game

Have your child shine the flashlight on a word bat. Read the word on the bat to your child. Ask him what letter it starts with. “That’s the word ‘moon.’ What letter does moon start with? What letter do you see?”

As you’re reading the words, also practice the beginning letter sounds. Say: “B says /b/. /b/ /b/ bat. Bat starts with the letter b.”

Have your child take the word bat and place it near the matching letter bat.

Practice the alphabet and letter sounds with this fun Halloween beginning letter sounds bat matching activity that is perfect for toddlers and preschoolers.

It’s not important that your toddler or even preschooler reads the words. You just want him or her to work on letter sounds and associating what that first letter looks like with its letter sound. It is important for you and your child to say the letter sounds as you’re playing.

Using the flashlight helps to highlight the letters. My toddler wanted to play this game again and again just so he could go around finding the bats with the flashlight.

More Bat Themed Halloween Activities

Bats in a Cave Sight Word Game

Halloween Bat Crafts for Kids

Bat Number Treasure Hunt at Inspiration Laboratories

Halloween Black Bat Sensory Bin at Pre-K Pages

Do you want to do more activities with your family?

Join our fun Facebook community, Creative Family Fun for Busy Families, for daily activities that are great for kids and families. We’ll chat, share, and have fun. It’s a safe and private place to share ideas for family and kids activities.

I’d love for you to join me! Just click the link below, request to join, and answer the questions (they’re easy, I promise). Come join the fun! Join the Creative Family Fun for Busy Families community here.

Leaf Hunt Alphabet Game for Toddlers

September 9, 2019 By Trisha

Fall is a great time to do learning activities with leaves.

Our Leaf Hunt Alphabet Game for Toddlers is a fantastic way to work on learning letters. You can practice name recognition and letter sounds, too.

Learn the alphabet with this fun outdoor leaf hunt alphabet game for toddlers and preschoolers. You'll have fun moving and learning!

Disclosure: There are Amazon Affiliate and other affiliate links in this article which means, at no additional cost to you, we could receive compensation for our recommendations. You can read our full disclosure policy on our Disclosure Page for more details.

Leaf Hunt Alphabet Game for Toddlers

Supplies Needed for the Leaf Themed Alphabet Learning

Leaves – collect real leaves, use silk leaves, or cut paper leaves

Chalk markers or permanent marker

Bucket or container

Drawing board (We used an Etch a Sketch Freestyle. A dry erase or chalk board would work well, too.)

How to Set Up the Leaf Hunt Alphabet Game

Head outside and collect some fallen leaves. We were able to collect magnolia tree leaves and tulip tree leaves after a storm had blown them out of the trees. Real leaves do become brittle and can crumble after a while. Larger leaves tend to do better. You can also preserve the leaves. Instead of real leaves, you can use silk leaves from the floral or craft department or you cut leaves from paper. If you want to save the paper leaves, you might want to laminate them or cover them with contact paper.

Write letters on the leaves. I used a chalk marker to write on real leaves. We’ve found that a chalk marker is fun for drawing on leaves as well. The chalk marker is erasable. If you change your mind, just wipe it off. Permanent markers would be fine substitute.

I drew uppercase and lowercase letters on our leaves. You could just start with uppercase letters or even just choose a selection of letters if your child is just starting to learn the alphabet. Sometimes too many letters can be overwhelming.

Spread the leaves out in the grass or on your floor.

Learn the alphabet with this fun outdoor leaf hunt alphabet game for toddlers and preschoolers. You'll have fun moving and learning!

How to Play

There are a few different ways we played this leaf game. The goal is to get kids moving and learning letters.

Game 1: Read the Letter

For this game, simply have your child pick up a leaf and bring it to you. Ask her what letter is on the leaf.

Outdoor fun with this leaf hunt alphabet game

You can also work on letter sounds. “That’s the letter B. B says /b/.”

Continue picking up leaves and saying the names (and sounds) of the letters.

You can add a bucket to your learning game if you wish. Have your child carry the bucket and place a leaf inside. Then, bring it to you and tell you what letter is on it.

Game 2: Find the Letter

For this game, you’ll need a drawing board. We use an Etch a Sketch Freestyle. A dry erase board or a chalk board would work equally as well. You could also use alphabet cards or letters written on paper squares. We were doing the activity outside, so I wanted something that wouldn’t blow away.

Ask your child to say a letter. Write the letter on the drawing board. (Alternatively, you can just choose the letter.)

Have your child find that letter in the leaves. Bring the letter back.

Practice saying the name of the letter and the letter’s sound.

You can also work on uppercase and lowercase letters. Write both cases of the letter on the board and ask your child to find them in the leaves.

Leaf Hunt Alphabet Game for Toddlers and Preschoolers

Game 3: Spell Your Name

Your child’s name is one of the first words he or she will be able to read. They get so excited when they recognize the word as theirs.

For this game, write your child’s name down on the drawing board. (You can even ask your child to spell it for you.)

Have your child hunt for the letters in his name.

My son found the letters in his name, but he didn’t find them in order. When he had all of the letters, I had him put the letters in the correct order under the drawing board.

More Leaf Themed Activities for Toddlers

Leaf Name Sticky Wall – work on name recognition with a contact paper sticky wall

Go Leaf Collecting– make a bag to collect your nature finds

Leaf Shape Collage – work on fine motor skills and learn shapes

Leaf Measurement and Sorting Activity

Do you want to do more activities with your family?

Join our fun Facebook community, Creative Family Fun for Busy Families, for daily activities that are great for kids and families. We’ll chat, share, and have fun. It’s a safe and private place to share ideas for family and kids activities.

I’d love for you to join me! Just click the link below, request to join, and answer the questions (they’re easy, I promise). Come join the fun! Join the Creative Family Fun for Busy Families community here.

Watermelon Sensory Sand and Alphabet Rocks

August 22, 2019 By Trisha

A watermelon themed sensory bin filled with pink sand and alphabet rocks is a fun sensory activity for toddlers and preschoolers.

Practice learning letters while digging for alphabet rocks in the watermelon sensory sand.

Have fun playing and learning your alphabet with this fun watermelon sensory sand activity with homemade alphabet rocks. It's a fun summer sensory activity!

Watermelon Sensory Sand and Alphabet Rocks

Pink sand makes me think of watermelons and summer, so I created a simple watermelon sensory sand activity for my toddler. My 5-year-old wanted to join in as well. Activities like this are perfect for multiple age groups. Kids love digging in sand.

I first used our pink sand that Crayola gave us to make watermelon kinetic play sand. The addition of a few ingredients makes the sand squishable and moldable just like store-bought kinetic sand. Today we’re just using regular pink sand.

To make the sand smell like watermelon, we added watermelon Kool-Aid. This is totally optional, but it adds a fun touch.

Have fun playing and learning your alphabet with this fun watermelon sensory sand activity with homemade alphabet rocks. It's a fun summer sensory activity!

Supplies Needed for the Watermelon Sensory Sand Activity

  • Large storage bin (or baking dish)
  • Pink Crayola play sand (I’ve added an Amazon link but you can find it at Walmart for about $7 during the spring/summer while supplies last.)
  • Watermelon Kool-Aid (optional)
  • Black rocks (I found a bag at Dollar Tree.)
  • Permanent marker or paint marker
  • Excavators, dump trucks, or other construction toys
  • Shovels, sifters, or other sand toys
  • Container for holding the collected rocks. (I used a green plate to represent the rind of a watermelon.)
DIY Alphabet Rocks

How to Set Up the Watermelon Sensory Sand Bin

Pour the sand into a large storage bin. Depending on the size of your construction toys, you can choose a smaller bin if needed.

Add alphabet rocks to your sensory bin. (In my mind, the black alphabet rocks mimic watermelon seeds.)

I wrote lowercase letters on the rocks using a paint marker. The paint marker actually rubbed off some of the rocks during play. I’m thinking a permanent marker would have done a better job.

Always supervise sensory play and be sure to choose appropriate size materials for child especially if your child is likely to put things in his or her mouth.

Add construction toys and a container for the rocks to the bin.

Invite your child to search for the alphabet rocks in the sand.

When an alphabet rock is found, ask your child what letter they see. You can also talk about the sounds the letters make or even what words begin with that letter.

Use the construction toys to search and dig for the the rocks. Or use sand toys to scoop and sift the sand to find the rocks.

Have fun playing and learning your alphabet with this fun watermelon sensory sand activity with homemade alphabet rocks. It's a fun summer sensory activity!

You can write uppercase letters on the rocks as well. This allowed us to spell my toddler’s name.

Instead of alphabet rocks, you could use number rocks to practice number recognition and counting. We painted rainbow number rocks for a counting game.

More Alphabet Learning Activities for Toddlers and Preschoolers

Construction Truck Alphabet Matching

Make Words with Alphabet Clothespins

Take Learning the Alphabet Outside with some chalk and a sidewalk

Do More Activities With Your Family

Join our fun Facebook community, Creative Family Fun for Busy Families, for daily activities that are great for kids and families. We’ll chat, share, and have fun. It’s a safe and private place to share ideas for family and kids activities.

I’d love for you to join me! Just click the link below, request to join, and answer the questions (they’re easy, I promise). Come join the fun! Join the Creative Family Fun for Busy Families community here.

Fun Hockey Activities for Kids

January 29, 2019 By Terri Thompson

Do you kids love hockey? Are they on the edge of their seats, cheering loudly, and begging to stay up until the end of the game?

If so, they’ll love this fun collection of hockey activities with everything from crafts, games, and learning activities.

These ideas make great boredom busters. Save these ideas for those days when you’re stuck inside because of bad weather.

Grab a few supplies, gather the fan club, and get ready to have some fun!

Are your kids crazy about hockey? Here are some great hockey activities that will get them moving, learning, and creating.

Disclosure: There are Amazon Affiliate and other affiliate links in this article which means, at no additional cost to you, we could receive compensation for our recommendations. You can read our full disclosure policy on our Disclosure Page for more details.

Hockey Games:

Play Tabletop Hockey. Find out how to make this simple tabletop game at Little Bins for Little Hands.

Play Marshmallow Hockey. Your kids will love this fun boredom buster from Lovely Commotion. You’ll love how easy it is to set it up.

CD Air Hockey. Finally, something fun to do with all your old cd’s! Set up this fun game from Busy Toddler to keep you little toddler busy.

Create a Mini Hockey Rink. You can use this tiny ice rink from Playtivities for all sorts of fun games.

Play Balloon Hockey. This game from Creative Connections for Kids is a fun thing to play when the kids are stuck inside.

Play Pompom Hockey. This game from Learning 4 Kids is a great way to get your kids moving inside.

Hockey Science Projects:

Do Hockey Science. Find out what will slide the best on ice and expore friction with our hockey science project here.

Table Hockey With Eggs. Experiment with friction with this fun STEM activity from A Little Pinch of Perfect.

Hockey Crafts:

Make a Cardboard Hockey Stick. Use recycled cardboard and a few other simple supplies to make our fun Cardboard Hockey Stick craft.

Make a Tabletop Hockey Rink. Your kids will have fun making and playing with this fun hockey rink from Handmade Charlotte.

Make Mini Hockey Sticks. Today’s Parent shows you how to take simple craft sticks and turn them into mini hockey sticks.

Hockey Learning Activities:

Gross Motor Phonics Hockey Game. Learn with movement with this fun driveway hockey game from Learn Play Imagine.

Print out the Hockey Printable Pack. Every Star is Different has created a fun printable pack for tots and preschoolers. Plus, she shows you so many fun ways to use them.

Play Name Hockey. Help you kids learn their name (or work on the alphabet) with this fun indoor hockey game from How Wee Learn.

Learn and have fun with Color Ice Hockey. This fun game from Teach Preschool is a great way to help your kids learn their colors.

Play Number Hockey. Learn your numbers with this fun set-up from Toddler Approved. SCORE!

Are you as in love with all these hockey activities for kids as I am? I’m not sure which ones I love the best.

Which of these hockey activities for kids are you going to try?

Are your kids crazy about hockey? Here are some great hockey activities that will get them moving, learning, and creating.

You may also like one of these fun kids activities:

Christmas Science – Grow the Grinch’s Heart

Hot Chocolate Science

Color Mixing Lab STEAM Activity

Fun Number Line Activities for Kids

Hockey resources I love:

In addition to these fun hockey activities, you little hockey fans would have fun with one of these great toys:

Are you looking for more kids activities?

Join our fun Facebook community, Creative Family Fun for Busy Families, for daily activities that are great for kids and families. We’ll chat, share, and have fun. It’s a safe and private place to share ideas for family and kids activities.

I’d love for you to join me! Just click the link below, request to join, and answer the questions (they’re easy, I promise). Come join the fun! Join the Creative Family Fun for Busy Families community here.

Arctic Fox Camouflage Craft

January 8, 2019 By Terri Thompson

We’ve been learning a lot about Arctic animals lately, and we decided to take a look at the Arctic fox. To show off what we learned, we came up with this fun Arctic Fox Camouflage craft.

Learn all about the arctic fox and camouflage with this fun Arctic Fox Camouflage craft and activity for kids. It's a fun way to learn!

It all started when my 4-year-old recently picked up a book about Arctic foxes at the library and requested we learn about them. Absolutely! (This tends to happen a lot, which is why my girls and I know many interesting tidbits about different animals.)

Disclosure: There are Amazon Affiliate and other affiliate links in this article which means, at no additional cost to you, we could receive compensation for our recommendations. You can read our full disclosure policy on our Disclosure Page for more details.

The Arctic fox turned out to be much more fascinating than I first thought. One thing that stood out for all of us was how different the fox looked in winter and summer.

This simple observation turned into a fun lesson in camouflage and how animals adapt to their surroundings.

We also did an easy art project based on what we learned to provide a visual reminder of how the Arctic fox uses camouflage.

Supplies Needed:

Construction paper  (blue, white, brown)
Ruler
Paint (white, brown, green)
Scissors
Glue
Black marker

Create your Arctic Fox Camouflage craft

Before beginning the project, I used a ruler to draw a line down the middle of our blue paper.

One half for the summer and the other half for the winter. We used our white paint to create a snowy landscape for our winter Arctic fox.

We then used our brown and green paint to create our summer landscape

The Arctic tundra is not lush and green in the summer. Instead, you will see more dirt and rocks with low-lying plants. (This picture from National Geographic is a good example of what you would see.)

Once our painted landscapes were complete, use cut simple fox figures from our construction paper.

We made the winter fox from white paper and the summer fox from brown paper. We then used our black marker to draw the details.

My preschooler observed that the Arctic fox was both brown and black in the summer, so she added some black stripes and patches with the marker.

Once the paint was dry, we glued our foxes onto the correct landscape.

We then used our marker to label the different scenes summer and winter.

Once we were done we had a great reminder of how the Arctic foxes uses camouflage and adapts to its surroundings with this fun Arctic Fox Camouflage craft.

Learn all about the arctic fox and camouflage with this fun Arctic Fox Camouflage craft and activity for kids. It's a fun way to learn!

Note: This post was first published on January 23, 2014. Updated and republished on January 5, 2019.

You may also like one of these great animal activities:

Cardboard Tube Penguin Craft

Polar Bear Bookmark

The Cutest Bear Crafts for Kids

Pom Pom Printed Polar Bear 

How Do Animals Stay Warm in Winter Science Activity at Science Sparks

Read a Great Book About Arctic Foxes

You can find out so much about arctic foxes in a good book. Here are some great choices of nonfiction arctic fox books, plus one fun fiction choice!

Arctic Fox: A Day in the Life: Polar Animals by Katie Marsico

Elementary Explorers: Arctic Foxes by Victoria Blakemore

Arctic Foxes: Animals That Live in the Tundra by Maeve T. Sisk

Nora: The Arctic Fox Fairy (Rainbow Magic Fairies) by Daisy Meadows

Are you looking for more kids activities?

Join our fun Facebook community, Creative Family Fun for Busy Families, for daily activities that are great for kids and families. We’ll chat, share, and have fun. It’s a safe and private place to share ideas for family and kids activities.

I’d love for you to join me! Just click the link below, request to join, and answer the questions (they’re easy, I promise). Come join the fun! Join the Creative Family Fun for Busy Families community here.

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