Friendship Garden Nursery School

Skills and Natural Exploration

Readiness Skills and Natural Exploration with a nod to Susan Gallagher for beginning this list

Fine Motor Skills:

  • Pick up small acorns, pebbles, sticks, and pinecone
  • Find small invertebrates, insects
  • Draw in dirt/sand with sticks
  • Scissor skills
  • Cut or hole punch leaves
  • Cut Grass
  • Cut garden plants

Gross Motor Skills:

  • Open space for running, jumping freely
  • Climb a low tree
  • Play with a ball
  • Move tires and stumps
  • Jump in leaves
  • Sled

Eye-Hand Coordination:

  • Toss a ball through a hoop, into a basket, or to a person
  • Dig and dump
  • Stack sticks to make structures

Language and Literacy Skills:

  • Letter Recognition, Upper and Lower case
    • Letter sound walk
    • Read books
    • Look for letter shapes in nature
    • Make a nature alphabet book
    • Draw letters in the sand/dirt/air
  • Sequencing
    • Talk about the order of doing things
    • Discuss being prepared for outside in all weather
    • Discuss how animals forage for and store food for winter
    • Look for pinecones that have been nibbled on
  • Matching
    • Match natural items by color, size, shape and sound
  • Opposites
    • Explore a variety of textures in nature and describe them
  • Visual Discrimination
    • Classify and group objects
    • Same and different
  • Positional words
    • Use words to describe, above, below, up, down, next to
  • Rhyming
    • Sing nature related songs and fingerplays
    • Make up songs

Math Skills

  • Counting
    • Count natural objects, sticks, rocks, pinecones, leaves, acorns, seeds, flowers, trees
  • Sorting
    • Collect and sort natural objects
  • Graphing
    • If you can collect it, you can graph it
    • Graph how something feels
    • Graph experiences
    • Graph flavors if you’ve grown vegetables
  • Measuring
    • Bring measuring outside, rulers, cups, thermometer, rain gauge
    • Use a balance and a scale
  • Number recognition
    • Draw numbers in the sand/dirt/air
    • Count objects you find
    • Use natural objects to create numbers
  • Size recognition
    • Compare natural objects
  • Patterns
    • Look for patterns, scales a pinecone, the rings on a tree stump
    • Makea nature pattern, one acorn, one pinecone, try more difficult patterns
  • Shapes
    • Have a shape scavenger hunt

Science

  • Properties of water in different seasons
  • Watch the tree, plant, insect, animal, and water cycles
  • Explore temperature
  • Watch the clouds
  • Plant a garden
  • Name the parts of plants, animals

Self Help Skills

  • Hang up coat
  • Put on coat, mittens, hats
  • Carry food bag
  • Open food containers, wrappers
  • Clean up

Toddler Problem Solving

The Boot in the Can. A toddler tossed his boot into the metal can on the playground. He laughed as he did this. He looked about smiling, he was quite pleased with himself. Soon his facial expression changed to a quizzical look. He looked into the can, tried to reach in but the boot was at the bottom, too far in for him to retrieve. He smiled, no longer laughing. He tried several times to reach the boot.

He looked around, he saw where I was sitting and got my attention. This toddler does not yet speak in full sentences. He showed me the boot in the can. I responded that I saw the boot in the can and wondered aloud how he would get the boot out noting that he was responsible for his actions. I retreated to continue observing. Soon enough he figured out tipping the can over and crawling in to get his boot which he brought over to have put on with a big smile on his face.

If I had helped retrieve the boot, what would he have learned? I am so thankful I allowed him to problem solve, be accountable and successful!

Made Up Games

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When we give children resources they create their own games. This group of children used materials to create a “basket ball” game up off the ground.

We too often limit children’s imagination with our own constraints. The joy of children making up their own games and playing them teaches so many skills at once. Collaboration, communication, consequences, risk assessment, eye hand coordination and other skills are innate to play. These skills are skills we think we should teach. We do not need too if we just let the children be.

What will you allow children to do today?

Rivers and Lakes

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After a rainy morning, the children discovered some dry “river beds” that the heavy rains left. They thought of a variety of ways to recreate the flow only to discover that the earth kept soaking it up.

The activity did not last long however the children involved worked together cooperatively to test their hypothesis that they could re-create a river and lake. Natural resources science lesson for the day, check! We must continue to follow the children as they create our curriculum based on their interests.

How often do you use what is naturally occurring around you as your curriculum?