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EARLY CHILDHOOD NEWSLETTER

 

Volume 2 Issue 8
September 2004


THIS MONTH'S EARLY CHILDHOOD NEWSLETTER THEME:

Colors Around You


WELCOME! to Education World's Early Childhood Newsletter. Each month, I'll share some ideas on a familiar teaching theme. Hopefully you will find a new activity idea or two -- or a new twist on one of your old favorites! Since I know you are very busy, I'll be short and sweet -- like most of activities I suggest.

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A WORD ABOUT THIS MONTH'S THEME

September is the month when Autumn slides in, pushing summer oh so slowly out of the way. Full colors of nature's summer begin to dull in preparation for a time of rest. But... in classrooms for young children, bright colors continually fill the rooms with joy and provide visual stimulation as well. Stay aware of the colors around you.

Anne Guignon
Editor, Early Childhood Education Newsletter



ACTIVITY IDEAS

THE BEGINNING: RECOGNIZING AND NAMING COLORS
Children begin recognizing colors when the people in their lives comment informally on colors in their environments, pointing colors out to children, and saying the color words.
Examples: Look at the green grass. See the blue sky. What a bright red jacket!
Soon children will generalize and be able to point to the blue sky, the blue blanket, the blue icing on the cake when asked. Children can then use the color words themselves.
Examples: What color is this pencil? yellow. What color is this car? green.

Older children love to learn color words that identify the mixtures and gradations of the colors in their world. A box of 64 crayons is still a great start. Help them increase their color vocabulary by introducing words such as: maroon, beige, cerulean, teal, olive, terracotta, gray, turquoise, azure... Encourage them to share other color words they learn and to use those words in their descriptive writing.

GRAPHING COLORS
Create a daily graph. Use color as the topic often. For example, graph the colors of shirts (tops) worn by class members. Provide each class member with a cutout in the shape of a tee shirt. Ask each child to color the shirt to match his/her own. Place the shirts in lines. One line of blue shirts, one line of yellow shirts, and so on. Each line must begin at the same place and shirts must be matched one to one. When done, the graph can be checked by matching the numbers of blue shirts on the graph to group of blue-shirted class members.

Variations: children themselves line up instead of using paper "shirts;" create bar graphs instead of picture graphs.

More colorful graphing ideas: the color of a piece of clothing, the color of the child's house, a favorite color...

SORT AND CLASSIFY
Play a game gathering classroom items and sorting by color. Teachers can control the degree of difficulty by providing items to be sorted. Begin with two colors and progress from there. When children are competent at that, add items of several shades of blue, etc., so generalizations can be made.

HOW MANY COLORS CAN YOU FIND?
Isolate an area of colored carpet, fabric, an illustration, or another object. Challenge children to identify as many colors as possible in that area. Provide magnifying glasses for a closer look.

ORGANIZE, REORGANIZE
(This activity is only for those of you who adapt well to a bit of chaos!)
Encourage children to reorganize the classroom -- or a section of the classroom -- by color. For example, they might organize a group of toys or a collection of books by color. After a week, discuss the pros and cons of such an organization. Which way works best? Solicit suggestions for something that might work better when organized by color.

COLOR MIXING
Mix colors whenever the opportunity arises -- and opportunities are everywhere! Students might mix colors when finger painting, using watercolors, making tissue paper and cellophane collages, tie dying, mixing food coloring, and more.

READ BOOKS ABOUT COLORS
--- How the Animals Got Their Colors: Animal Myths from Around the World by Michael Rosen, illustrated by John Clementson
--- Colors (Slide 'n Seek) by Chuck Murphy. A board book for the very young.
--- Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? by Bill Martin Jr., illustrated by Eric Carle
--- Mary Wore Her Red Dress and Henry Wore His Green Sneakers by Merle Peek. Illustrations from black and white to full color -- and a song too!
--- The Color Kittens (Golden Books)by Margaret Wise Brown. A re-issued version of this old (over 50 years!) classic for very young children. All about mixing colors.
--- Why Do Leaves Change Color? (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science, Stage 2) by Betsy Maestro. Colors and autumn science all wrapped up together.



ON THE WEB

Check out the following Web sites for more background and activities.

ANIMAL COLORS
Just for teachers, a New York Times article about "…the Mysteries of Animal Color." Background to help answer children's questions.
https://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/20/science/some-blend-in-others-dazzle.html

COLOR MATTERS
Another site for teachers. Background about color, photos of colorful places, color and the brain, color and the body... A wealth of information!
https://www.colormatters.com/index.php

COLORS IN PRESCHOOL
Worksheets, coloring pages, flash cards for all year long. Holiday activities too.
http://www.first-school.ws/theme/cp_colors.htm

EVERYTHING PRESCHOOL
Absolutely zillions of ideas for integrating color into all phases of learning -- songs, art, games, science, and just plain fun.
http://www.everythingpreschool.com/themes/colors/index.htm

MIXING PRIMARY COLORS
A web page showing one class's experimentation with color. Children will enjoy photos of other children.
http://hastings.ci.lexington.ma.us/staff/SLee/science/colors.html

START WITH SCIENCE COLOR ACTIVITY
From the Mohawk Valley Library System, an organized study of color mixing. Includes related books.
https://www.mvls.info/startwithscience/programs/colors.html

ARTS & CRAFTS -- COLORS
Art activities for all colors. Site contains links to activities for individual colors too.
http://www.preschooleducation.com/aallcolor.shtml

RAINBOW OF COLORS PRE-SCHOOL ACTIVITY
A wide variety of color activities all in one place.
http://ms.essortment.com/freepreschoola_rxji.htm