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Activities by Age for 3-Year-Olds

Children at this age often love to draw, which helps build the coordination they need to hold a crayon or pencil and begin to form letters.</p>\r\n"}} id=text-bc3afed924 class=cmp-text>

Children at this age often love to draw, which helps build the coordination they need to hold a crayon or pencil and begin to form letters.

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Blue Makes Me Think of ...

Drawing lets your child work on the coordination needed to hold a crayon, keep the paper still and apply enough pressure.

Fill the Tub

This fun activity will give your child a chance to practice pincer control as he pushes macaroni into the plastic lid of a container.

Marching Around the Letters

Get your child up and moving as you use music and movement to help your child practice writing letters.

My Cutting Kit

If you take the time to put together a Cutting Kit, it will encourage frequent and successful practice cutting with scissors, which will help your child develop fine motor skills for writing.

My Name!

This activity provides your child with failure-free practice in tracing her name. Writing her own name is empowering and is a step in believing she is a writer.

My Personal Cereal Book

This activity uses environmental print (words in our environment) to expose your child to print awareness.

Nuts and Bolts

In this activity, your child will practice the fine motor skills eventually needed for writing and drawing.

Sand Designs

Give your child fine motor practice in the sand with this fun, quick and simple activity.

Shaving Cream Shapes

In this activity, your child will have fun 鈥渇ingerpainting鈥 with shaving cream while learning about different shapes.

Sidewalk Writing

This activity provides a fun way for your child to practice her emerging drawing and writing skills outside.

The Write Time

This activity encourages you to start a file for your child鈥檚 writing to show progress over time.

Bottle Cap Fun

For this activity, you鈥檒l need to start a collection of bottle caps of various colors and sizes for your child to examine and play with.

Color/Letter Sort

In this fun game, your child will improve her observational skills as she learns to distinguish letters.

Feel and Find

This activity lets your child learn to distinguish objects by touch, eventually moving on to plastic letters.

Find the Letter

This is a fun, active activity where your child will match a magnetic letter to an oversized letter written with sidewalk chalk.

Hop to the Letter

When your child won鈥檛 stop moving, use this fun activity to take advantage of that energy while building in a little alphabet knowledge.

Letter Monster

In this fun activity, your child will love feeding the letters of his name to the Letter Monster.

Letter Soup

In this activity, children will compare letter shapes as they learn the names of letters.

Match the Keys

In this activity, your child will have practice looking at the similarities and differences in keys, which will eventually help with identifying letters.

Sticks, Humps, Bumps, Curves and Circles

Play this sorting game to help your child learn about differences and similarities in letters.

The Search for Letters

This activity will give your child practice finding the letters in his name. Those are the letters that he will most likely learn first.

Walking the Tightrope Letters

In this activity, your child will walk in a straight line while learning about the letters in her name, giving her a chance to see the letters from different perspectives.

Rhyme Time Cleanup

Preschool children enjoy hearing and experimenting with rhymes. Next time you ask your child to clean up his toys, turn it into a fun rhyming game!

Body Beatbox

In this activity, your child will watch and hear you produce sounds with your hands, feet and voice and repeat what you鈥檝e done.

Fruit Name Clap

In this activity, you will bring your child鈥檚 attention to the syllables that make up words.

Fun Rhyming With Books

In this activity, you鈥檒l read books that have lots of rhyme and language repetition to help expose your preschooler to important phonological awareness skills in a fun and natural way.

Listen for the Super Word

In this fun activity, your child will be asked to listen for and act upon a super word.

Same Sound All Around

Make a game out of finding objects in your house that begin with the first letter of your child鈥檚 name.

Shopping for Sounds

Routine activities like food shopping provide a perfect way to introduce your child to the concept of beginning sounds while simultaneously checking a necessary item off your to-do list!

Sound Race

This activity combines motor skills in a fun way, allowing your child to practice listening for beginning sounds while getting some of that excess energy out.

What Is In 鈥 side the Box?

This fun game will help your little one listen carefully and discover that words can break apart into smaller sound units, or syllables.

What Would You Like Today?

Turn mealtimes into a game in which your child gets to choose what he鈥檇 like to eat by finishing the words you鈥檝e slowly started saying.

Which Picture?

Here鈥檚 a fun, simple way to introduce your child to the different parts of words using pictures from a magazine and a few index cards.