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Collecting inspires many budding
scientists, and exploring nature with an interested adult has
kindled the interest of many future biologists.
Measuring and weighing activities
are appropriate even for young children. It's great fun to make
diagrams of rooms in the house or maps of the yard or neighborhood.
You might try introducing nonstandard measurements, such as "How
many Daddy-shoe-lengths wide is the kitchen?" The Guinness
Book of World Records is a rich source of relative measurements.
Using time is the best way to learn
about it. Relate time to events that are meaningful for the child
and use appropriate terms ("What are we doing now?";
"What will we do after/while we eat lunch?"). Pasting
or drawing pictures of activities on a daily calendar while discussing
past and upcoming events makes "then" and "soon"
more understandable than using abstract concepts of days, weeks,
months, or seasons.
Following directions is one of the
most important skills learned at home. Taking steps in order,
planning ahead, and talking about what to do before tackling the
task can all be encouraged. Cooking (as noted earlier), treasure
hunts, and building models are all sequential-step-following activities.
For older children, map and compass skills are very helpful.
Calculator games are a good source
of problem-solving situations with numerical concepts.
These are only a few of the multitude of
activities that form the natural base of math and science learning.
They are essentially about the real worldÚwhich is the best place
to learn about them.
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