Baby shape games
Shapes! Toddler Kids Games,Baby Boys Learning Free on the App Store
Description
Smart Baby Shapes – is an outstanding bright game, which will acquaint your kid with the main colors, shapes and sizes easily and clearly while playing.
The app teaches to distinguish shapes, sizes and colors, as well as to pronounce studied terms correctly.
The game includes both static and moving objects, which promotes better development of kid’s coordination and fine motor skills.
Smart Baby Shapes is suitable for children from 2 years and above.
Simple and intuitive control will make the first encounter with various colors and shapes easy and cheerful.
Distinctive features of the app:
- Includes 3 games for studying shapes, colors and sizes
- All levels are created on a “simple-to-complex” basis, a kid of any age can start playing
- Enables to study all the main colors and shapes, which are necessary for a kid’s early development
- Simple and intuitive one-touch control
- Develops kid’s logic, fine motor skills and attention
Version 2.6
This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon.
- Sound bug fixes
Ratings and Reviews
16.4K Ratings
Used for our special needs child.
We have a nine-year-old daughter with special needs, her attention span for most every thing is just a minute or two, but she loves to play this game and will do so for 5 to 10 minutes at a time. And that is a big deal to be able to keep her occupied for 5 or 10 minutes continuously.
Thank you for making it free, we would not have tried it otherwise as so many other games we tried did not work for her.
Levels progress with progress!
This game has 2, then 3, changes things up a bit, goes to a 2 & 3 level, each with just enough to keep the attention for a young child to learn. My granddaughter was putting a shape into a hole & a bird popped up on screen, startled her, to make her drop the shape, we had a good laugh together!
Had tried a game similar to this when she was a toddler that was very disappointing, only about 5 items & “Congratulations, you’re done unless you spend money now!” No thanks!So thank you for offering a early learning experience for free & giving the opportunity for more levels before requiring money for even more levels. An organization that truly puts sincere concern for quality teaching before the almighty dollar, is one that I will be seeking out for future programs & be willing to pay for, to have it!!!
Great game
This app keeps my 20 month old very entertained. He's learning so fast I'm going to have to find something more challenging. We did have issues with him swiping the screen and making the game disappear. This problem was solved by adjusting the settings on my iPad so that the screen was locked in place. The setting is called "guided access". Not a very self evident name. The game itself is great though. I would recommend it to anyone with a toddler.
The developer, Viacheslav Fonderkin, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.
No Details Provided
The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.
Information
- Seller
- Viacheslav Fonderkin
- Size
- 32.2 MB
- Category
- Games
- Age Rating
- 4+, Made for Ages 0–5
- Copyright
- © iSelect Apps
- Price
- Free
- Developer Website
- App Support
- Privacy Policy
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Games with geometric shapes
It is very important to teach a child to perceive and distinguish between the shapes of objects and memorize their names.
To do this, the baby examines the shape of the object with his hands and eyes and applies this knowledge to solve a specific problem (for example, pick up an object that matches the shape of the corresponding geometric shapes to the slot).
As a result of purposeful games, the child memorizes the standards of geometric shapes and their names.
Round - not round
In a tight bag, put round objects that have the shape of a circle (wheel, plastic plate, rings from the pyramid, teething ring, etc.) and other objects (matryoshka, cube , book, bar of soap, etc.). The child needs, without looking, to get only round objects. Or take out any object and say whether it is round or not.
Discover the shape
Prepare paired volumetric geometric shapes: a cube, a ball, a parallelepiped, a cylinder, a cone, etc. One set of figures is folded into a bag, the second is laid out on the table.
You show any of the figures on the table and ask the child to take the same one out of the bag. Voice the name of the figure he gets: “parallelepiped”, “cylinder”.
Sorting
Cut cardboard into geometric shapes in different sizes and colors. Invite your child to sort them into circles, triangles, squares, ovals and rectangles.
Do you have any?
Place a number of cardboard cut-out geometric shapes in front of your child, such as a circle, a triangle, a rectangle and an oval. And in front of you - a square, a rectangle, a circle and a triangle.
Hold up the circle and say, “I have a circle. And you?".
The child raises the circle and shows. Now hold up the square and ask the child, "Do you have a square?"
The child must answer that he does not have a square.
At the end of the game, you can compare which geometric shapes the mother had and which the child had, and lay out a common figure from them.
Repeat row
Lay out in a row 3 - 5 geometric shapes, for example: a circle, a triangle, a square, an oval, a triangle. The child needs to lay out exactly the same row from below: circle, triangle, square, oval, triangle.
Third extra
Put two blue circles and one red square in front of the baby - what's extra? Gradually complicate the task: put a red circle, a yellow circle and a green triangle or a blue square, a blue circle and a green square.
Circle track
On a thick sheet of paper close to each other in the form of a wavy path, draw many circles with a diameter of 2 cm, and in parallel, or even slightly crossing the first path, draw a path of squares with a side of 2 cm. The kid needs to walk along the path only from circles with two fingers, then only from squares.
Collect all circles
Lay out circles, squares, triangles, ovals, etc. cut out of cardboard on the floor. different sizes. The child needs to collect, for example, only circles.
House with geometric windows
Make a didactic game for the child:
Lay the landscape sheet horizontally and fold it in half. On the top sheet, draw windows of various geometric shapes. Cut the windows so that the child can open and close them.
Put a sheet of paper into the resulting “book”. Open the round window and draw behind it, for example, the sun. Behind the square window is a box, behind the rectangular window is a book, behind the triangular window is a sailing boat, behind the oval is a mirror.
Ask the child: “What lives behind the round window?”
A child opens a window and says: “Sunny”, etc.
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Author: Daria Koldina
Learning geometric shapes: games for preschool children
One of the important aspects of the development of mathematical concepts in preschoolers is the study of the basics of geometry. In the course of acquaintance with geometric shapes, the child acquires new knowledge about the properties of objects (shape) and develops logical thinking. In this article, we will talk about how to help a preschooler remember geometric shapes, how to properly organize games for teaching geometry, and what materials and aids can be used to develop a child’s mathematical abilities.
At what age can one start learning geometric shapes?
Many parents are wondering if young children need to get acquainted with geometric shapes. Experts believe that it is optimal to start classes in a playful, relaxed form from the age of 1.5. Until this age, it is appropriate to pronounce to the child the names of the shapes of objects that the baby meets in real life (for example, “round plate”, “square table”).
Introducing the child to geometric shapes, be guided by his reaction. If your baby started to show interest in them at an early age (by playing with the sorter or looking at pictures), encourage his curiosity.
At 2 years old, the baby should be able to distinguish between:
- Circle;
- Square;
- Triangle.
By the age of 3 you can add:
- Oval;
- Rhombus;
- Rectangle.
At an older age, a child can memorize such shapes as a trapezoid, a pentagon, a hexagon, a star, a semicircle. Also, children visiting the Constellation Montessori Center get acquainted with geometric bodies with interest.
How can I help my child remember geometric shapes?
Teaching a child geometric shapes should take place in stages. You need to start new figures only after the baby remembers the previous ones. The circle is the simplest shape. Show your child round objects, feel them, let the baby run his finger over them. You can also make an application from circles, mold a circle from plasticine. The more sensations associated with the concept being studied, the child receives, the better the baby will remember it.
Three-dimensional figures can be used to get acquainted with the forms. It can be made by a designer, a sorter, lacing, frame inserts. Since at an early age the visual-effective type of thinking is most developed, various actions with figures will help to remember them better.
How children of different ages perceive geometric shapes
The operations that a child can perform with geometric shapes and how he perceives shapes depend on the age of the baby. In accordance with age characteristics, the following stages of training can be distinguished:
- In the second year of life, the baby is able to visually recognize familiar figures and sort objects according to shape.
- At 2 years old, a child can find the desired shape among a number of other geometric shapes.
- By the age of 3, babies can name shapes.
- At the age of 4, a child is able to correlate a three-dimensional figure with a flat image.
- At senior preschool age (and sometimes even earlier) you can start studying geometric bodies (ball, cube, pyramid). Also at this age, the child can analyze complex pictures consisting of many shapes.
Regardless of the child's age, try to pay attention to the shapes of surrounding objects and compare them with known geometric shapes. This can be done at home and on the go.
Games for learning geometric shapes
For a child to be interested, learning geometric shapes should take place in a playful way. You should also select bright and colorful materials for classes (you can buy them in a store or do it yourself). Here are some examples of games and tutorials for learning geometric shapes:
- Sorting. Games with a sorter can be started from the age of 1. Invite the child to find its window for the figure. So the child will not only memorize geometric shapes, but also develop fine motor skills, thinking and spatial representations, because in order for the part to fall into the hole, you need to turn it at the right angle. You can also sort any other items, such as building blocks, Gyenesch blocks, or counting material.
- Insert frames. In fact, this manual is similar to a sorter. For each geometric figure, you need to find its place.
- Geometric lotto. To play, you will need a field with the image of geometric shapes and handout cards with each figure separately. A child can take small cards out of a chest or bag, and then look for their place on the playing field. This game also perfectly trains the attention of the baby.
- Geometric appliqué. Cut out various geometric shapes from paper and, together with your child, make a picture out of them (for example, you can make a Christmas tree from triangles, a house from a square and a triangle).
- Drawing (including stencils).
- Modeling.
- Laying out figures from counting sticks.
- Geometric mosaic.
- Laces with geometric shapes.
- Card games.
- Guess by touch.
- Active games. Draw geometric shapes on the pavement with chalk. Ask the kid to imagine that the figures are houses that you need to run into on a signal. Next, you name a geometric figure, and the child runs to it.
In addition, educational cartoons can be used to study geometric shapes. Here is one of them:
Conclusions
Learning the basics of geometry at preschool age is an important part of developing a child's mathematical and sensory representations. Acquaintance with the figures should occur gradually (first, simple figures - a circle, a square, a triangle). To keep your child interested, study geometric shapes in a playful way. Your assistants in this can be such educational aids as insert frames, mosaics, lotto, sorters, sets of geometric shapes and bodies, stencils.