Teaching colours to kindergarten
10 Activities for Teaching Colors in Kindergarten
Curriculum | Featured
Teaching colors in kindergarten is an important and fun skill to teach. These kindergarten color activities will make learning hands-on and engaging all year long. Plus, your students will work on math, literacy, fine motor, and problem-solving skills along the way.
Colors and Color Word Activities for Kindergarten
Teaching colors and color words in kindergarten helps students to visually discriminate colors and begin working with colors in different subjects, such as math, literacy, and art.
From sorting, graphing, reading color words in sentences, and identifying colors in art, teaching colors is an important life skill for young learners.
#1. I Spy!
I Spy! is a kid-favorite when it comes to kindergarten color activities. This game can easily be incorporated anytime of day, whether it’s a morning warm-up, carpet game, or quick time-filler activity.
To play, one person is the “spy.” They look around the room and say “I spy something (green/blue/red).” Students then take turns raising their hand and guessing what it is. The first student that guesses correctly is the next “spy.”
Using color games with students is an effective way to engage them and practice skills in a fun way.
#2. Scavenger Hunt
Another way to get your students active and engaged in the learning is to do a color scavenger hunt. To play, draw different colored circles in the middle of various notecards. You can use as many colors as you’d like to work on.
The students will draw a notecard, identify the color, and go around the classroom to find something in that color. When they find something in the matching color, they stop and raise their hand in place.
Once everyone has found a match, go around the room calling on students one at a time and have them share their color and what the object is. Have them return to their seats, pass their cards to the left, and repeat the scavenger hunt again with their new colors.
Another option is to do this activity in small groups. Give students 2-4 notecards and have them go around the room and collect objects. Then, they return to the small group table and match the object to the correct color notecard before switching cards.
#3. Color Patterns
Whenever you can combine your kindergarten color activities with math, that’s a teacher win! Practice identifying colors and making patterns with different colored counting bears, color links, or plastic cubes.
You can call out a pattern and have students model it with their manipulatives. You can also use pattern cards to help students model various patterns, such as AB, AAB, ABB, ABC, and AABB patterns.
#4. Color Sorts
A simple yet effective kindergarten color activity is to have students practice sorting by color and saying the colors out loud.
You can give students a handful of manipulatives, such as pattern blocks, colored cereal, plastic cubes, mini erasers, color links, etc. Have them sort the manipulatives by color and identify the color by saying it out loud.
To take it a step further, ask students to count how many are in each category to practice math skills.
Another variation of this activity would be to have different colored cups or containers and have students sort their pile into the proper cup or container.
If you don’t have different colored cups or containers, you can write the color word in a colorful marker on a sticky note and stick it to the outside of any cup or container you have on hand. This would help students learn their color words as well.
#5. Egg Carton Fill
This color activity uses both color knowledge and fine motor skills. Prepare an egg carton by coloring a circle on the bottom of each space in an egg carton. You could also use a colored circle sticker instead and stick it in the bottom of the spaces.
Have students use jumbo tweezers to sort colored pom poms into the correct spaces in the egg carton, matching the colors of the pom poms to the circles. This would be a great small group or fine motor center activity.
#6. Play Dough Color Count
Play dough is a great manipulative to keep on hand when teaching colors. Students can practice identifying colors and counting at the same time.
To prepare, write different color words in the corresponding color with marker on notecards. Students will draw a color card to determine which play dough color they’ll use. Then, they’ll roll a dot cube and count the dots. Finally, they’ll form that many play dough balls in the correct color, counting as they go.
Students can do this activity at a small group table or desk or with a color matching mat.
#7. Color Call Out
The next kindergarten color activity is another super easy, no prep game that can be played at any time.
To play, stand in circle as a whole group. One person calls out a color. Starting with the person to the left of them, each student says a real world object that is that color. After every student has said an object, the whole class spells the color word together.
Students take turns being the “caller” and calling out the next color.
#8. Roll and Match Colors
Color Roll and Cover is a fun game for students that makes practicing colors super fun.
You can use a color cube or a dry-erase cube to write color words or draw colored circles on. Students will roll the cube and cover a space on their roll and cover mat with a matching colored manipulative. The first student to cover the most spaces wins.
This activity is one of the activities found in the Let’s Learn Colors Mini Unit.
#9. Bingo Dabber Activities
Bingo dabbers are perfect for several kindergarten color activities. You can give students a white piece of paper and have them write color words using the matching color of bingo dabber. This also gives students a little fine motor practice while forming the words.
Another option is to have students dab freely on a white piece of paper and have them say the color word each time they dab.
To practice spelling the color word, they could even say a letter each time they dab to spell the color word. Once the word is complete, they switch colors.
#10. Color Boom Cards
Using digital kindergarten color activities is another way to practice colors while engaging your students. Students can practice color recognition with real world objects or even color discrimination with Boom Cards.
They’ll hear the color words in the audio directions, giving them even more exposure to colors and color words.
I hope these 10 kindergarten color activities have given you some fresh ideas that you can implement with your students.
Looking for more colors and color words activities for kindergarten? Check out my Let’s Learn Colors Bundle, complete with color activities, centers, games, and no prep pages.
Post Tags: #color words#colors
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Color Activities for Kindergarten
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Color activities for kindergarten! Engaging activities and ideas for early learners to practice color recognition.
Color Activities for Kindergarten
Recognizing basic colors is a skill all kindergarten students need to master. The best way to practice color recognition is with fun color theme activities. My lesson plans during the first few weeks of kindergarten always include color activities. We sing songs to practice color words, read children’s books about colors, practice color sorting and color matching, and sometimes even do science experiments!
Color Centers
Adding color activities to your daily centers is a perfect way for young children to practice color recognition. Here are a few colors themed activities for you!
Color Sorts
I use these color cards for a few different activities. For this color activity, students practice sorting objects by color. If your sweeties are able, you can add a response sheet where they practice writing color names or they can label the object.
You can also sort objects! Have your students sort buttons, pom poms, counting bears, blocks, popsicle sticks, the list goes on and on.
Roll and Color
Pocket dice are so much fun! I add cards with different colors and make a few copies for a quick center. Roll the dice… color a box on your paper. Easy!
Color Sentences
This is a center activity that I model during whole group and eventually add to our pocket chart literacy station. These simple sentences are a hit! Plus, I re-use the color cards from the color sorting activity.
You can also have students write color sentences with these no prep pages! These make a fun little color activity for morning work!
Dough Activity
Playdoh is an important part of a child’s first few days in an early education classroom… well at least in my kindergarten classroom! They were always so excited to see playdoh sitting on their desk when they walked in first thing in the morning. So of course, adding color mats to their center time with playdoh was a no brainer! I also kind of love Playdoh for working on those fine motor skills.
Board Games
These simple color games are tons of fun and perfect for your kindergarten or preschool classroom!
I use Bump games ALL YEAR LONG! I have Bump games to practice various math and literacy skills. I introduce Bump for the first time using the color themed board games!
This fun game is so simple! It is perfect for teaching colors. Students spin the color wheel and place their game piece on the correct color. There are 12 different color games so I just switch them out so it stays exciting!
Here is another simple color game. This board game is a great way to focus on primary colors.
Puzzles
Puzzles stay in my center rotation for several months! These matching color puzzles are great kindergarten and preschool activities.
Simple Puzzles Colors with Word Handwriting Practice
A Few More Fun Ideas!
Riddle of the Day
Students guess a new color every day with these fun riddles! I post the daily riddle on the board and we work together to make guesses.
You can read more about how I use classroom riddles to teach text details and inferring in this blog post:
- Classroom Riddles for Kindergarten
You could also have a color scavenger hunt or play an I Spy game, based on which color was revealed. Just another fun way to talk about colors!
Directed Drawing
Star of the Day directed drawing is one of my favorite things to do in kindergarten. We start this activity early in the school year to help students construct illustrations that carry meaning. This is the perfect opportunity to help students begin choosing colors that make sense and using them in the right place. So, we aren’t going to use the color green to color the sky (unless there is about to be a tornado I suppose) but rather color the grass green. You can snag the Star of the Day directed drawing for FREE at the end of the post.
Color Experiment
If you are looking to do an experiment with colors, this video about from SciShow Kids is great! It is all about color mixing.
Favorite Books about Color
There are several great books about color! Here are few of my favorites.
Have so much fun with these color activities for kindergarten! Don’t forget to snag the free file below! Simply, add your name and email address. The free file will be sent to your inbox.
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Deedee Wills
My teaching career allowed me to experience teaching in different classroom environments and grades. My heart belongs to early childhood education. My job is to make teaching FUN, ENGAGING, and EASIER. Welcome!
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..Learning colors: how to teach a child to distinguish colors and shades
It is generally accepted that by the age of three a child should learn to distinguish between primary colors. This skill is an important part of sensory development, it gives the child the opportunity to see the world in a new way. Often, if the baby does not know or confuse colors, parents have concerns about the pace of development of the child. Do I need to worry if the study of colors is not easy for a child? How to teach a child to distinguish colors? You will find answers to these questions in our article.
At what age does a child begin to see colors?
Studies have shown that children begin to perceive colors by 2-3 months. The first colors a child sees are yellow, orange, red, green. At this age, babies can already react differently to their toys of different colors (for example, a red rattle can please a child more than a blue one), look at bright pictures with enthusiasm. The baby's world quickly acquires colors, but if we talk about the ability to consciously find an object of the right color, then usually it appears in children at the age of one and a half. It is at this age that it is optimal to start learning colors in a playful way. You can voice the names of flowers to a child for up to a year, this will only benefit him. But do not demand too much from the baby, remember that his brain is actively developing, and as soon as the time comes, you will certainly see the results.
To see if your child is ready to learn colors by playing with building blocks, ask your child to point to a part that is the same color as yours. If the baby can find objects of the same color, then he is quite ready to memorize the names of colors.
Learning colors in everyday life
Children get most of their knowledge about the world in everyday life: communicating with adults and peers, observing nature, playing. The study of flowers is no exception. Sometimes a child does not need to do special exercises to learn to recognize colors. For this, it is enough that he hears the name of the color and associates it with a specific thing. During daily activities, voice for the child what color the objects are around. Whether you are drawing, playing with blocks, looking at cars in the yard, reading, swimming, eating, dressing - in each of these situations, you can gently teach your child to distinguish colors.
It is important that the study of colors does not turn into torture. You should not constantly test the child's knowledge by asking him which color is which. Soon the baby may just start to ignore you. “Let's paint the sun yellow!”, “What a delicious green cucumber!”, “Oh, where did the blue cube go? Here he is!" are examples of how you can gently help your child remember colors.
Games for learning colors and their shades
In order to get your baby interested in learning colors or to reinforce the knowledge they already have, you can offer your child to play special “color” games.
Color Sorting
Sorting games are designed to help children learn to group objects by color. Any materials at hand can be items for sorting: toys, covers, designer parts, cubes, buttons, cereals, pencils, etc. You can organize the game in various ways:
You can come up with as many options for sorting by color, it all depends on your imagination. So that the child does not lose interest in the task, connect the plot of the game with his favorite characters, toys (for example, a cat will eat from a yellow bowl, and a baby elephant from a red one, etc.).
Match a Pair
Help your child learn colors with the Match a Pair series. Ask your child to find a petal for a bug, a pot for a flower, a roof for a house, etc. You can present the baby with a deliberately wrong option and ask to correct the mistakes.
Pick up a patch
Show the child the picture with the missing details. Ask him to fill in the gaps (this can be done with plasticine, pom-poms, caps, cards, etc.).
Color Lotto
At the age of about one year, children begin to be interested in various lottos. In the color lotto, the task is to collect pictures of the same color on the card.
Colored Sensory Boxes
Create a sensory box for your baby where everything is the same color. During the game, the child will be able not only to remember the color that he sees, but also to develop fine motor skills, tactile sensitivity, thinking, and imagination.
Color days
This is one of the most interesting and popular ways to teach your child to distinguish colors. Its essence is that during the day (or several days) you draw the child's attention to objects of a certain color. For example, on a yellow day, you can dress in yellow clothes, play with yellow toys, draw a yellow chicken. Surrounded by one color, the baby will easily remember it.
Cards for learning colors
You can learn colors with your child using cards. With the help of Doman's "Colors" cards, you can introduce your baby not only to the main colors, but also to different shades. It is important not to overload the child with unnecessary information about the names of 10 shades of green or red. Learn only those shades whose names you can use in the game and life.
Board games for learning colors
Board games are a great way to learn about colors and consolidate knowledge about them. Currently, the stores offer a wide range of similar games for every taste and budget. Choose a game that suits your child.
Educational cartoons
There are many educational cartoons on the Internet that will help your child memorize colors quickly. Here is one of them:
Educational books
If your little one loves to listen to stories and look at pictures, this is the way for you. We all remember the wonderful story of V.G. Suteev "Rooster and paints", by S.Ya. Marshak has a whole “Colorful book”. You can also find many educational books that will become your faithful assistants.
Conclusions
We have listed for you different color learning games. In order for a child to master the concept of color well, it is worth adhering to a number of principles: do not rush the baby, provide a variety of material for games, discuss what you see.
Conclusion
You can start studying colors from an early age, the main thing is that it is interesting for the child. It is impossible to specify clear age limits when a child should learn primary colors. This process, like all development, is individual for each baby. The Sozvezdie Development Center has created a Montessori environment for kids, aimed at the comprehensive development of the child. In the classes "Together with Mom" children in a playful way get acquainted with the concepts of color, shape and size, do thematic creative work. You can learn from our teachers how to interest a child in an activity and how to properly present him with cognitive information. Develop with us!
Prepared by a Montessori teacher
Sokolova Oksana
Learning colors with the smallest preschool children
When and how do we learn colors with our children?
Every parent wants their baby to be the very best. This is especially true for those parents whose baby is the firstborn.
For the first children, they buy all the best, the most beautiful and expensive. But at the same time they forget that the child needs not expensive and beautiful things and toys, but high-quality and skillful upbringing.
What can be taught to a small child? It turns out that there is something that can be taught at a very early age. Learn to distinguish colors.
When we hang different objects in the crib that have different colors and shades, the baby reaches out with his arms not to those figures that have a bizarre shape, but to those whose color he likes the most.
i.e. already at this age, the baby is able to distinguish colors. If you observe what colors a child chooses when he is a toddler, you can easily determine the direction of his character. You can even correct his inclinations by instilling color preferences.
If you notice that your child is reaching for blue, brown toys, it's time to sound the alarm.
It would be more correct to remove toys of these colors from use, at least until a year and a half, when the baby will realize that these colors can be, but in small quantities.
But yellow, green of different shades should be in front of the child's eyes as much as possible. Red is enough, but not overdone, so as not to instill feelings of aggression. Blue and pink are a must, as a factor in the formation of calm in the character of the baby.
As soon as the child has grown up a little, up to about a year old, we begin to consciously learn colors with the child.
Contents
- Why do we teach colors with a child?
- Learning colors creatively
- Learning colors while walking
- A new way to learn colors
Why do we learn colors with a child?
Color perception helps the child not only to distinguish the diversity of the objective world, but also contributes to the formation and formation of the emotional sphere of the baby.
Therefore, it is very important to teach a child to perceive and distinguish colors.
Any education of the youngest children should be carried out in a playful way. A large number of didactic and other types of games have been developed for teaching color.
Let's dwell on them in more detail.
Perhaps the most popular color learning game is Find the Color. At first, the baby cannot determine the color even from the sample that you show him. Therefore, you first need to pick up cubes and other objects of the same shade. You can invite the child to arrange in piles all objects of the same color and a certain shade.
It is necessary to repeatedly say what color the toy is.
The next moment in the game is to lay out multi-colored objects that are specially mixed up. These can be handles with caps removed. Sometimes it is useful to put a cap on a pen of a different color and ask if the color is right?
Another interesting method. Colored caps are large enough to fit multiple toys under one cap.
The task can be such that the child puts toys under a cap of a certain color. Then the caps are raised in turn, and the task is evaluated for correct execution. The cap is blue, for example, and all the toys under it are also blue. And so on.
The game "Find the extra" is very popular for studying the different qualities of a child's personality. When we teach colors with a child, we can offer him to find an object that is extra in color in a bunch of one-color ones. Put in a pile, for example, red toys, one toy of a different color.
Game "Colorful balls". Pour balls or balls of different colors on the floor and put a few boxes. In each box you need to put toys or objects of a certain color.
For learning to be effective, each action must be commented and each color named. By repeatedly asking the child questions, we encourage the child to think. This will be an incentive to remember the colors.
Learn colors creatively
Another effective way to introduce and reinforce a child's knowledge of color is creativity.
Paints, plasticine, colored pencils and other accessories will help the child remember colors and learn to perceive their different shades.
Among other things, the child receives skills and abilities for visual activity, and also develops fine motor skills of the hands.
That's how much benefit we get when we learn colors with a child at a very young age.
By the way, instead of paints containing some elements unhealthy for a child's body, you can use natural dyes - raspberry or beet juice, etc.
Before you start drawing, it is worth clearly and clearly name the color that we will use and what we will depict.
It is strictly forbidden to use diminutive forms when naming a color, such as "blue" instead of "blue" or "red" instead of "red". Such wording can confuse a child, and he will not learn the color, and will completely get confused in the names.
When drawing, you need to allow the child to draw lines himself, paint over a sheet of paper. You can even let him get his palm into the paint and then make prints on the sheet.
Just watch carefully so that later the baby does not pull these most beautiful hands into his mouth. You never know. Well, if instead of paint we use raspberry juice, and if real paints, then it will not be very good.
Until the child learns the color, do not start learning the next one.
Learning colors while walking
In general, I think that there is no need to organize special classes to introduce a child to flowers.
You can unobtrusively comment on everything around, doing any business with the baby - whether it's dressing or looking at books. Or even walking down the street. Naming objects, it will be good to give him different definitions - what size, shape. And, of course, to name what color this or that object is.
It will be useful to ask the child questions about the color of objects. It is recommended to praise for the correct answer. It is strictly forbidden to scold for an incorrect answer. Correct the child and say: “You know, I saw it in such a color, but this particular object is such and such.”
A new method for learning colors
Now it has become very fashionable to use different methods and technologies for teaching children. I recently came across a color teaching technique called Color Days.
There are six primary colors and also six days of the week, given that one day - the seventh - is a day of rest.
On the first day, all the toys, clothes, dishes the baby has when he eats, etc. one color, the next day everything is laid out in a different color.
So throughout the day the baby sees the environment in a certain color and remembers it. In this case, the name of the color is repeatedly pronounced by parents and the child.
On this day, we sculpt only this color from plasticine, draw only with the color of this day.