3 to 4 Years
What to expect
Children this age
- Start to play with other children, instead of next to them;
- Are more likely to take turns and share;
- Are friendly and giving;
- Begin to understand that other people have feelings and rights;
- Like silly humor, riddles, and practical jokes;
- Like to please and to conform;
- Generally become more cooperative and enjoy new experiences;
- Are increasingly self-reliant and probably can dress without
help (except for buttons and shoelaces);
- May develop fears ("Mommy, there's a monster under my bed.") and
have imaginary companions;
- Are more graceful physically than 2-year-olds and love to run,
skip, jump with both feet, catch a ball, climb downstairs, and
dance to music;
- Are great talkers, speak in sentences, and continue to add
more words to their vocabularies; and
- Have greater control over hand and arm muscles, which is
reflected in their drawings and scribblings.
What they need
Children this age require opportunities to
- Develop their blooming language abilities through books,
games, songs, science, and art activities;
- Develop more self-help skills--for example, to dress and
undress themselves;
- Draw with crayons, work puzzles, build things, and pretend;
- Play with other children so they can learn to listen, take
turns, and share; and
- Develop more physical coordination--for example, by hopping on
both feet.
Kitchen Cut-Ups
Here are some recipes popular with preschoolers. Things
always seem to taste better when you make them yourself!
What you'll need
Knife
For applewiches: 1 apple, cheese slices
For funny-face sandwich: 1 piece of bread; peanut butter, cream
cheese, or egg salad; green pepper, celery, radishes, carrot
curls; olives; nuts; hard-boiled egg slices; tiny shapes of
cheese; apples and raisins
For fruit Popsicles: fruit juice (any kind), an ice cube tray
or small paper cups, yogurt, mashed or crushed fruit, Popsicle
sticks
For bumps on a log: celery, peanut butter, raisins
What to do
- Choose a safe spot to cook where you won't have to worry about
making a mess.
- Tell your child what the ingredients are. Talk about what you
are doing as you go along. Ask and answer questions.
- Let him smell, taste, and touch as you go. Let him (with your
help) pour, stir, measure, and help clean up.
- Applewiches. Core an apple. Cut the apple crosswise into thick
slices. Put cheese slices between the slices. Cheddar cheese
is particularly good. Eat like a sandwich.
- Funny-face sandwich. Cut the bread into a circle. Spread with
cream cheese, peanut butter, or egg salad. Decorate using green
pepper, celery, radishes, carrot curls, olives, nuts, hard-
boiled egg slices, tiny shapes of cheese, apples, or raisins for
eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
- Fruit Popsicles. Pour the fruit juice into small paper cups or
an ice cube tray. Place a Popsicle stick in each cup or
compartment before the juice is completely frozen. Return to
the freezer until frozen solid. For variations, mix yogurt with
the juice before freezing for a creamier Popsicle, or add mashed
or crushed fruit such as strawberries, pineapple, or banana.
- Bumps on a log. Spread peanut butter on the celery stalks.
Decorate with raisins. Great snacks!
Cooking helps children learn new words, measuring and number skills,
what foods are healthy and what ones aren't, and the importance of
completing what they begin. It also teaches about how things change,
and it can teach chil-dren to reason better. ("If I want a cold
fruit juice Popsicle, then I'll have to put it in the freezer.")
Young children are natural artists. Here are some activities that
introduce preschoolers to scribbling, painting, and pasting.
What you'll need
For scribbling: crayons, water-soluble felt-tipped markers,
different kinds of paper (including construction paper,
butcher paper), and tape
For fingerpainting: store-bought fingerpaint or homemade
fingerpaint made with soap flakes, water, food coloring or
powdered tempera; an eggbeater or fork; a bowl; a spoon; an
apron or smock; newspapers or a large piece of plastic to
cover the floor or table; butcher paper; and tape
For collages: paper, paste, blunt-tipped scissors, fabric
scraps or objects that can be glued to paper (string,
cottonballs, sticks, yarn)
What to do
- Scribbling. Give your child different kinds of paper and
different writing materials to scribble with. Coloring books
are not needed. Fat crayons are good to begin with. Water-
soluble felt-tipped marking pens are fun because your child
doesn't have to use much pressure to get a bright color. Tape
a large piece of butcher paper onto a table top and let your
preschooler scribble to her heart's content!
- Fingerpainting. Use store-bought fingerpaint, or make your own
by mixing soap flakes (not detergent) in a bowl with a small
amount of water. Beat the mixture with a fork or eggbeater.
Add powdered tempera paint or food coloring. Spread out
newspapers or a large piece of plastic over a table or on the
floor and tape a big piece of construction paper or butcher
paper on top. Cover your child with a large smock or apron, and
let her fingerpaint.
- Collages. Have your child paste fabric scraps or other objects
such as yarn, string, or cottonballs to the paper (in any
pattern). Let her feel the different textures and tell you
about them.
Here are a few tips about introducing your preschoolers to
art:
- Supervise carefully. Some children would rather color your
walls than the paper. Some also like to chew on crayons and
markers or try to drink the paint.
- Don't tell them what to draw or paint.
- Don't fix up their pictures. It will take lots of practice
before you can recognize their pictures--and that often doesn't
happen until after they are in kindergarten.
- Give them lots of different materials to work with. Parents can
demonstrate new types of art materials.
- Find an art activity that's at the right level for your child,
then let him do as much of the project as possible.
- Ask your preschooler to talk about his picture.
- Display your child's art prominently in your home.
Art projects can spark young imaginations and help
children to express themselves. These projects also help
children to develop the eye and hand coordination they will later
need to learn to write.
Any household task can become a good learning game and
can be fun.
What you'll need
Jobs around the home that need to get done, such as:
Doing the laundry
Washing and drying dishes
Carrying out the garbage
Setting the dinner table
Dusting
What to do
- Tell your child about the job you will do together. Explain why
the family needs the job done. Describe how you will do it and
how your child can help.
- Teach your child new words that belong to each job. "Let's put
the placemats on the table, along with the napkins."
- Doing laundry together provides many opportunities to learn.
Ask your child to help you remember all the clothes that need to
be washed. See how many things he can name. Socks? T-shirts?
Pajamas? Have him help you gather all the dirty clothes. Have
your child help you make piles of light and dark colors.
Show your child how to measure out the soap, and have him pour
the soap into the machine. Let him put the items into the
machine, naming them. Keep out one sock. When the washer is
filled with water, take out a sock. Let your child hold the wet
sock and the one you kept out. Ask him which one feels heavier
and which one feels lighter. After the wash is done, have your
child sort his own things into piles that are the same (for
example, T-shirts, socks).
Home chores can help children learn new words, how to listen and
follow directions, how to count, and how to sort. Chores can also
help children improve their physical coordination and learn
responsibility.
Next
Home
Welcomed!