Usborne: First Learning
Usborne: First Learning
Usborne: First Learning
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otherwise, without written permission of the publisher. For information regarding permission, write
to Usborne Publishing Ltd, 83-85 Saffron Hill, London EC1N 8RT.
ISBN 0-439-33237-0
posites
Jenny Tyler and Robyn Gee
Designed and illustrated by Graham Round
With consultant advice from John Newson and Gillian Hartley
of the Child Development Research Unit at Nottingham University.
SCHOLASTIC INC.
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Notes for parents
It is important to use this book when both is not only a very satisfying activity but is
you and your child are in the right mood to also a valuable way of helping develop
enjoy it and not to try to do too much at good pencil control. Before you start,
one time. Short, frequent sessions will check your child is holding the pen or
allow the child’s concentration to build up pencil correctly. It is easy to develop bad
gradually. Leave any activities your child writing habits with the
seems unready or unwilling to tackle and
Pens and pencils should
come back to them later. be held lightly between
Many of the words included in this book the thumb and first two
will probably be familiar to your child fingers, about 1 in from
already. The activities provided and the the point.
discussion they will stimulate are intended
to help consolidate and extend their
understanding. Some of the questions Same and different
invite verbal answers. These may be used It is important for children to grasp the idea
as starting points for discussion. of same and different. There are many
Discussion of the size and amount different criteria that can be relevant in
opposites, in particular, can lead on to judging whether things are the same or
making comparisons and looking at different. The pages on same and different
relative sizes. in this book relate specifically to size and
This in turn can lead on to introducing shape.
Left and right
It takes most children a lot of practice to
distinguish confidently between left and
right and this book does no more than
introduce the idea in two of the contexts in
which they might encounter it. Constant
Writing numbers practice when putting on gloves, shoes
and boots and when you are turning
To answer some of the questions, the child
corners on a walk or drive will help to
needs to be able to count and write the
reinforce the idea. If a child is quite
numbers up to five. If your child is not very
strongly left or right handed it can help to
confident with numbers yet, it would be a
associate the appropriate word with “the
good idea to write them out on a strip of
hand you hold your spoon in”. Action
paper so she has a model to follow when
songs and games such as “Hokey Pokey”
attempting to write them. Alternatively you
and “Simon says” are also good ways of
could write the number 5 faintly or in small practicing.
dots in the appropriate box on the page for
your child to write over. Follow-up activities
You could follow up any of the pages in
this book with practical activities, such as
asking your child to find big and little
things, sort things into long and short and
so on. You could also play games in which
Pens and pencils the child remembers and follows a series
of instructions such as, “Walk in front of
There are plenty of coloring opportunities the chair, jump over the cushion, crawl
in this book and your child will need a set under the table and hide behind the
of crayons or felt pens for these. Coloring curtain”.
• Color the big clown’s shoes red.
• Color the little bucket blue. i-
• How many balls are there?
• How many little balls are there? I
Color them green.
• How many big balls are there? I
Color them yellow.
• Color the little clown’s nose red. -
• Who is wearing the big hat? |_
Make this square the same color as the flower on the big hat.
• Draw dots on the big clown’s trousers.
This island is called Fat Island. This island is called Thin Island.
Everything that lives here is fat. Everything that lives here is thin.
• Color all the things that live on Thin Island blue and green.
How many clowns have short legs?
Color their hats red.
How many clowns have long legs?
Color their hats blue.
> *
• Color the bird that is below the red and yellow balloon.
Hm
Find a closed door and color it blue.
Find 2 open doors and color them red.
How many more open doors can you find?
Which room has open windows? Color the things in it.
How many gates are closed?
Color the open shade yellow.
in front of
bottles.
16
more
• Are all the flowers the same? Color the one that is different.
• 2 of the clouds are the same shape. Find them and color them.
• Which duck is different? Color it.
• Which 2 trees are the same? Color them.
• Do all the birds look the same? Color them each a
different color.
=n
Put your hands on the table so your thumbs are next to each other.
Draw a plane
that is going
, up for cat.