Print and play this fun family board game that gets children up and active! Players learn healthy habits and earn tokens for activities such as "jump like a kangaroo" and "Pretend to juggle."
Kids like puzzles. Successfully decoding a secret message gives kids a great feeling of accomplishment. While having fun your child will also be working on identifying and writing the initial letter in a word, important skills for reading and spelling.
Playing Memory is a great way to reinforce turn taking and develop memory skills and concentration. Your child will also be working on short vowel sounds by saying the sound represented by each character.
Penguin, Monkey, Cat, and Panda are learning new exercises. Read the description of each exercise. Then try it! Count how many you can do. Write the number in the blank.
This printable activity encourages your child to use the language of estimation and approximation. Estimating is an important skill for maths and science.
Kids ask a lot of questions. Turn their tough questions into a Book of Why. It's a great way to start building a child's research skills at an early age and to show them that "Why?" is a great question!
Ask your child to use the launch codes to complete the patterns of colours and shapes. The ability to extend or duplicate patterns is a logical reasoning skill that forms a basis for future work in maths (specifically, algebra!).
Children develop phonemic awareness and basic reading skills by listening to the sounds in words. This printable encourages your child to find all the short-I words.
Pip can't wait for a new year to start at LeapSchool! He has packed his backpack with all his school supplies. How many of each item has Pip packed? Count the school supplies and write the number of each item on the line. Bonus: Now count your own school supplies!
This printable activity encourages your child to consider why simple events occurred. The ability to conclude why simple events occurred is an important Cognitive Development skill.
Children can rock out to a rhyming song they make up with word families. Children who understand word families have an easier time learning to spell and decode words.
Lily and Tad are combining the jellybeans they got in their Easter baskets. Of which colour did they get the most? Of which colour did they get the least? Find out. Fill in the table by drawing in the jellybeans with crayons or markers.