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Posted by: | Posted on: September 19, 2019

Everyone Should Play!

Did you know that those who play with children burn 20% more calories per week? It is hugely beneficial for children to have the opportunity to play with the whole family, including grandparents. Children learn a lot by playing with people of different ages – improving social, communication and problem-solving skills, bonding and creating shared memories and traditions.

Read 14 Reasons to Play at Every Age to discover more benefits of intergenerational play. (Source: The Genius of Play)

Posted by: | Posted on: September 27, 2018

Let’s Talk About Math!

Let’s Talk About Math! is an early math video series focusing on early math from birth to 3. With support from the Heising-Simons Foundation, ZERO TO THREE, Next Generation, and Too Small to Fail have partnered to develop a series of videos (in English and Spanish) highlighting the foundation of early math skills in the first 5 years of life. Videos in the series are available in English and Spanish. Check them out at https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/series/let-s-talk-about-math-early-math-video-series  

Thanks to Baby Talk –  a free, one-way listserv that is distributed monthly. Each issue features high quality, readily available, and free resources. Resources highlighted in yellow are available in English and Spanish. To join the listserv, send an email with no message to  subscribe-babytalk@listserv.unc.edu        Past issues are archived at http://fpg.unc.edu/resources/baby-talk-archive  

Posted by: | Posted on: September 25, 2018

Why Children Need to Play


Unlike older children, preschool age children are unable to learn through abstract or passive methods. Young children learn best by direct hands-on experience. The need to actively explore and manipulate materials and toys; discovering answers, properties, relationships, skills and concepts for themselves. Classroom experience needs to be concretely relevant to a child’s personal knowledge and maturation level. Often this is referred to as age appropriate or developmentally appropriate curriculum, an approach that meets educational goals based on research on how young children learn best. Some researchers and policy makers tell us, ” Play is the work of childhood”. It is a child’s very personal way of interacting with their world and learning to master the possibilities in it. Preschool curriculum is much more than meets the eye; it’s the very serious endeavor of starting a life-long path of learning, and having a little fun along the way!

  It looks like play but it meets an academic goal:

  • Block building – Mathematical goals (spatial concepts, problem solving, balance and weights, cooperation)
  • Stringing beads – Mathematical goals (correspondence counting, patterns, sequencing); Literacy goals (visual motor coordination, left to right concepts)
  • Finger plays and rhymes – Literacy goals (auditory discrimination, phonetic skills, auditory memory, concept comprehension, visual motor coordination, vocabulary development)
  • Concentration game – Literacy goals (visual discrimination, symbolic decoding, visual memory, concept development; Mathematical goals (matching and classification)
  • Drawing and painting – Literacy goals (symbolic representation, visual memory, visual motor coordination, creative expression)

We hope these materials have enable you to understand the amount of care and consideration that goes into to planning a quality and worthwhile preschool experience for your child. 

Adapted from Joni Levine, Child Care Lounge

Posted by: | Posted on: January 30, 2018

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library

Every child in Hoke County is eligible for a free book, once a month, until they turn 5 years old! Click here to register your child, or call 910-848-2300.