• Home,  STEM

    Holiday Gifts! Our Favorite Preschool & Kindergarten Toys That Teach

    children play with Discovery Toys Marbleworks set

    We often get asked what are our favorite “toys that teach,” as parents start thinking about gifts for the holidays. Most toys do teach young children something — working on strengthening those fine motor finger muscles, encouraging creativity and imagination, teaching social skills, and of course language, math and science (STEM) concepts.

    Some toys capture the attention of our kiddos at school better than others. And with the holidays and Black Friday on the horizon, here’s our (not exhaustive) list of our favorites. We’ll add to this periodically as we discover new faves.

    (Note: by purchasing through these links, Preschooligans will receive a small percentage of the sale at no cost to you. Prices are accurate as of posting time and may be subject to change. Thank you for your support!)

    Alphabet Robots (Amazon $31.97) — These are a big favorite! They work those finger muscles that are so important for writing, typing and all sort of grasping tasks. We love incorporating these with gears, engineering, building and even space-themed units.

    Magna Tiles (Amazon — set pictured $116.75) — Our Magna Tiles set was so popular at our school, we had to invest in another set so more than one classroom could use them at a time. They can be made into just about anything, and they are practically indestructible. One of our teachers’ favorite holiday activities is to provide the kiddos with a bowl of large metal jingle bells that stick to the magnets in the tiles. Our kiddos love using them to make their creations more festive in the holiday season.

    HABA Animal Upon Animal Stacking Game (Amazon $24.99) — These wooden wild animals are a “hoot”! Stacking the wooden animals (whether you play the game the way the instructions say or just freeform it), provides a healthy dose of problem solving and spatial awareness skills, as well as oodles of giggles. And we love it with a wild animals, habitats, zoo animals or nocturnal animals lesson unit.

    Discovery Toys Marbleworks (Amazon $54.95) — This marble rollercoaster set is a massive hit in our classroom. It teaches so many STEM concepts: physics, gravity, simple machines, inertia, velocity & speed, balance, building concepts and more. It also reinforces and rewards children for experimenting and following the scientific method: forming a hypothesis, testing it, making changes, and testing again. We like the Discovery Toys set because it is durable and the pieces fit together well. And as an added bonus — the marbles emit a satisfying clacking sound the entire way down. Winner winner.

    Squigz (Amazon $49.95) — We’re all about dual threats around here, and this STEM gem is not only fun to build with, but the sucker-sound the Squigz make when they connect with each other or a table is not to be missed. It’s delightful. These are a fun, different kind of building toy that will elicit giggles galore.

    Popular Playthings Magnetic Mix or Match Vehicles Green Air, Land, Sea Set; Space Set; Train Set; Fire & Rescue Set (Amazon $32.99-$59.99) — Mix and match vehicle parts to create brand new innovative vehicles! We have linked the large Air, Land, Sea set above, as well as smaller individual sets with single themes. We have 3 different individual theme sets at school and we recommend if you’re going with the smaller sets that you choose at least two different ones for your kiddos to really explore the coolness of these toys.

    Coogam Wooden Geoboard w/Pattern Cards & Latex Bands (Amazon, $21.99) — Geoboards are a favorite because kiddos can create their own pictures, shapes and designs, and replicate more complex images in the included cards. It’s a great toy for fine motor muscles workouts, spatial reasoning and focus.

  • Colors,  Science

    Rain Cloud Science Experiment

    Shaving cream and water color science experiment, featuring mix of blue and yellow food coloring in one clear container, and red and blue in another.

    How much do your kiddos love science experiments? When the learning can be hands on in preschool, it just kicks it up a notch, doesn’t it? We are into the first week of our Nature unit and we will be talking about weather next week. This cool science experiment, free directions courtesy of Toby & Roo, shows how rain clouds hold onto, then disperse rain.

    The experiment requires minimal prep, but packs maximum fun and fascination. You’ll need water, shaving cream, liquid food coloring or liquid water color and (optional) pipettes, plus tall, clear containers. We didn’t use the pipettes because we used liquid water color that we could pour directly onto our shaving cream clouds. We found our inexpensive clear plastic containers at the dollar store.

    And, as we did above, if you use primary colors to drop onto your shaving cream “cloud,” you can work in a color mixing lesson to go along with your rain cloud demonstration. Two for one? We love it!

  • Centers,  Literacy,  Reading,  Science,  Small Groups

    Spring Has Sprung: Learning All About Plants

    Plants Need: image of sun with label "light", image of rain cloud with rain and label "water" and image of soil with label "food."

    Spring is right around the corner, and we’ve banished all visions, mentions or even thoughts of winter from our classroom! We’re launching our “Nature All Around Us” unit and today’s free printable fits right in as it teaches all about plants.

    We LOVE Pocket of Preschool’s topic investigations, and this freebie is a mini version that explores plant needs, plant parts and plant lifecycles. It also includes a cut-and-paste sequencing activity.