Monday, August 10, 2009

How to Incorporate Literacy into the Block Center

Incorporating Literacy in the Block Center

The Block Center is where the preschoolers learn basic mathematical skills and concepts. The children learn about shapes and sizes as they are building. The Block Center is also a great area to incorporate literacy. Grasping, stacking, and carrying blocks helps children to develop eye/hand coordination. You can incorporate literacy into your Block Center by adding a variety of literacy props:

· Literacy Writing Materials to include:

o Pencils, crayons, markers, placed in small baskets.

o Paper of all shapes, sizes and colors: lined, unlined, graph, post it, notecards and rolls of adding machine paper.

o Clipboard with pencils and paper for children to draw their own blueprint.

o House plans and actual blueprints of houses or buildings. Magazines for children to look at the pictures, giving them ideas on what they would like to design.

o A great activity in the Block Area would be for the child to design their own house, make a blue print and build it from their plan.

Books about construction, building roads, machinery, trucks, should be placed in the center for the children to look at. Books can give the children ideas about what to build, beautiful pictures of trucks, tractors, and other different machinery.

· Great books to enhance your Block Area:

o How A House is Built by Gail Gibbons

o Building a House by Byron Barton

o C is For Construction: Big Trucks and Diggers From A to Z by Caterpillar

o The Construction Alphabet Book by Jerry Pallotta

o Tonka Construction Zone by Charles Hofer

o B is for Bulldozer: A Construction ABC by June Sobel

o Digger Man by Andrea Zimmerman

o Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel by V. Burton