Cognitive games for early childhood education
Cognitive games for early childhood education. Children are gifts from God. Parents should work with their children to overcome difficulties. The healthy growth of babies is inseparable from their parents. Patient teaching, education is a long process. Cognition of things by infants and young children is helpful to the development of IQ. Early education cognitive games for infants and young children teach you how to educate your children.
Early childhood education cognitive game 1
Game 1: Recognize colors
Props:
Used tissue boxes and shoes Boxes, large biscuit boxes, and mooncake boxes can all be used as paper boxes in the game. Use various colored papers, candy wrappers, cut pieces of corresponding colors from various advertising papers, or directly use colored pens to paint blocks of various colors on the paper and cut them into corresponding sizes.
Steps:
1. The mother lets the baby know the colors of the paper: "Baby, today, let's learn about several colors. Their names are red, yellow, and blue. , green. ”
2. Mom puts the prepared pieces of paper in the box.
3. The mother takes out a random piece of paper from the carton and asks the baby to tell its color. Or, the mother says the name of the color and asks the baby to find it in the carton and hand it to the mother.
Game 2: Getting to know little hands and feet
Props:
"Health Song" cassette or CD, tape recorder or CD player
Steps:
1. Mother and baby sit on the floor or bed.
2. The mother first raises her hands, rotates her forearms, and asks the baby: Where are the hands? At the same time, raise your hands and turn them around, and then let your baby imitate them.
3. Mom puts her feet straight in front of her and puts her feet on the ground to move around. Ask the baby again: Where are the feet? Then move your feet. Then let the baby follow suit and move his feet.
4. After the baby learns to move his hands and feet, the mother will play the music of "Health Song" and do exercises with the baby. In line with the lyrics "Move your hands! Move your feet! Take deep breaths", the baby follows the mother's movements of hands and feet. Other music parts allow the baby to swing his body freely.
Game 3: Imitation of animals
Steps:
1. The mother and baby sit on the ground first, and then the mother says to the baby: "Let's learn to play together. Dog walks, okay?" Then, the mother crawls on all fours, imitating the way a puppy walks, and guides the baby to imitate this action.
2. The mother demonstrates the puppy’s bark to the baby and lets the baby imitate it.
3. Then, the mother and the baby learn the movements of the puppy and crawl from one side of the room to the other side, competing to see who can crawl faster. Infant and toddler early education cognitive games 2
Body orientation
Babies are full of curiosity and interest in exploring their own bodies. You can use this to train your baby's orientation cognition. When the baby starts talking at about one year old, you can gradually let the baby understand which are the left and right hands, feet, eyes, ears, etc. After the baby becomes proficient, you can call out the names of each part for the baby to identify. For example, if the mother says "left ear", Let your baby point to his left ear. Then train the baby to pat the chest to express "front", pat the back to express "back", use the finger to the sky to express "up", and use the finger to the ground to express "down", so that the baby can understand the basic concept of orientation.
Dressing
When you get up in the morning and dress your baby, you can also play dressing games with your baby. When putting on the shirt, ask the baby: "Where is the baby's left hand? Stretch out your left hand to put on the sleeve." Then ask the right hand again. When putting on pants, say: "Here, put on your right leg first, and then your left leg." You can also do this when putting on shoes, consciously training your baby's left and right orientation awareness.
Find radishes
Prepare some red and white radishes and put a basket outside the refrigerator in your kitchen.
Put the radishes on the ground in a mess, and tell your baby a story about radishes: "One day, the naughty little squirrel came to the mother rabbit's house and made a mess of the radishes that the mother rabbit had collected so hard. Come and help the baby sort out the radishes. Let's..." Then let the baby help the rabbit mother put the red radishes in the refrigerator, the white radishes in the vegetable basket outside the refrigerator, the large carrots in the upper layer of the refrigerator, and the small ones in the lower layer of the refrigerator. Let your baby understand the concepts of up, down, inside and outside by placing radishes.