• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

LEARN PLAY READ

  • ABOUT
  • Get Ready for Kindergarten
    • How to Prepare Your Child for Kindergarten – With Activities!
    • 27 Books Perfect for Introducing Kindergarten Concepts
    • How to Run a Kindergarten Readiness Class for Preschoolers
    • The Get Ready for Kindergarten Handbook
    • The Get Ready for Kindergarten Calendar
  • Process Art
  • Book Resources
    • Picture Book Reviews
    • Chapter Book Reviews
    • Non-Fiction Book Review
    • Book & Cook
  • Parenting Resources
    • Health
    • Nature Play
    • Need Hope?
  • Program Plans
  • Workshops
  • Shop
    • Cart
    • Checkout
    • My account
  • CONTACT
You are here: Home / Program Plans / How to Prepare Your Child for Kindergarten – With Activities!

How to Prepare Your Child for Kindergarten – With Activities!

July 29, 2019 by Librarian

Preparing kids for kindergarten is much simpler than it sometimes seems! Focus on four development areas and do these easy activities with your child.

*We use affiliate links and may earn commission from purchases made through those links. All opinions are my own.

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

Social and Emotional Development

Discussion Prompts

Talking about kindergarten and what it will be like is one of the best ways to prepare your child. Discussions with your child will give them an opportunity to ask questions and share fears and/or excitement. Here are some of the things we discuss before kindergarten:

Preschool Similarities

If your child attended preschool, talk about how kindergarten will be like preschool. For example, your child had a teacher or teachers at preschool that taught them new things. The same happens in kindergarten! In preschool, the child made friends. They’ll get to do the same thing in kindergarten! In preschool, the child was dropped off at school and then, when the day was over, he/she got to go home. The same happens with kindergarten! Think about all of the things your child liked about preschool and tell them how those things will be in kindergarten.

For kids who did not attend preschool, you can talk about how kindergarten will be similar to attending classes at the park district or programs at the library. For example – at the library, the child got to read books and make crafts with a librarian. In kindergarten, the child will have a teacher who will read books and make crafts with him/her too!

Kindergarten Daily Schedule

Talk with your child about what a day will look like in kindergarten:

Arrival: is the child taking the bus, walking with an older sibling or friend, or getting dropped off in a car

In the classroom: what the teacher does (helps the child learn new things); how to ask questions (raise hand); following directions (directions are to keep the child safe); making friends (introducing yourself, sharing something you like, and asking the new friend what he/she likes); lunchroom rules

Leaving at the end of the day: will the child walk home, take the bus, or get picked up in a car

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

School Helpers

Discuss with your child the helpers they will encounter at school, such as the school nurse, office workers, janitor, and librarian.

Activities

Recognize Emotions

To recognize emotions in themselves and in others, children need to practice. Using pictures from the internet or storybooks, ask your child what emotion a person may be feeling based on his/her face. Ask why the person may be feeling that way and if the child has ever had that emotion. Ask the child what makes him/her feel that way. Have the child show you what other facial expressions may also express the same emotion.

Read The Kissing Hand by Audrey Penn

The BEST book for sending kids off to kindergarten. We use a rubber heart stamp to stamp on the children’s hands, so they remember that somebody at home loves them very much – even when he/she is in school.

Practice Making Friends

Making friends does not always come naturally. Teach your child how to make friends:

Introduce yourself: Hi, my name is BLANK. What’s your name?

Find common interests: I like BLANK. Do you? What’s your favorite BLANK?

Simple as that!

Paint with a Partner

I love this activity because it allows children to practice following directions, as well as practice working well with somebody else:

Provide each partner (you can work with the child or he/she can do this activity with a friend or sibling) with a piece of paper and paint. Designate one person to be the leader and one child to be the follower. Set a timer for 3 minutes. The leader will paint a picture slowly, one step at a time, while the follower duplicates each step of the painting onto his own paper to make an exact replica of the leader’s painting. When the timer rings, compare the paintings: do they look the same? Switch roles and repeat.

For additional muscle strengthening, sensory benefits, and motor improvements, tape the papers to a wall.

Play Simon Says

This game allows the child to practice following directions.

Draw Pictures of Yourselves

To practice awareness of himself/herself, have the child draw a picture of himself/herself. We use markers because the kids LOVE them. Label the picture with his/her name.

Language and Literacy Skills

Activities

Sing Alphabet Song

Your child probably knows the traditional ABC songs by now, so it might be fun to introduce a new version. As much exposure to the alphabet sounds and letters as possible is very beneficial for language and literacy.

For example, we love the Alphabet Zoo song by Jack Hartmann

Match Rhyming Pictures

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

We matched these pictures of things that rhyme. You can also find things around the house that rhyme and pair them up. Even simpler, say words and find rhymes for them! For example, say BOOK and help the child come up with cook, look, nook, took! Even saying nonsense words that technically rhyme is okay!

Map Stories

I tell a story, like Jack and the Beanstalk, and show pictures during the story. After, I have the kids tell me the story using the pictures. I ask them what the beginning of the story is, what the middle is, and what the end is. I ask them about the problem in the story and how it gets solved. We talk about the story and how it is structured simply and this gets kids thinking about plot and conflict.

Playing with Craft Dough

Use PlayDoh or another type of craft dough to explore letters. Print out big bubble letters and have the child fill the letters in with the craft dough. Or, purchase letter-shaped cookie cutters and play with those and the craft dough. Essentially, we’re exposing the kids to letters as much as possible.

Drawing Family Pictures

Have the child draw each of his/her family members and then help him/her label each member. Drawing helps strengthen his/her fine motor skills which is essential for learning to write. Labeling is more writing and spelling practice!

Make Collage Art with Tape

This is a FAVORITE of the kids’ activities. I use large pieces of construction paper and write each child’s first name on it in big letters. Then, I help them rip pieces of Washi tape and tell them to stick the tape over the lines of their names.

Trace Letters in Sensory Bins

Fill a shallow tray or box with sand, dry rice, or beans and ask the child to trace letters into the material using the eraser end of a pencil or a cotton swab.

Read Alphabet Books

Ask your local librarian for help if you need it, but there are TONS of alphabet picture books. Read as many as you can! Some of our favorites can be found here.

Math Skills

Activities

3D Shapes

Many children know the standard shapes going into kindergarten – circle, square, oval, diamond, triangle, rectangle, etc. But many children are not familiar with 3D shapes. Introduce these to your kids when they have the 2D shapes down.

We introduce them using this great YouTube video:

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

After that, I show them examples of three 3D shapes. Using craft foam, I cut out a circle, square, and triangle. Then, I grab a marker, box, and cone to show the kids how the marker is made of a circle, the box is made of squares, and the cone is made of a triangle.

Group Graphing

Using a giant wall graph and lots of different colored dragons, we have lots of people pick their favorite color dragon and we graph it together on the wall graph. The we talk about which color has the most and the least, and which colors are the most liked and the least liked.

Our giant wall graph has the numbers 1-6 going up the left side and then the bottom has the colors (green, yellow, blue, purple, orange, pink) going across the bottom. The kids match the color with the number. For example, the second child to put up a pink dragon would find the number 2 and the color pink and put the dragon where they intersect.

Stamp out Patterns

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

Use rubber stamps and ink pads to start a pattern for the child. Then, have them continue the pattern. The kids LOVE this activity.

Build Towers

We use giant blocks, foam blocks, small blocks – any blocks we can find – to build towers, houses, cities, whatever the child wants to build.

Play Bingo

If you have enough kids or people, play Bingo. It’s great for number recognition!

Introduce Angles

I printed out an obtuse angle, acute angle, and right angle on separate sheets of paper. Then, the kids made those angles using our bodies – using our arms, legs, and fingers. Spreading our legs only a little bit makes an acute angle and spreading our arms out really far makes an obtuse angle.

Fine and Gross Motor Skills

Discussion

Big and Small Muscles

Big movements use big muscles and small movements use small muscles. We need to exercise all of our muscles – big and small – to keep them strong.

Activities

Cut Craft Dough

The best material to practice using scissors with is craft dough or PlayDoh! The kids won’t stop and it’ll be great for improving their scissors skills! Many, many children do not know how to cut when using scissors, even though it is an essential skill to learn as preschoolers.

Make Beaded Necklaces

We used craft laces and beads to make necklaces. I can never pull the kids away from this activity!

Dance Party

Put on some music and strengthen those large muscles with a dance party!

Resources

There are so many resources available for preparing your child for kindergarten. Here are some of our favorites:

Kindergarten Concept Books

how to prepare your child for kindergarten with activities

These 27 books are perfect for introducing and practicing kindergarten concepts.

Local Libraries

If you don’t already visit your local library regularly, this is a great place for preparing your child for kindergarten. The classes and books are wonderful for improving social and emotional readiness, as well as language, literacy, math, fine motor, and gross motor skills.

Kindergarten Readiness Yearly Activity Calendar

The Get Ready for Kindergarten Calendar includes twelve months of activities for you and your child as you prepare for kindergarten. If you’d like a FREE resource, try The Get Ready for Kindergarten Handbook.

Books Perfect for Introducing Kindergarten Concepts Video

Filed Under: Program Plans Tagged With: fine motor skills, gross motor skills, kindergarten, kindergarten resources, literacy, math, preschool

Primary Sidebar

Welcome! I'm Jaime, and I'm so happy you're here to learn, play, and read with me!

I'm a children's librarian in the midwest. I have a Master's in Library Science, with a Youth Services specialization. I like to think of myself as a professional reader of children's books, a sensory enthusiast, and a play activist. Which is great for working with children because kids' days are full of learning and playing (and in my dream world, reading books)!

I hope you're able to find some inspiration for teaching the littles in your life!

SEARCH

Want More?

Shop on Etsy

LESSONS

Get to Know Learn Play Read

Get to know Learn Play Read by browsing some of our favorite posts and products, from baby activities to art projects to book lists! Check out our Etsy page to use your discount code! If you don’t have a discount code and would like one, email info@learnplayread.com with the subject “Discount Please!” Stay up to […]

Daily Summer Activities for Preschoolers

Looking for daily summer activities for your families? Look no further! Find 93 activity ideas to keep your summer fun. *We use affiliate links and may earn commission from purchases made through those links. All opinions are our own. Daily Summer Activities for Families Three months with no school are ahead, and all of those empty […]

School Library End of Year Checklist

Use this school library end of the year checklist each year to make sure you finish all necessary tasks before summer break. Of course, modify and add/delete as it fits your library and district requirements. School Library End of Year Checklist Download PDF copy of the end of year checklist More School Library Resources Graphic […]

Learn Play Read, 2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to LearnPlayRead.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.


Footer

RECENT

  • Realistic Fiction Chapter Books for Ages 8-12
  • Get to Know Learn Play Read
  • Best Natural, Simple, and Quality Baby Items
  • Daily Summer Activities for Preschoolers
  • School Library End of Year Checklist

Tags

art art history babies book club book review books butterflies circles Claude Monet Colors Crayola elementary family Famous Artists Finger Painting Flowers glue Henry Matisse kids kids books Messy Messy Painting non-fiction non-fiction book review non-fiction picture book Paint Painting picture book picture books preschool Preschoolers Process Art Programs read scissors Shapes stickers teacher resources teach kids at home Toddlers Vincent Van Gogh Water Lilies Wax Paper Yarn Young Artists

Archives

  • February 2024
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • December 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • February 2022
  • October 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • January 2019
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in