Pudding is Good for You!
I love to eat all types of pudding; vanilla, chocolate, butterscotch… But it isn’t the healthiest food in the world to eat on a regular basis. However, it is good for preschoolers, but not in the way you are thinking. Pudding can be a wonderful manipulative to use when practicing printing formation.
I realize that right now you are probably picturing a baby smearing pudding all over the tray of a high chair and, although using a finger in pudding on a tray is certainly a possibility with this activity, there is no need to create such a mess and still get the writing practice for which you are looking.
Instead of dumping pudding on a tray, try putting a few spoonfuls in a plastic, “zip”-closed sandwich bag. Seal it and squeeze out as much air as possible. Then, flatten the bag on a table and allow your child to come write her letters and numbers on the bag.
If your child needs a little more prompting, instead of simply having you announce a number or letter to write, put a set of magnetic numbers and letters into a bag or pillowcase and let him pull them out one at a time. He then has an activity that is more like a game, and he also has something to refer to when determining how each letter is shaped.
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Written by Laura on August 13, 2011
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