Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Developmentally Appropriate Materials for Pre-school and Kindergarten Ages (3-6)

Developmentally Appropriate Materials for Pre-school and Kindergarten Ages (3-6)

Materials for preschoolers and kindergarteners should support their developing social skills and interest in adult roles, growing imaginations, increasing motor skills, and rapidly expanding vocabularies. Refer to the table below for examples of developmentally appropriate materials for preschool and kindergarten children.




Type of MaterialAppropriate MaterialsExamples
Skill/conceptBooks/recordsPicture books, simple and repetitive stories and rhymes, animal stories, pop-up books, simple information books, wide variety of musical recordings
 GamesSocially interactive games with adults, such as What If; matching and lotto games based on colors and pictures, such as picture bingo or dominoes; games of chance with a few pieces that require no reading, such as Chutes and Ladders; flannel board with pictures, letters, and storybook characters
Gross motorActive playPush and pull toys; ride-on toys; balls of all kinds; indoor slide and climber; rocking boat
 OutdoorClimbers, rope ladders, balls of all sizes; old tires, sand and water materials
ManipulativeFine motorDressing frames; toys to put together and take apart; cookie cutters, stamp and printing materials, finger paint, modeling dough, small objects to sort and classify; bead stringing with long, thin string; pegs and small pegs; colored cubes, table blocks, magnetic board/letters/numbers and shapes; perception boards and mosaics
 Puzzles and form boardsFit-in or framed puzzles (for 3-year-olds: from 4-20 pieces, for 4-year-olds: from 15-30 pieces, for 5-year-olds: from 15-50 pieces); large, simple jigsaws; number/letter/clock puzzles
 InvestigativeToys, globe flashlight, magnets, lock boxes, weather forecasting equipment, scales, balances, stethoscopes
ConstructionBuilding setsSmall and large unit blocks; large hollow blocks; from age 4, interlocking plastic blocks with pieces of all sizes
 CarpentryWorkbench, hammer, preschool nails, saw, sandpaper, pounding benches, safety goggles
Self-expressiveDolls and soft toysRealistic dolls and accessories; play settings and play people (e.g., farm, hospital)
 Dramatic playDress-up clothes, realistic tools, toy camera, telephone, household furniture
 SensoryTactile boxes; auditory and musical materials such as smelling and sound boxes; cooking experiences
 Art/musicAll rhythm instruments, music boxes; large crayons, paint, paste, glue, chalkboard and chalk, sewing kits, collage materials, markers, modeling dough, blunt scissors
Natural and everydaySand and waterSandbox tools, bubbles, water toys
  Old clocks, radios, cameras, telephones; telephone books; mirrors; doctor kits; typewriter; magazines; fabric scraps; computer; cash register and receipts; measuring cups and muffin tins