Preschool Colors Theme

Today I wanted to talk about teaching colors and having a preschool colors theme for teaching colors in your preschool (or kindergarten or home) classroom.  Did you know that one sign of reading readiness is that a child knows how to identify his/her colors? In many ways, it is quite difficult to teach a child colors. The child either can recognize the difference in colors, or they don’t see any difference. Until the child’s brain is ready to see the differences, you cannot really get him to understand. One day it seems to just click and the child can see/understand colors.  I remember being frustrated with each of my children thinking they must be color blind…but, sure enough one day they just would understand when I said “Santa is red”, they understood what that meant.  Preschool Colors Theme


That being said, it is still great to do different activities to help reinforce the different colors.  It is good to start with just one color and give a lot of examples of that one color.  Then have one example of another color and say… These are all yellow:  yellow sun, yellow duck, yellow corn, yellow banana, yellow bus….  Red strawberry.  Which one does not belong?  Why is it different?  Which ones are yellow?  Which is red?

Other ideas for teaching a preschool colors theme:

  • Read the book Too Many Balloons and do these free color preschool activities to go along with the book.
  • Read the books When the Crayons Quit and When the Crayons Came Home.  In the first book, the crayons each quit one by one because they are always being asked to do the same thing:  The blue is ALWAYS the sky and he is tired of it.  He quits.  It gives a lot of examples of what each color usually colors.  In When the Crayons Came Home, they reconsider and make their way home to report for duty again.

    The Day the Crayons QuitThe Day the Crayons QuitThe Day the Crayons Came HomeThe Day the Crayons Came Home

  • Add food coloring to a glass of milk and focus on that color for the day.
  • When coloring, just focus on coloring with one or two colors only.
  • Sing the song “If you are wearing read, clap your hands”, or stand up straight or turn around, etc.
  • Play the board games Color Huey or Bee Alert hese are favorites in our house.  I love both these games.
  • Have a rainbow week at school. Monday everyone wears red, Tuesday everyone wears orange, etc.
  • Make a color book.  If you are doing the color yellow, each page would have something in it that is yellow:  yellow sun, yellow duck, yellow corn, yellow bus, yellow banana.
  • You can look through magazines and cut out things that are that one color too.
  • Do a scavenger hunt around the classroom or home for things that are one color.
  • Make a sensory bin:  Fill a tub with rice or white beans and bury colored manipulatives in the bin. Have the students try and find all the red bears.
  • Use Legos-  Build something with only one color!
  • I have a free Color book below for the color red.  To get your free color book for your preschool colors theme, enter in your email below and you will be added to our mailing list where you will find out about more fun things.

    How to Grow a Confident Reader
    Preschool Colors Theme Red
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    If you liked this post, you will also like these resources:
    Teaching Colors Minibooks  Editable Fall Worksheet Pack Brown Bear Brown Bear Activities


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Madreen Karle is a master first grade reading teacher with over 30 years of classroom experience. She taught reading in a special needs and English as a Second Language classroom. After retiring she wrote a reading program to help others learn how to teach reading. She is a trusted educator and author of 5 books to help teach children to read and write. In addition to her books, she is a mentor for 3 websites that give reading teacher tips (Mrs. Karle’s Sight and Sound ReadingMrs. Karle’s Reading Patch, and Mrs. Karle’s Handwriting Patch). Through her teaching she learned that confidence was the key to learning to read. A child who is not confident at reading does not like to read and struggles to read. Mrs. Karle created “sunshine moments” to help teach children how to grow their confidence and learn to read.
Meeghan Karle Mousaw (Madreen’s daughter) has her Master’s in Special Education. She has 8 years experience teaching children to read online. In addition, she developed a curriculum to teach children handwriting called The Handwriting Patch. With the Handwriting Patch learning is fun because children learn to draw and learn handwriting at the same time. In 2019 The Handwriting Patch curriculum became an amazon best seller the first year it was released, helping thousands of kids learn handwriting with a unique, fun method. She is mom to 6 kids, each with differently learning abilities and struggles.
The Reading Patch was established by the creators of Mrs. Karle’s Sight and Sound Reading. Together they have been featured on the NBC media outlets and Parents Magazine online. Over the last 8 years in their online platform, Madreen and Meeghan have worked tirelessly with teachers, homeschoolers and parents looking to help children learn to read to become a trusted authority in teaching children to read and advocating early literacy skills. They often partner with other educational experts to deliver the most current information to the Reading Patch community.

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