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  Available Activity Books    

We thought it would be useful to provide some great learning and activity work books to help support our children at home, click on the pdf symbol to open useful learning resources to help your children continue in their development as well as have some fun too!  

 EYFS Activity Book 

 Brought to you by TTS 

 EYFS Spring into Spring Activity Book 

 Brought to you by TTS 

Hope Education

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Hope Education have collated a range of resources for home learning activities, top tips and advice regarding well-being, staying active, and encouraging children to wash their hands. This is aimed for EYFS and primary-aged children to support practitioners, teachers, children and parents during this period.

 

Access their free home learning resources and activities  here. https://www.hope-education.co.uk/home-learning

FREE LEARNING PACKS From Literacy Counts

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Literacy Counts have put together materials to support parents and teachers to continue learning at home. They are committed to supporting and helping you in the event of longer-term closures. They are offering access to the FREE Home School Resources Click 

https://literacycounts.co.uk/free-home-learning/

They also have a range of resources on their website where you can find out how they can help your child or school with their Reading and Writing                                               

Check out 40 Easy Toddler Activities From Busy Toddler

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https://busytoddler.com/2016/11/40-super-easy-toddler-activities/

Learning at home ideas 

Younger children will likely benefit from activities, games, and discussion with parents. Working with younger children at home, it is important not to see mathematics as a separate or standalone activity but rather as something which can be incorporated into everyday activities, games, stories, and conversations.
Here are some ways that we can support parents to celebrate maths as part of their day:

Board games, particularly ones with linear, numbered, equal-sized spaces can be useful for the development of early number skills. Most families will have ‘Snakes and Ladders’ or something similar; if not, this is a great opportunity to make your own!
Incorporate mathematics into everyday routines and activities: tidying up and meal times in particular provide opportunities for conversations about counting, comparing, time, and sharing.
Snack times and meals are a great opportunity to learn mathematics, such as counting, estimating and comparing. For example, with young children, you could count and match items in a ‘Teddy Bears’ Picnic.’ You can compare quantities such as more or less or quantify food items (making sure to link the last number counted to the number of items in the set) or discuss the capacity of different cups or jugs. A parent or puppet can make deliberate errors in counting and sharing, with the child encouraged to identify these mistakes.
Use mathematical vocabulary where possible as part of conversations and play: for example, when making comparisons (which is bigger? which teddy is first in line? who has more? are they shared fairly?). Opportunities can also be taken for ‘shape-spotting’ and sorting around the home.


Finding the mathematics in story books.

www.mathsthroughstories.org

contains explicit links to mathematics in stories, but you can also consider opportunities in more common story books for mathematical discussion.
Use manipulatives to support learning. For example, building bricks could be used to model simple addition and multiplication, or toys used to make comparisons of size or quantity. Measuring items, scales, construction materials, puzzles, sorting and pattern materials are also great sources for discussion!

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