This activity gives children an opportunity to practice counting and critical fine motor skills.

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This activity gives the children the opportunity to see how ice floats.

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Learn what sorts of materials and structures are effective at producing echoes.

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What happens to sand when you add water.

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Understanding that things can be measured is an important part of early childhood.

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Young children are fascinated with how the human body works, and listening to a heartbeat is particularly intriguing.

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Classification and sorting are important skills to develop for math, science and language arts.

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A truly tasty science activity!

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Pete the Cat may be losing his buttons, but his story provides a great chance to practice sorting skills!

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One-to-one correspondence and counting are incredibly vital in early childhood education.

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Classification and sorting can take on a more personal meaning when children use items they've created themselves.

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This simple activity is sure to spark an interest in science for little ones!

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Children will go fast and far as they explore ramps, how they work and how they can affect an object's speed.

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Explore the process of creating machines that do…nothing!

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Show and tell is an age-old activity that happens in many classrooms.

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Since puzzles can be expensive, this activity is an affordable way to create your own!

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This insect lifecycle activity gets two colorful thumbs up!

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Recreate numbers, shapes and more with modeling materials!

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Use the power of magnets to create unique artworks!

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Enjoy finger painting without the mess!

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Use children's own artworks to help them learn spatial terms!

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Create craft stick rafts and then test them. Will yours sink or float?

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