Author: Family Choice Awards
Each box is packed with 15 fun, hands-on activities that spark imagination and support early childhood development — all themed around sunshine, rain, wind, and snow.
✅ All Materials Included – Over 30 high-quality items, ready to use
✅Step-by-Step Instructions – In **Arabic and English**, plus video guidance
✅ Sensory, Motor & Language Development – Designed by early learning experts & professionals
✅ No Prep Needed – Just open and enjoy together!
This box is particularly curated for 3 – 5 years age group. These are the Learning Objectives Specific to This Box:
Communication and Language (C&L)
In activities like “Land, Air, Road, and Water Transport”, your child will expand their vocabulary by learning the names of different vehicles and their functions. They will use a wider range of vocabulary to describe the vehicles, which helps them articulate their thoughts in more complex sentences. In ‘What Do You Hear? What Do You See?’, your child matches sounds to images, strengthening listening skills and word recognition. This activity also supports the development of understanding “why” questions and enables your child to articulate their ideas clearly and confidently.
Personal, Social, and Emotional Development (PSE)
Activities such as ‘Iced Balloons’ help children practice perseverance as they work to free the vehicles from the ice. This activity encourages them to expand their ideas and problem-solving strategies while fostering emotional expression. In ‘Let’s Make a Toy Car’, your child will practice turn-taking, sharing materials, and working collaboratively. These interactions help them build constructive and respectful relationships, while also learning to regulate their emotions and make thoughtful choices during creative play.
Physical Development (PD)
Through ‘Gross Motor Play with a Sandbag’, your toddler improves balance, coordination, and body control as they walk with a sandbag on their head. This activity also provides an opportunity to further develop and refine a range of ball skills, such as throwing, catching, and aiming, as they practice with the sandbag during different movements. It encourages your toddler to use their dominant hand, promoting the development of hand-eye coordination and strength. These activities help build foundational physical skills and support overall motor development.
Mathematics (M)
In ‘Pattern Activity with Vehicles’, your child copies, continues, and creates patterns by matching vehicles to shapes, helping them understand sequencing and repetition. As they follow patterns and predict which vehicle comes next, they practice identifying and extending patterns. Similarly, practicing math through playdough children will explore quantities and learn mathematical language such as ‘more than and less than’.
Understanding the World (UTW)
By ‘Making boats’ your child explores buoyancy and basic science concepts through hands-on play and experimentation. Additionally, in ‘Who drives that activity’, your child shows interest in different occupations as they match vehicles to the workers who use them, such as associating a fire truck with a firefighter or a plane with a pilot. This activity helps your child understand real-world roles and occupations, promoting their curiosity about how things work in the world.
Expressive Arts and Design (EAD)
Activities like ‘Let’s Make a Scooter’ allow your toddler to explore, use, and refine a variety of artistic effects as they decorate a scooter with different textures. This encourages them to express their ideas and feelings through creative choices. Similarly, by tearing and sticking , your toddler joins different materials and explores various textures as they tear and paste paper to create vehicles. These activities foster artistic expression while also helping develop fine motor skills, as your child refines their ability to manipulate materials and make thoughtful, creative decisions.
Literacy (L)
Activities like ‘Making Letters with Playdough’ support your toddler in recognizing and forming letters, which is a crucial step in early literacy development. By shaping letters with playdough, your child engages in hands-on learning, strengthening their understanding of letter recognition. Through extended conversations about stories and characters, they also have opportunities to learn new vocabulary and expand their language skills.