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ClickStart: Thomas & Friends; Learning Destinations

Product ID: 822813 / Mfg Part #: 22656
LeapFrog - ClickStart

$17.95

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All aboard for a learning journey with Thomas and his friends! Three different adventures, all with multiple levels, help your child master early school skills.

What it Teaches:

  • Problem Solving

  • Letters

  • Sequencing

  • Phonics Skills

  • Shapes

Learning Path Stones

  • Phonics Skills
    Before they can read independently, children must learn the relationship of letters to their sounds and be able to distinguish individual sounds, or phonemes, within words. Phonics skills help children sounds out new words (If I can read "pot", then I can read "hot" and "spot").

  • Word Building
    To read and write, children must understand how individual letter sounds blend together to make words. Experimenting with building words, such as changing mat to cat to rat, helps with reading and spelling.

  • The Alphabet
    Knowing the letters of the alphabet is one of the first steps toward learning to read and write. Introducing letters to young children helps them learn to recognize the different shapes and names - an early indicator for reading achievement.

  • Colors
    Learning color names and matching them consistently to the right color develops by around the age of 2 to 3 years. When children eventually come to understand the concepts of color they can then use that information to categorize shapes, patterns and other visual information.

  • Exploration and Curiosity
    Toddlers use their curiosity and logical reasoning skills to solve everyday problems. By investigating all sorts of possibilities, they develop unexpected solutions and creative problem-solving strategies.

  • Sorting and Classifying
    Children actively arrange their blocks, cars and dolls, using visual discrimination to sort objects around them. Essential for math and science, classification is the logical reasoning ability to identify and group objects by attributes such as color, size, number, function, length, volume, weight, area, time and other familiar characteristics.

  • Keyboarding
    Learning to use the keyboard is another step in becoming computer literate. It can take a while for children to learn the positioning of each key, but simply searching for the right key helps children with letter recognition. Eventually, they'll be able to use the keyboard commands as an alternative to using the mouse.

  • Mousing
    Children start off using the computer mouse before they learn how to use the keys. It's best to get a child-sized mouse so that it's small enough for children to handle correctly. Within a short space of time children become adept at navigating the screen using the mouse to point and click.

  • Screen Navigation
    Children quickly learn the basics of screen navigation. By pointing and clicking they can open programs they can use to help them learn.

  • Shapes
    Identifying and manipulating shapes lays the groundwork for geometry by giving children concrete experience with angles, symmetry and relative sizes.

  • Early Number Sense
    As early as 6 months, babies begin to understand the concept of numbers, noticing small groups of one, two or three things. As children develop number sense they learn to count by ones, skip count and count backwards, gaining the foundation for operations. Children who have good number sense find learning operations like addition and subtraction much easier.

  • Number Recognition
    To begin their study of math, children must distinguish numerals from letters and shapes and understand that numbers are symbols for amounts.

  • Sequencing
    Even toddlers can often recite number names in order, but the ability to compare and order numbers in sequence indicates a practical application of number concepts.

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