Developmental Skills and Activities for Children Ages 4 to 5 Years
Developmental Skills and Activities for Children Ages 4 to 5 Years
Developmental Skills and Activities 4 to 5 Years
Development during the preschool years encompasses a broad range of normal. The following checklist of skills depicts what we expect most children to develop during a specific range. Remember that children develop at different rates and this is only a guide to help you determine what skills are appropriate to work on with your child.
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Developmental Skills
- Plays with other children cooperatively
- Explores gender roles (mommy/daddy) and community helper roles (firefighter, shopkeeper)
- Understands limits and defines them for others
- Respects authority, though may still test limits
- Participates in group games
- Chooses own friends
- Is sensitive about teasing
- Likes silly jokes
- Dresses, toilets, and eats independently
- Interested in new experiences
- Increasingly inventive in fantasy play
- Dresses and undresses
- Negotiates solutions to conflicts
- More independent
- Imagines that many unfamiliar images may be "monsters"
- Views self as a whole person involving body, mind, and feelings
- Often cannot tell the difference between fantasy and reality
Supporting Activities
- Provide opportunities for role playing and pretending (discourage violent play).
- Group same-age children together or invite a child of similar age for a "play date" to encourage cooperative play.
- Teach simple games. (Duck, Duck, Goose)
- Allow child to help set limits. ("How many turns will each child get?")
- Help child develop strategies for solving social problems. ("Use words, not hitting."; "What else could you do? What will you you say next time?")
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Developmental Skills
- Asks questions to gain information (Why...?, How...?)
- Understands routines and can tell what activity comes first or next in a sequence
- Plays with language, making up nonsense words
- Answers questions about stories and retells stories with assistance
- Joins sentences together
- Correctly names some colors
- Understands the concept of counting and may know a few numbers
- Tries to solve problems from a single point of view
- Begins to have a clearer sense of time
- Follows three-part commands
- Recalls parts of a story
- Has mastered some basic rules of grammar
- Speaks in sentences of five to six words
- Speaks clearly enough for strangers to understand
- Tells stories
Supporting Activities
- Read story books to child.
- Ask child questions about stories and have child retell stories.
- Encourage child to act out stories from books or imagination and use different voices for the characters.
- Engage child in what if games to encourage child's own storytelling. ("What if you could fly...?")
- Expand the range of computer software available to the child.
- Arrange trips to the library, zoo, and special events such as parades.
- Play rhyming games with child. ("Can you say three words that rhyme with cat?")
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Developmental Skills
- Cuts on a line
- Copies shapes
- Prints a few letters
- Draws to represent objects
- Builds symmetrical structures with blocks
- Makes sculptures with nontoxic modeling clay
- Draws a person with two to four body parts
Supporting Activities
- Provide building toys such as blocks.
- Offer child a variety of surfaces to write on. (construction paper, envelope, chalkboard, cardboard).
- Encourage child to represent objects and activities through drawing.
- Provide nontoxic modeling clay, sand, paper and glue.
- Limit number of different objects child may use at one time.
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Developmental Skills
- Walks backwards
- Walks up and down stairs without help, alternating feet
- Hops
- Begins to skip
- Kicks a ball accurately
- Turns somersaults
- Follows movement directions ("Put your hand on your head, take two giant steps, then turn around.")
- Hops and stands on one foot up to five seconds
- Throws ball overhand
- Moves forward and backward with agility
Supporting Activities
- Let child help design obstacle course (balance beams, chairs to climb over, tables to crawl under, see saws).
- Roll and pass large plastic hoops to each other.
- Organize a noncompetitive kick ball game.
- Take child to playground to practice climbing, balancing, and other movement activities.
- Play Simon Says, including challenging movements.
- Skip with child from the house to the car.
- Encourage child to practice walking backwards.
- Play music for dancing and provide musical instruments child can play while dancing or marching.
Contact Info
Leigh Austin
Director
407-317-3200 x 2763
Kathie Anderson
Program Specialist
407-317-3503
Helpful Resources
*Welcome to the World: An Overview of Your Growing Child
Florida Department of Education (FLDOE)