Kindergarden - The Five Senses

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
The Five Senses: Supplemental Guide 155

1B-1


Dear Family Member,

Your child will be learning about the fi ve senses and the body parts that go with each
sense:


  • Sight/eyes

  • Hearing/ears

  • Smell/nose

  • Taste/tongue

  • Touch/skin


Your child will learn basic ways to take care of his/her body—for example, not putting
fi ngers in the eyes or ears. And your child will learn how the fi ve senses help to care of
him/her—for example, being able to taste and smell when a food is spoiled and feeling
when something is too hot to touch.

Below are some suggestions for activities that you can do at home with your child to
help him/her continue learning about the fi ve senses.


  1. Sensory Walk


Use the activity sheet that comes with this letter to help your child record what s/he
sees, hears, smells, tastes, and touches (see page 1B-3).


  1. Texture Hunt


Your child will learn that objects have many different types of textures; for example,
a rock is hard, a pillow is soft, the table is smooth, a basketball is bumpy, ice is cold,
scissors are sharp. As you walk around the house or outside with your child, invite him/
her to touch a variety of safe objects. Talk with your child about the texture of each of the
objects. You can also put a familiar object into a bag and have your child guess what is
inside using only his/her sense of touch.


  1. A Tasty Dish


Your child will learn about four different tastes: sweet, salty, bitter, and sour. Talk to
your child about the different kinds of tastes as you enjoy a meal together. You can also
have your child eat something with his/her eyes closed and guess what it is.


  1. Sayings and Phrases: Look Before You Leap & Better Safe Than Sorry

Free download pdf