|
HOME
SEARCH FOR CHILD CARE NOW
REGISTER YOUR
DAYCARE~CENTER
PARENT RESOURCES
PROVIDER~TEACHER RESOURCES
LINKS
CONTACT US
 |
|

Kindergarten
Readiness Checklist
While
there is no perfect formula that determines when a child is truly
ready for kindergarten, you can use this checklist to see how well
your child is doing in acquiring the skills found on most
kindergarten checklists.
Check the
skills your child has mastered. Then recheck every month to see what
additional skills your child can accomplish easily. Young children
change so fast -if they can't do something this week, they may be
able to do it a few weeks later.
-
Listen to stories
without interrupting
-
Recognize rhyming
sounds
-
Pay attention for
short periods of time to adult-directed tasks
-
Understand actions
have both causes and effects
-
Show understanding
of general times of day
-
Cut with scissors
-
Trace basic shapes
-
Begin to share with
others
-
Start to follow
rules
-
Be able to recognize
authority
-
Manage bathroom
needs
-
Button shirts,
pants, coats, and zip up zippers
-
Begin to control
oneself
-
Separate from
parents without being upset
-
Speak understandably
-
Talk in complete
sentences of five to six words
-
Look at pictures and
then tell stories
-
Identify rhyming
words
-
Identify the
beginning sound of some words
-
Identify some
alphabet letters
-
Recognize some
common sight words like "stop"
-
Sort similar objects
by color, size, and shape
-
Recognize groups of
one, two, three, four, and five objects
-
Count to ten
-
Bounce a ball
If your
child has acquired most of the skills on this checklist and will be
at least five years old at the start of the summer before he or she
starts kindergarten, he or she is probably ready for kindergarten.
What teachers want to see on the first day of school are children
who are healthy, mature, capable, and eager to learn. |