I don’t know about your kids, but mine *love* to sort! They are both naturally driven toward making groupings of similar objects, lining them up or making little piles. Sorting is not only fun, it’s also building those important early mathematical and scientific reasoning skills. Here’s some of the easy ways we explore similarities and differences through sorting:
Things for sorting:
- Craft supplies: beads, buttons, colored paper clips, fabric scraps, pom poms
- In the kitchen: various types of cereal, pasta, beans
- Nature items: rocks, shells, leaves
- Toys: small animals, legos, marbles
- Treats: M&Ms, jellybeans
- In the garage: screws, bolts, nuts, washers
- Other: coins
Sorting containers:
- muffin tins
- hula hoops
- small bowls, buckets, baskets
- yarn circles laid out on the floor
- divided trays or serving dishes
- empty egg cartons
- ice cube trays
Everyday applications:
- silverware
- laundry
- groceries
- toy clean-up
Sort and classify by:
- color
- shape
- size
- function
- habitat
- season
- texture
Happy Sorting!




















{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }
Fun ideas! I really enjoy your blog!
Neat idea! Sorting is such a great activity for improving fine motor skills/pincer grasp and helping kids understand how things are different yet still the same at any given moment. As kids are older (they can sort at around 2 but this other task takes longer) you can have them sort on different levels, such as having them sort beads that are a bunch of colors and shapes, then having them sort on the less-obvious dimension (in this case, shape) and not look at color. It’s a big developmental step to do this!
librarycollective.blogspot.com
I LOVE this idea. Will definitely have to try it since my 3 yo daughter loves to sort anything and everything. Thanks for sharing this idea.