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Toddler Workbook Learning Activities: Part 14

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These workbook activities are great for practicing fine motor skills and early letter and number recognition. I love incorporating creative, hands-on learning that keeps my toddler engaged while helping her develop pre-writing skills and sparking creativity!

We did all five of these activities in one sitting – it took about 35 minutes total. I sat next to her and explained each page before starting, but she figured out most of it on her own. I love watching how she focuses, experiments, and learns through hands-on play.

Here are the links to the 3 main supplies I use – other than colored markers!

  1. Sketchbook – It doesn’t bleed through even with sharpie or markers.
  2. Dot Markers – Use this for color, number or letter recognition. There is so much you can do with these markers!
  3. Dot Stickers – Use this for color recognition and creative crafting. My toddler loves them!

1. Shape Match Cake

Setup:
Draw a simple cake outline and add colorful shapes (like circles, squares, triangles, and hearts) on top. Then, cut out matching shapes for your toddler to glue onto the cake in the correct spots.

Challenges:

This one feels like a mini art project – and it’s a great warm-up activity to get little hands moving.


2. Connect The Dots

Setup:
Draw dotted outlines for four different shapes – for example, a circle, square, triangle, and heart. Give your toddler a crayon or marker and let them connect the dots.

Challenges:

She was so focused and happy with this one – connect-the-dots activities are such a great way to build tracing confidence.


3. Letter Matching Ponds

Setup:
Draw four small ponds with fish inside each one, labeling each fish with a different letter. Then, write those same letters on dot stickers. Have your toddler match and stick the correct letters on top of each fish.

Challenges:

This activity combines sensory play and learning – matching stickers is one of her favorite ways to practice letters!


4. Apple Coloring With Dot Markers

Setup:
Draw six apples – two red, two green, and two yellow. Give your toddler matching dot markers to color inside the apples.

Challenges:

Using dot markers keeps things mess-free while still strengthening little hands for early writing.


5. Tracing The Rain

Setup:
Draw four clouds and add dotted lines underneath each one – some straight, some slanted. Give your toddler a marker or crayon and let them trace the “raindrops.”

Challenges:

This one always helps her slow down and focus – a calm way to end our workbook time.

Each of these pages challenges different developmental skills – from tracing and coordination to problem-solving and early literacy. They’re simple, low-prep, and easy to do at home using just paper, crayons, markers, dot stickers, and glue!

If you’re looking for an engaging way to help your toddler learn through play, try combining a few of these workbook pages in one session. They’re a wonderful mix of creativity, learning, and fine motor practice, all while keeping your little one focused and having fun!

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