Play Dough

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Your Child Will Learn

Fine motor skills and how to use tools

Here’s What to Do

  1. Play with play dough! You can use store-bought play dough or make your own (recipe attached).
  2. Show me how much fun it is to roll, squeeze, pound, poke, and pull apart play dough.
  3. Help me use tools like popsicle sticks or spoons, a small rolling pin, or cookie cutters to shape the dough in different ways.
  4. Make some pretend cookies or cakes and have a pretend tea party with dolls and stuffed animals.

Put PEER Into Action

PAUSE

  • Set up our play dough in a space free of distractions.

ENGAGE

  • “What does the play dough feel like? What happens if you pull it apart?”
  • “Would you like to cut a piece of my pretend pie? Maybe Teddy would like a piece too.”

ENCOURAGE

  • I might not like the play dough texture at first. Help me by offering it to me in a ball shape, which may be more familiar.
  • Model using tools for me first, then let me try on my own. 

REFLECT

  • What did I seem to like or not like about playing with play dough?

Not Quite Ready

If I seem more interested in eating the play dough than playing with it, try again in a few months.

Ready for More

Show me how to make objects out of playdough. See if I can imitate what you make.

As Your Child Masters This Skill

They will enjoy experimenting with play dough.

Time to Complete

15-30 minutes

Materials Needed

Play dough (bought from a store, or homemade-see recipe below)


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