All stock codes associated to this product
708431805583, 8055831214, 80558-31214
Le stylo lecteur Tag donne vie aux livres !
Alors que la fe Clochette rve de trouver le talent qui pourrait lemmener dans lautre monde, elle dcouvre quelle peut aller encore plus loin en restant fidle elle-mme.
Des activits permettent votre enfant de jouer avec les personnages, dexplorer les illustrations et de renforcer ses comptences en lecture.
Apports ducatifs :
- Exercer sa mmoire
- Trier et classer
- Imaginer la suite de l'histoire
- Dcouvrir les saisons
Use your Tag Reader to bring this story to life! Tinker Bell longs for a new talent that will take her to the Mainland. Read along in this magical tale as Tinker Bell discovers that being true to herself will take her furthest of all. After the story, play learning activities that help build vocabulary and reading comprehension skills.
Introduces:
- Memory skills
- Sorting and classifying
- Making predictions
- Seasons
Disney
Teaches
Earth Science
Earth sciences (such as geology and oceanography) deal with the origin, structure and physical phenomena of the earth and the solar system.
Feelings and Emotions
At about 18 months, children begin to communicate feelings and engage in emotional interactions. Research shows that the ability to express emotion is key to social development and well-being.
Music
From birth, children love music and even prefer it to speech. Apart from the obvious joy of music there are a number of surprising benefits to listening to music: it helps develop language, problem solving skills, memory, and physical coordination.
Sorting and Classifying
Children actively arrange their blocks, cars and dolls, using visual discrimination to sort objects around them. Essential for math and science, classification is the logical reasoning ability to identify and group objects by attributes such as color, size, number, function, length, volume, weight, area, time and other familiar characteristics.
Memory Skills
Being able to recall information enables children to solve problems and retell stories more efficiently
Book and Print Basics
A child's early experiences with books greatly influence his ability to learn to read. Reading together helps a child learn how to turn pages one at a time and that text moves from left to right. Advanced readers learn how to use books for research.
Vocabulary
While infants and toddlers learn vocabulary by memory, older children use word structure and context to help understand the meaning of a word. They identify synonyms and antonyms. They use prefixes, suffixes and base words to build their own vocabulary.
Subject Knowledge
Children learn about the world through stories. In turn, they use the knowledge they gain to comprehend other stories, both fiction and nonfiction, more fully, building their general knowledge and increasing their vocabulary across subject areas.
Listening and Reading Comprehension
As children develop comprehension of books read aloud or independently, they explore the uses and functions of written language. They begin to construct meaning, eventually applying critcal skills to make inferences and draw conclusions.