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Help Leo Sort Colors - early sorting activity

About This Product

In this activity the learner will be sorting COLORS and is a nice beginner activity for the early learner. It is also great to use with a learner who is more advanced but needs a quick activity that he/she can do independently free of errors.

This activity that can help develop a learner's cognitive and perceptual abilities involves sorting colors. The activity can begin by providing the learner with a set of sorting cards that feature different colors (red, blue, green, yellow, etc.).

The learner is then asked to sort the cards either by color. For example, the teacher might show the learner a green card and ask the learner to sort all the green cards into one pile, or all the red cards into another pile.

The activity can be tailored to the learner's level of ability, gradually introducing more complex colors as the learner becomes more adept at sorting. For younger learners, the cards can feature primary colors, while older learners can be challenged with a more wider range of colors.

This activity can be conducted individually or in a group setting, allowing learners to learn from each other and collaborate as they work through the sorting process. It is also a fun and engaging way for learners to develop their sorting skills, which can have practical applications in a variety of fields such as science, engineering, and computer programming.

This activity is easy to create. Print, laminate, cut (once) and velcro. You can use a coil binding machine to create a coil bound activity book, or you can use a three hold punch and place in a binder or use binder clips for many years of teaching and learning.

Enjoy-

IFIOgirl

I'll Figure It Out

What's Included

A PDF with 20 pages.

Colors in this activity include

orange

pink

yellow

purple

blue

gold

gray

green

red

black

white

Resource Tags

sorting activity sorting colors visual discrimination early learning occupational therapy grouping colors task based learning autism discrete trial training visual attention

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