Highlights
Nutapat learns to pour liquids from little containers that are just right for her small hands. Note the little sponge for wiping up spills. She learns to be careful not to spill a single drop. This exercise helps developing fine motor control and increase her attention span |
Proud works with the Dressing Frames to master the dressing skills that classically challenge her as she begins to take her first steps toward independence. |
This special set of numeral cards is used to help Noparuth learns to read numerals up to 9,999. |
At age of two and a half or three, our children are introduced to a few sandpaper letters at a time until they have mastered the entire alphabet. They trace each letter as it would be written, using two fingers of their dominant hand. As they trace the letter’s shape, they receive three distinct impressions: they see the shape of the letter, they feel its shape and how it is written, and they hear the teacher pronounce its sound. |
The Construction Triangles allow Muffin to explore the geometric possibilities inherent within several different types of triangles. |
The Color Tablets (box II) help Nutapat learns to distinguish among primary and secondary colors and tones, while mastering the words used to describe each color and shade. (There are three separate boxes of Color Tablets.) |
The knobbed cylinders teach Pavida to discriminate among various sizes and shapes either diameter, length, or both and indirectly prepare her to learn mathematics and the concept of quantity. |
The Puzzle Map of the World introduces the seven continents. Each is shown in a distinct color. Children learn the names and location of each continent. |
Before Pavida can begin to understand history, she needs to begin to grasp the concept of time. Pavida is learning to tell time, along with the other concepts of the passage of time, such as: How long is a minute, an hour, a day, or a year? |
Land and Water Forms Noparuth is pouring water to the three dimensional models trays to create a higher level of sensory impression. Here he explores the idea that an Isthmus is a narrow piece of land between two larger bodies of water, while a Strait is a narrow passage of water connecting two large bodies of water. |