Do your students need help remaining on task in your play dough center? Sometimes, just adding a few picture cues or task cards can increase engagement in a learning center.
You can use these printable “I Can” task cards to help your students stay on task in the play dough center. While you don’t want to stifle your student’s creativity, in the beginning of the school year the play dough center can be a free for all if you’re not careful.
Play Dough Task Cards
Using task cards can be especially helpful if your students have not had any prior experience with play dough. They’re also helpful if you need to provide evidence that early learning standards are being supported in your play dough center.
Each card has a picture of a task along with an “I can” statement. Students can look at the pictures as a reminder of the different ways to use the dough.
There is also a task card cover and an instruction page in case you would like to place the cards inside a task box for independent use.
Another idea is to select some of the pictures, cut, and glue to a page to create a poster for your play dough center.
I Can Play Dough Task Cards
The play dough tasks included are:
- Make a small ball
- Make a large ball
- Roll a snake
- Cut the dough with a knife
- Knead the dough
- Flatten the dough with my hands
- Flatten the dough with a rolling pin
- Use cookie cutters
- Pinch the dough with my fingers
- Press the dough with my fingers
You can print the cards, laminate, cut, and place them in a task box or your play dough center. Choose the cards that best your needs and those of your students.
Ideas for Playing with Play Dough
- Use Cookie Cutters: Add fun and creativity, spark imaginative play
- Spell Your Name: Alphabet knowledge and name recognition
- Make People: Develop oral language skills (children lend voice to people)
- Roll Snakes: Develop fine motor skills and palmar arch in hand. Skills necessary for holding a pencil.
- Roll the Dough: Using rolling pins allows children to practice their coordination skills and exercises the muscles in the shoulders and arms necessary for writing on flat surfaces
- Cut Dough: Develop fine motor skills in hand. The dough provides a thick, stable medium which makes cutting easier and provides children with successful opportunities to practice cutting with scissors.
You can find these cards, and much more in my big bundle of play dough task cards you can use for the entire year.
Love the “I Can Cards” with the real photos. Amazing how something as simple as giving suggestions of “I can” helps with center management.
Thanks for stopping by Kathy, glad you like the cards! In pre-k it’s a good day if they don’t eat the play dough 🙂
Thanks for these. A good resource to have. Shared on FB and pinning right now 🙂
This is EXACTLY what our new principal just “suggested” –you must be a mind reader:) thanks so much
I’m so glad these will be helpful to you Debbie! I’m not a mind reader but I wish I was 🙂
You have so many great playdough resources! Thank so much for generously sharing your Play Dough “I Can” Task Cards. I featured your printable as the Free Printable of the Day at the Living Montessori Now Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/LivingMontessoriNow.
Thanks for stopping by Deb! I appreciate the shout out on your FB page 🙂
Oh I absolutely love this idea!
Glad you like it Play Create Explore, thanks for stopping by!
I printed these last week, used them this week. The kids LOVE them. I printed them scaled 2 pages to one sheet of cardstock so the kids traded them …” try this one” . . . as they enjoyed working with clay.
That’s great Fran! I’m so glad your students enjoyed the cards, thanks for letting me know!
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