One of the best ways to teach a child deeply andcomprehensively think - it's guessing his riddles. With answers (about school, polyclinic, pool), you can act in different ways - the options are discussed below. Born in ancient times, children's poetic riddles continue to fulfill their main role to this day - to demonstrate to children how important it is to be able to think outside of specific areas of knowledge and to sum up all their life experience, albeit not very significant, for the solution of the task set before them .
Few kids like to go to school.Someone there is just bored, someone is opposed to the very fact that he is forced to perform tasks. Factors of negative attitudes toward the educational institution can serve as clashes with peers, and rejection of teachers, and the need to throw your favorite cartoons, computer games and the Internet for sitting at a desk with a tedious textbook. Sincere conversations, which sometimes try to initiate anxious parents, rarely lead to tangible results. Try to approach a negligent student with an unexpected - creative - side and offer him riddles about the school - complex! With the answers of the child you can not rush: even if it seems to you that he has long forgotten about your attempts to show him the "true way", in fact the schoolboy will almost certainly secretly reflect on the proposed puzzle. In the same way, you can come up with or take from any sources riddles about the hospital and doctors, about the kindergarten, about the pool or the circle, to which the child refuses to walk just out of stubbornness.
Children's puzzles are presented in books and manualsabout the school with answers. Responses, as a rule, follow directly behind the puzzle; in some cases they are slightly encrypted with different fonts so that the small child does not immediately understand where to look for the clue or simply could not read it (for example, if the text is printed "upside down"). You can use your own imagination and diversify the solution of puzzles: provide the child with a choice of several answers, create an original puzzle from the word-solution or invite the child to draw or show, and not to voice the answer. Potential variations - a great variety.
Try using the following riddles with answers about the school:
With the warm-up, the lesson began,
And I'm still waiting for football.
And every day on your doorstep
I go with a smile, ...!
(School)
Sometimes it is formidable,
Sometimes - deliberately negligent.
Sometimes - even frivolous.
But I must be diligent!
(Teacher)
Mugs and triangles,
Figures and squares,
Charts and toe
Under the power ...!
(Mathematics)
Riddles with answers (about school, polyclinic, anyunloved place) will not only form the child's skills of figurative and associative thinking, but also help overcome his dislike for the institution. It is important that the texts imply a positive assessment of the school and emphasize the need for education - of course, in fairly simple images and in the form of small poems written in a language that is accessible to children.