Begin your preschool curriculum with an outline that provides the basic template you will use weekly. Include activities the students will participate in daily, such as circle time and music.
Incorporate dramatic play into early childhood lesson plans. Preschoolers learn through role play and imitation. Provide items to nurture the children’s creativity, such as costumes and dress-up clothes, wigs, kitchen toys, play food, dolls, plastic cars and boxes that open and close.
Include activities to build fine motor skills in the weekly lesson plan. Children learn fine motor skills by using their fingers and other small muscle groups. Incorporate preschool crafts such as lacing cards, practicing cutting skills, stringing beads and puzzles into preschool education. (See step six)
Integrate activities that promote gross motor skills. These activities can take place on the playground or inside the classroom, depending on the weather. Include jumping, climbing, running, bouncing balls and any activity that helps promote large muscle growth in preschool children.
Add language and pre-writing skills by reading to the children every day, teaching the alphabet through songs and simple flash cards, and providing students with access to picture books during center time. Tracing pictures and the alphabet with a pencil promotes writing skills. You can use pre-K worksheets to bring consistency to the lesson plan.
Incorporate arts and crafts into the daily schedule. Art projects should include a variety of supplies that stimulate the senses, such as paints, paint brushes, butcher paper, modeling clay, crayons, markers and collage materials.