Evidence-based curriculum for ages 2-8
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20+ Play-Based Learning Activities for 3-Year-Olds 

Help boost your 3-year-old’s math, reading, and motor skills with these 20+ creative play-based activities.

There’s no better time to learn through play than the toddler years! Play-based learning activities offer benefits beyond targeted educational concepts, such as building motor skills and developing social-emotional awareness.

The following learning activities for 3-year-olds foster broader abilities, like motor skills and more, while also helping little ones work on skills they’ll need for kindergarten. But mostly, they’re just a lot of fun! Use them as educational activities for 3-year-olds (and even slightly older) at home or in preschool. 

At this age, kids are ready to start learning the alphabet, which you can incorporate into play activities. Be sure to continue reading regularly with your child, asking them questions about the story to ensure comprehension. Here are some simple learning activities for 3-year-olds that can help them get ready to start reading.

1. Explore Alphabet Sensory Bins 

Sensory bins are so much fun for preschoolers, as they allow them to explore new textures and discover hidden objects. Create your own using a plastic bin and the filler of your choice.

An alphabet sensory bin with colorful letters.

2. Act Out Stories

Imaginative play helps encourage creativity, and you can make it even more meaningful by having kids act out stories you’ve read together. This kind of story retelling helps develop skills like sequence of events, remembering character traits, and other key reading comprehension concepts. You can act out stories with them or encourage them to use stuffed animals, puppets, or other toys as characters instead.

Two young children acting out a fairy tale.

3. Create Letter Crafts

Pull out your craft supplies and let your preschooler get creative with alphabet letters. You can create collages, letter animals, rainbow letters, glitter letters, and so much more. Get started with these ideas for letter A crafts, letter B crafts, and letter C crafts.

Free fun letter A crafts from ABCmouse.com.
Free fun letter B crafts from ABCmouse.com.
Free fun letter C crafts from ABCmouse.com.

4. Make Playdough Letters

What toddler doesn’t love the squish of playdough? Molding, squeezing, and shaping the dough strengthens motor skills too. Step playtime up a notch by showing your child how to shape letters out of playdough. This fun, tactile approach can further help them commit these letter shapes to memory. When you’re done, call out the letter names and let your little one smash them flat one by one!

Colorful playdough letters.

5. Sing and Dance to Alphabet Songs 

Singing and dancing aren’t just fun–they also helps kids remember information. Incorporate catchy alphabet songs into your toddler dance parties, and encourage everyone to sing along. The ABCmouse YouTube channel is full of fun alphabet songs you and your child will love.

By now, your child is probably beginning to learn to count, starting with their fingers. At age 3, your child can begin developing number sense skills like cardinality and one-to-one correspondence. While targeted learning activities are good, kids can also learn early math skills with a hands-on approach, using activities like those described below.

Tip: For more great math activities for young children, check out our list of engaging Hands-on Math Activities here. 

6. Move and Count 

Try this: Set a timer for 60 seconds, then ask your child to see how many times they can do a specific movement (hop on one foot, touch their toes, etc.) before the timer goes off, counting as they go. Then, try again to see if they can break their record (and count even higher).

7. Learn About Measurement

Children using a measuring tape to measure brazil on a map.

This is the time to learn about comparison words like bigger and smaller, taller and shorter, more and less. You don’t need to worry about inches or pounds just yet. Instead, try games like looking for leaves of five different sizes, then putting them in order from largest to smallest. Get more preschool measurement activities here.

8. Play Shape Bingo 

Point out and help your preschooler identify shapes in the world around them, such as triangles, squares, circles, and rectangles. Count the number of sides together, and talk about straight lines and curves. Then, get our free printable Shape Bingo pages and see who can get three in a row first or use our shape coloring pages for extra practice independently.

Free fun shape bingo cards from ABCmouse.com.

9. String Bead Patterns

A child stringing a pattern of beads on pipe cleaner.

Try this: Create patterns for your child to copy, such as three red beads, two blue beads, and one yellow bead. Identifying and recreating patterns develops logical reasoning skills they’ll use in more advanced math and beyond. 

10. Sort Everything 

Part of identifying patterns is determining what certain items have in common. This means identifying characteristics like color, shape, size, texture, and more. When kids sort items by their properties, they learn to look more closely at details and practice comparing. Try sorting toy cars by color, building blocks by size, or silverware by shape. Find more fun sorting activities for preschoolers here.

11. Draw the Weather 

A picture of different types of weather drawn by a young child.

Start a weather journal in a blank notebook. Each day, ask your child to draw a picture of the weather they see outside. Record the date and weather details like temperature and rain or snowfall amounts on that day’s page. From time to time, you can look back through the book and talk about the changes in weather throughout the seasons.

Tip: Here are more fun preschool weather activities to try.

12. Flap Like a Butterfly, Buzz Like a Bee

Imitating animals comes naturally to kids, and it can also encourage them to learn more about various species. Invite your child to move and make the noises of all sorts of animals. If they’re unsure of the animal, spend a moment doing some research together to learn about it. This activity is good physical exercise and so much fun to watch!

A bee and a butterfly hovering over a bright pink flower.

13. Mix Paints to Learn About Colors 

A child mixing paint in a painters pallet.

14. Find Out What Sinks or Floats 

15. Plant a Garden 

Whether you’ve got a big veggie patch in the backyard or a row of herbs growing on the windowsill, gardening teaches toddlers about plant life cycles and healthy eating. Try the classic activity of planting a bean in a transparent cup to watch the roots grow below the surface. You can also check out this cute silly seeds activity.

Silly seed animals made from growing grass seed in cups.

16. Help Out in the Kitchen 

Try this: Let children help measure ingredients, learn the names of various kitchen tools, or sniff the various spices.

A mother and daughter exploring textures in a kitchen.

17. Go On a Sensory Scavenger Hunt

18. Try Out Musical Instruments

Tip: Resist the urge to show children exactly the right way to play instruments at first and let them experiment. When they begin to show more interest, start demonstrations and lessons.

A young boy playing drums on pots and pans on the living room floor.

19. Make a Face

A young boy making lots of different silly faces.

20. Play Online Games

A little screen time, even at this age, can be a valuable way for children to learn. The online games at ABCmouse are specifically designed to allow kids to learn independently through play and work on developing early math and reading skills, as well as other important concepts. Take a look at our collection of online learning games and choose a few to introduce to your 3-year-old.

ABCmouse #1 learning app for kids!

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