L.W. asks from Florence, KY on September 12, 2011
How Old Was Your Child When They Knew Colors?
Hi Ladies
Im wondering if you can help me. Everything I read online gives me mixed reviews. She will be 3 in December (soo just a shade over 2.5 years old) Im not worried about my little girl but I am interested to hear what everyone else has experienced. She can say the alphabet (well sing it) speaks English with some Spanish (thanks Dora) and this morning was talking about the days of the week (monday, tuesday etc)
However she is terrible with colors and even tells us "I dont know any colors mommy". She KNOWS Orange and Brown really well but confuses all the other colors.
Can you ladies tell me how old your kids were when they started to be interested in learning colors? When did they understand colors (like how long did it take them to get all the basic colors down....6 months? etc)
Again, Im not worried that there is some learning disablitiy but Im hoping for all of your opinions, exeriences to know how long and how hard to 'push' colors. I have been working nightly in the tub and with her night time books.
BTW she is in daycare for about 10 hours per day.. they do colors and letters of the week so they are helping too.
Thanks Ladies
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S.H. answers from St. Louis on September 12, 2011
as early as 18 months....& usually before age 3. It is very rare to go beyond 3. What concerns me is that she is telling you that she can't grasp it. Has she ever been tested for color blindness? Just a thought......
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M.G. answers from Chicago on September 12, 2011
At 2.5 my boys began recognizing what words were colors. They will be three next month and have had colors mastered for about two months now. I didn't push it at all, just exposed them. I wouldn't worry yet.
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G.M. answers from Los Angeles on September 12, 2011
SOLID on ALL the basic colors? My son was 4. He was in a pre-K class where I would volunteer twice a month and I never stopped being SHOCKED at the kids who were 4 and did NOT know their colors! Some of them might only be able to tell me 1 color correctly if any at all. I think children are just little people, each of whom have different strengths and weaknesses and they DEFINITELY develop at different rates! Most end up knowing all that needs to be known in the end.
I like to remind myself of the difference between my sister and myself...she is older and waaaay more successful than I am, but CANNOT do math in her head! So she buys dinner and I calculate the tip! :)
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S.H. answers from St. Louis on September 12, 2011
as early as 18 months....& usually before age 3. It is very rare to go beyond 3. What concerns me is that she is telling you that she can't grasp it. Has she ever been tested for color blindness? Just a thought......
4 moms found this helpful
S.W. answers from Minneapolis on September 12, 2011
Our daughter's daycare teacher told us she thought our daughter was color blind... She was very verbal and ahead of her age in most areas, but did not know her colors. I don't remember for sure how old she was, but about the age of your daughter. I kinda freaked out. I bought a color test online that was designed to test kids for color blindness before they are old enough to read. She wasn't colorblind... (I spend $100 on the test and it told us in one minute that she could see the differences between colors. I donated it to the daycare teacher so she wouldn't scare any other parents with this nonsense.)
Children's brains and abilities develop unevenly. Some areas will be advanced and some "behind" for their age. At 2 1/2, she is too young to worry about learning her colors. She will learn this and other skills, when that part of her brain is developed enough. Besides, it is rare for girls to be colorblind, it is more common in boys.
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K.W. answers from Seattle on September 13, 2011
She may be just slow on recognizing colors. This is okay. She may also be colorblind. The fact that she says "I don't know any colors mommy" tends to support the idea that she might be colorblind. This is also okay.
To translate her statement (if she is colorblind) into adult non-colorblind speech. "I see lots of colors in the world. But the labels you give colors doesn't match the colors I am seeing. When I describe the colors I see, people say I am wrong. I haven't figured out what this pattern means yet."
This might make a lot more sense if you take a look at this site:
http://critiquewall.com/2007/12/10/blindness
If you're concerned about it, you can find simple colorblindness tests online or at the library. Don't spend $100 on a kit.
My son is yellow-blue colorblind. He was six before he sheepishly confessed that gray squirrels look pink to him. Now, when he asks me what color something is, I reply "It looks orange to my eyes. What does it look like to your eyes?" Usually it looks the same to him. Sometimes it looks different. It depends on the exact tones of the color in question.
Hope this helps.
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K.C. answers from Orlando on September 12, 2011
I think my babe might be an artist, she knew her colors before she could talk and "color words" were some of her first words. She had a couple of different color books and she would ALWAYS turn to the correct page, by about a year. She is 2 months younger than your daughter now and loves (!) to learn the different colors, right now she is likes to tell the different shades of colors, violet, lilac, teal, maroon, etc. But she is NOT the norm.
I think the best way to teach colors is from books (like you already are!) and in the car or on walks. You don't really have to "teach" it you just work it into everyday conversation. "look at the green leaves on the tree" "Mommy sees a yellow car next to us." etc.
Also color together, have her pick out a color of construction paper and tell her what it is, sit down with her and talk her through it. "can you pass mommy that yellow crayon?" "Can you draw with the pink?" and guide and help her along the way.
Before being a mom I used to teach first grade and I could not believe the number of kids that would come into my class and not know shapes and colors. I think they should know the basics (from the 8 pack of crayolas :)) before kindergarten. Don't get worried/upset she will get it in her time. All kids pick things up a little differently.
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L.L. answers from Rochester on September 12, 2011
My first child knew and could recognize (point to) colors when she was 18 months, and could say them all shortly after. My 16 month old knows red, blue, yellow, and green...we're working on the rest. Colors are something that are very easy to teach, because our world is one of color...just use every opportunity to describe something with color. It's not "put on this shirt," it's "Put on this red shirt, please" or "hand me your blue cup" or whatever.
However, to be fair, my husband and I are both musicians and artists and things like this tend to come very easy for our children. My six year old still cannot tie her shoes or ride a bike, and I know lots of younger children that can do these things. It all balances.
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S.H. answers from Honolulu on September 12, 2011
My kids, both of them, were 2 years old when they knew colors.
And by 3, they knew their shapes.
Some kids are not as visual.
Kids at this age, mostly are auditory.... up until about 8 years old.
Your daughter is normal.
There is a wide range of it.
And by year end, a lot can change.
Don't make her feel self-conscious though.
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J.S. answers from Minneapolis on September 12, 2011
I think it's great she can tell you she doesn't know her colors! That is pretty perceptive for 2.5.
My boys were early, like 18-20 months. My daughter is 2.5 (she'll be 3 in Nov.) and she's just getting them now. She still makes mistakes sometimes.
J.
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K.U. answers from Detroit on September 12, 2011
For my daughter it was somewhere between 2 and 2.5 that she knew most of them (the basic colors in the rainbow plus brown, black and white - but not sure how long it took her, she seemed to figure it all out at once). But every kid is different and from what I've heard it can take some of them a while to get their colors down. I am sure eventually she will figure it out. :)
EDITED TO ADD: One of our favorite books has been "Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?" by Bill Martin and Eric Carle. It's another great way to help with color recognition.
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