24 answers

Learning Colors

My daughter turned 2 in May and is very strong willed and independent. She knows her ABC’s, she can count to 10, she has a great memory, and she speaks very well for her age. The one thing she can not get is her colors, everything is green. I am very well aware that every child learns at their own pace, but my husband is colored blind and I was wondering if anyone knows if that is something that can be passed along? I work with her everyday on her colors and when you ask her what color something is, she either says “I don’t know” or “green”. Any suggestions? Thank you!

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Thank you all for your feedback. It is always nice to hear every ones experience. I am going to continue talking about colors everyday and I am sure she will get it. You all had great ideas and I plan on trying them all!!!! This is such a wonderful site, it is good to know other moms/kids are going through the same thing.

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I too learned in school only males can be colored blind.
I am also a preschool teacher and when she gets dressed ask her which shirt she wants to wear. Or what she wants to eat. I would have a green shirt or kiwi or green apple broccali along with her favorite food, maybe a piece of candy and then ask her what color food she wants. She will quickly realize she needs to know another color besides green :)

I asked my husband who is a bio. major and he said that girls could not be colored blind. I had a similar problem with my daughter at 18 months old. I thought she new her abc, numbers to 20, memorized songs, but colors where very hard for her. Everyone told me she was to young not to worry, but I was worried. I bought her color book which she loved and I would read it to her everyday and tell her the colors it only took about 2 weeks to learn them. When I wanted her to give me something I would ask her to hand me that blue block or whatever it was. By telling her the color she was able to recognize what each color looked like. We even played a game in the car when a vehicle passed by I would ask her what color is that vehicle and she would tell. She is now 22 months old and that is her favorite car game. I think the more you make a game of it the easier it is for them to learn good luck.

My daughter did the same thing. She would say everything was pink, so one day when we were walking down the stairs I asked the color of something and she said the right one. I knew at that time she was just being strong willed as usual, but she knew her colors. You just have to catch her at a time when she has her guard down. Have a good day!

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If you really think she might have gotten the second gene from your side of the family, you can call ECI and ask if they have a listing of pediatric eye doctors to refer you to, or if they could come to your house and test her. ECI only works with children until they are 3, but if she will need additional assistance in school, it's MUCH easier to get it if she's been in ECI.

Keep working with her in the meantime...it sounds like you're doing a great job already!!

1 mom found this helpful

My situation was exactly like your's. My husband is color blind, my daughter could count, say ABC's, talk very well, etc. at age 2. Colors was a little later. She is now 2 years 9 months and knows many colors. Just give it time.

I don't know much about the color blind thing...but I think it skips generations and is mostly passed on from the grandfather???? Not sure about that though.

That is so neat that your daughter turned 2 in May because so did my daughter! Anyhow, I have been working with her on colors as well, and the method I use is painting her toenails a new color each week. I don't know how you feel about doing that so early, but it worked for me. She knows blue, green, pink, red, purple, & yellow, just to name a few. Now she points to the colors and says the name when she sees them.

Don't sweat it. My son who knows his ABC's, numbers, colors etc. often gets irritated when we ask him to "perform" and will either say the wrong color on purpose or will just ignore us or say "I don't know". I talked with the teacher at his MDO and she assured me that he ABSOLUTELY knows his colors! I wanted to be sure, so I got some Hershey's Kissables and I got one of each color out and told him that if he could tell me the color than he could eat them. Of course, he knew his colors then without hesitation! I would not even worry about it!

Hi Kristy! Color blindness is hereditary and it usually effects males more so than womnen. However, if your husband is color blind your daughter my be too. There are simple tests I'm sure you can find online but she would need to be able to recognize letters and numbers. Hope that helps!

A.

i think knowing colors is a more difficult concept to grasp because they are not constant. for example, a flower or shirt can be white, red, yellow, purple, etc... colors are used as adjectives, like big and little.
that being said, a couple of months ago i decided to teach my daughter her colors (she will be 2 in september). i realize it's not something she has to know, i just felt like it would be useful information for her to have. i basically talked about the color of things all day long (elmo is red, would you like some yellow banana, we are going to put on your pink shirt). i used to teach kindergarten, so i got out some of the materials i used with my kids. she loves playing with these large, plastic buttons i bought for sorting (she's not into putting things into her mouth anymore, so i wasn't worried about her choking). i noticed that she already knew the color black and would pick them out and put them in a group together. then i started picking up the red ones, saying red, and putting them in another group. i did this several times and asked her to help. i would talk about other things that she is familiar with that were the color we were looking for. we played like this for about 2 weeks, talked about colors all day and i was amazed because she knew them. we still talk about colors and she has fun pointing them out. i just made identifying the color of things a part of our everyday conversations and even though she knows them perfectly now, we still talk about them all of the time. in my experience, as long as you make learning anything fun and just part of your day, it will happen. we didn't sit down with some paper and crayons or flashcards and work on memorizing colors.
i would also ask the daycare to see what they are doing with her at school. good luck :)

saw you had several responses, but thought you would like to know that though color-blindness can be handed down, it is far more likely to occur in males than females. And being so young and a girl, I wouldn't worry about it as yet. But, as always, if it makes you feel better, talk to your dr.
I know the color-blind info because family friends of ours have it in their family and they have told us what their dr. told them. And yes, all that have it in their family happen to be male (they have 2 girls w/o it and 4 boys, 2 with it and the father has it).

T.

My daughter did the same thing. She would say everything was pink, so one day when we were walking down the stairs I asked the color of something and she said the right one. I knew at that time she was just being strong willed as usual, but she knew her colors. You just have to catch her at a time when she has her guard down. Have a good day!

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