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Nursery rhymes are an important part of anyone’s childhood. They can impart many important lessons to children, as well as being a lullaby to calm a cranky or crying child. Teaching nursery rhymes requires its fair share of attention and devotion from parents and teachers, but it can be done in play as an activity that your child will love. We've outlined everything you need to know about teaching this fun topic, so your kids can start reciting nursery rhymes in no time.

1

Sing to them and with them.

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  1. Be prepared to be silly and goofy with them. Sing it to them when they're young and you're getting them to sleep or changing their diapers. Sing along with them once they're older, in their car seat or while they're playing. Be prepared to rhyme and sing until the tunes and words are just naturally drilled into them. [1]
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2

Be patient.

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  1. Nursery rhymes should be fun, not a taxing chore. Your child may mix up the words, sing the wrong tune, or even get creative and sing the wrong rhyme on purpose; this is perfectly okay, and you must remain patient. [2]
    • If you feel any deficiency in your child’s progress, sing the same poem to them, during play and other relaxing activities, again and again. Understand that the repetitive quality of nursery rhyme phrases helps in memorizing them.
4

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  1. After you teach about a certain nursery rhyme today, ask questions about it tomorrow before starting the next rhyme. For instance, you can ask questions like “Where was Humpty Dumpty sitting?”, “Why couldn’t the soldiers fix him?”. [4]
    • This is the quickest way to get them to memorize a rhyme and it works faster if you give little prizes for every right answer.
5

Draw patterns.

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  1. Use this to your advantage by helping them learn a vast number of nursery rhymes. You can engage yourself in this activity with your child by drawing a character from a certain rhyme you wish to get your child memorized. [5]
    • For instance, you can sing together ‘Humpty Dumpty’ with your child and then draw Humpty on a paper and ask your child to identify it and relate to that rhyme. This activity will greatly enhance the memory and association skills.
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  • Question
    What nursery rhymes are scary for children (e.g. have a dark/scary backstory)?
    Community Answer
    Some examples include: Three Blind Mice. Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater. London Bridge is Falling Down. Rock-a-Bye-Baby. Ring Around the Rosie. Check the back story for each one to know why they're of the darker variety.
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