Games and exercises on the topic “WILD ANIMALS”material on speech development (senior group) on the topic


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SPEECH DEVELOPMENT. LEXICAL TOPIC “WILD BEASTS OF OUR FORESTS AND THEIR CHILDREN”

CHILDREN SHOULD KNOW THE NOUNS: bear, she-bear, bear cub, wolf, she-wolf, cub, hare, hare, little hare, fox, fox, fox, fox, hole, lair, squirrel, squirrel, hollow, moose, elk, calf, horns, hedgehog , hedgehog, hedgehog, wild boar, female boar, boar, badger, badger, little badger, forest, clearing, cheat, paw, wool, claws, nose, ears, hooves, tail. Muzzle, snout, mouth, animals, cubs, bushes, trees, mouse, lynx, raccoon, beaver, deer, marten, fangs, sable, mink, mole, den, connecting rod. ADJECTIVES: brown, clubfooted, cunning, predatory, gray, tireless, scary, thick (fur), red, wild, fluffy, dexterous, careful, fast, white, cowardly, long-eared, lop-eared, sensitive (ears), oblique, timid, velvet, prickly, wolf, striped. VERBS: wanders, climbs, roars, tears (bast), jumps, gallops, growls, grins. Hunts, escapes, howls, gnaws, digs, runs, “gave a go,” collects, stores, grunts, sniffs, sniffs, listens, hides, pricks, sneaks, sucks, lies down, falls. CHILDREN SHOULD BE ABLE TO NAME THE FAMILY: Bear, she-bear, little bear. Hare, hare, little bunny... SELECT NOUNS TO ADJECTIVES: Brown, club-footed, clumsy -... Gray, toothy, scary -... Cunning, fluffy, red-haired -... CALL MOM: The bear's cub, the fox's cub..., the bunny's... WHO HAS A VOICE : The fox yelps, the bear growls, the wolf howls... WHO LIVES WHERE: A fox lives in a hole. In the den - ... In the den - ... In the hollow - ... TO WHOM WE WILL GIVE WHAT: Meat - to the wolf, raspberries - ..., honey - ..., carrots - ..., nuts - ... SELECT NOUNS TO THE VERB: Hunts - ... Sneaks - ... Howls - ... Bites - ... Jumps - ... Tricks - ... Waddles - ... SELECT SIGNS: Wolf (which one?) -.... Fox (what?) - ... Hedgehog (what?) - ... SELECT ACTIONS: Bear (what is he doing?) - ... Fox (what is he doing?) - ... Hare (what is he doing?) - ... CORRECTLY ANSWERING THE QUESTIONS: Whose? WHOSE? WHOSE? WHOSE? Track - wolf, fox, hare... Ears - bear, hare, squirrel... Head - elk, hedgehog, wolf, fox... FORM NEW WORDS USING PRESIDENTS: Walks - moves, leaves, goes around, passes, enters, enters, descends, finds , leaves, approaches, reaches, comes, leaves, passes. COMPLETE A DESCRIPTIVE STORY ACCORDING TO PLAN. What is the name of? Where does he live? What kind of home does he have? What is the appearance? What habits? What does it eat? How does it get food? What are his enemies? How to defend yourself? What is the cub's name?

The fox is a predator. The fox mainly hunts mice, gophers, and less often hares. The fox cunningly catches hedgehogs. She rolls the hedgehog to the water, he straightens his spines in the water and swims to the shore. This is where the fox is waiting for him. The fox lives in a hole, and in the spring the fox gives birth to cubs. The squirrel is a rodent. She eats nuts, berries, mushrooms, and pine cones. The squirrel has sharp claws. This helps her quickly climb the tree. The fluffy tail serves as a parachute for the squirrel. A squirrel lives in a hollow and insulates its nest with down. In summer the squirrel is red, and in winter it is gray. In winter, the squirrel sleeps almost all the time and rarely looks out of the hollow. The squirrel is a thrifty housewife. She prepares nuts for the winter and dries mushrooms on tree branches. In the spring, squirrels give birth to squirrels. The wolf is a predatory animal. Wolves live in a pack. A pack is a wolf family. Wolves almost always hunt for sick, weak animals. Wolves hunt at night. Wolves live in a den to raise wolf cubs; wolf cubs appear in the spring. The bear is an omnivore. He loves to eat honey, berries, fish, ants, roots, but can also attack humans. The bear is clumsy in appearance, but easily climbs trees and runs quickly. The bear builds a den for himself from twigs, fallen trees, and moss. In winter, a mother bear gives birth to cubs. If a bear has accumulated little fat since the fall, it wakes up in the winter and walks through the forest hungry. For this the bear was nicknamed the connecting rod. The hare is a rodent. The hare feeds on grass, leaves, shrub bark, mushrooms, and roots. In winter, it chews the bark of trees. The hare is white in winter and gray in summer. This helps him hide from predators. Long, fast legs also save the hare from its enemies. The hare runs up the mountain at a run, and down the mountain somersaults. The hare lives under a bush in the summer, and digs a hole in the snow in the winter. In the spring, the hare gives birth to baby hares.

EXERCISE “GUESS AND TELL”. This beast lives in the forest, gnaws the bark of the trunks. In the summer in a gray fur coat, and in the winter in a white one. (Hare) - What does the hare eat in the spring? (grass, leaves). The owner of the forest wakes up in the spring, and in winter, to the howl of a blizzard, he sleeps in a snowy hut. (Bear) -What does a bear eat? (roots, grass, beetles, mice, hares). You and I recognize the animal by these two signs: He wears a gray fur coat in the winter, and a red fur coat in the summer. (Squirrel) - What does a squirrel feed on? (cones, nuts). All winter between the Christmas trees I slept through a bag of needles. “F-f-f-f—stop sleeping, It’s time to get up!” (Hedgehog) - What does a hedgehog eat? (bugs, worms, mice). Gray and toothy. Howls on a rainy day: “Uh-uh...” (Wolf) - What food does a wolf eat? (meat - catches mice, hares, sheep). Fluffy tail, golden fur, lives in the forest, steals chickens in the village. (Fox) - Who else does the fox catch? (mice, hares).

Exercise 1.

Parents are recommended:

- look with your child at illustrations depicting animals of our forests - a hare, a squirrel, a wolf, a bear, a hedgehog and a fox; note their external signs;

- talk about where they live, what they eat; consolidate the names of animals and their cubs in the child’s vocabulary;

- visit the zoo as an excursion.

Task 2.

Solve riddles (learn by choice).

I confess, I am guilty: I am cunning and cunning. I often sneak into the chicken coop in the evening. (Fox)

Under the pines and under the fir trees there lives a ball of needles. (Hedgehog)

A fast little animal hops and hops through the trees. (Squirrel)

Gray flannelette animal, cross-eyed long-eared.

Well, guess who he is, and give him a carrot. (Hare)

Who walks around angry and hungry in the cold winter? (Wolf)

In summer he walks through the forest, in winter he rests in a den. (Bear)

Task 3.

Didactic game “Guess who it is?” (match nouns to adjectives).

Brown, club-footed, clumsy - ... .

Gray, toothy, scary -….

Sly, fluffy, red - ....

Small, long-eared, timid -...

Gray - ..., clubfoot - ..., cunning - ..., prickly - ... .

Task 4.

Didactic game “Who has who?” (word formation exercise): for a bear - a bear cub, for a wolf - ..., for a fox - ...; a bear has cubs, a wolf has ....

Task 5.

Didactic game “Name the family” (word formation exercise): dad is a bear, mom is a bear, cub(s) is a bear cub(s); dad is a wolf..., dad is a hare -...; dad is a hedgehog...; dad is a fox...

Task 6.

Didactic game “Name Mom” (use of the genitive case of nouns): a bear cub for a bear, a little fox for ....

Task 7.

Didactic game “Who gives what voice?” (match the verb to the noun): fox - yelps, bear - growls, wolf - howls, squirrel - ....

Task 8.

Didactic game “Who can you say about ...” (match a noun to the verb): hunts - ..., sneaks _ ... howls - ..., bites - ..., gets scared - ..., jumps - ..., waddles - ..., cunning - ..., tracks - ... .

Task 9.

Didactic game “Who lives where?” (use of the nominative case of nouns).

Living in the hole (who?) is a fox.

In the den - ....

In the hollow -….

Task 10.

Didactic game “Who will we give what?” (use of dative case of nouns).

Meat - to the wolf, raspberries - ..., honey - ..., carrots - ..., apples - ..., nuts - ..., mushrooms - ....

Task 11.

Didactic game “Hunter” (use of the genitive case of nouns). The hunter caught (who?) in the forest - ....

Task 12.

Exercise for coordinating speech and movements.

I'm like a squirrel in a wheel, jumping on the spot,

To make it more fun, let's gallop together.

One, two, three, four, five - the little bunny began to jump.

The little gray one is good at jumping - he jumped ten times.

The child jumps in place.

The child jumps 5 times to count.

After the words “he jumped ten times,” the child jumps 10 times.

Task 13.

Exercises for fingers.

Bunny

The gray bunny jumps deftly.

He has a carrot in his paws.

Lean your elbow on the table, spread your index and middle fingers to the sides, and clench the rest into a fist.

Bunny and ears

The bunny's ears are long and stick out from the bushes.

He jumps and gallops, making his bunnies happy.

Fingers in fist. Point your index and middle fingers up. Move them to the sides and forward.

Task 14.

Compose a descriptive story about a wild animal in our forest (optional) according to plan:

Name.

Where does he live?

Housing.

Appearance.

What does it eat?

Cubs.

Task 15.

Cut out pictures of animals from our forests and paste them into an album.

MAGAZINE Preschooler.RF

Objectives: 1. Clarification and expansion of the dictionary on the topic “Wild Animals”. Consolidating the general concept of wild animals in speech. 2. Improving the grammatical structure of speech (formation and use of nouns in the instrumental case, genitive case with the meaning of absence; nouns with diminutive suffixes). 3.Development of phonemic hearing, distinguishing nouns that are similar in sound and differ in one sound. Development of fine and gross motor skills, attention and memory. 4. Fostering love and respect for nature. Equipment: toys (squirrel, fox, hare, bear, hedgehog), a “wonderful bag” with treats for animals, images of animals on slides, a ball, 2 hoops (large and small), puzzles, a labyrinth, pictures of animals (wild and domestic). Progress of the lesson: Fox enters the group and cries. Speech therapist: What happened? Fox: I lost my little fox? On the way, I met Lesovik, and he told me that he helped the cubs find their mothers. He said that you could help me. Speech therapist: We will help you. What is your little fox? Fox: Small, red-haired, pretty. Labyrinth. Let's see how the little fox could go? (children run their fingers through the maze and look for a way out) -Where did you lose it? Fox: In the forest. Speech therapist: Guys, we need to find ourselves in the forest to find the fox cub. Close your eyes one, two, three! (Slide with a forest) Fox: The forest is big, the road will be difficult, we need to know a lot. Speech therapist: Game “Who lives in the forest?” Hedgehog or knife? Teddy bear or bowl? Bun or squirrel? T-shirt or bunny? (Pictures appear on the slide; at this time the children are putting together puzzles from the game “Who Lives Where?”) Fox: Is there a little fox? No, let's move on. Oh, there are so many animals here, but how do you know which of them lives in the forest and which one lives in a person’s house or near a person’s house? Image of a house and forest. Children pick up domestic animals near the house, and wild ones near the forest... Speech therapist: Who am I hearing? Who says what? (on the slides there is first a sound, and then an image of the heard animal) Guys, now let us also call each other, as animals do. Bear - OOO, bear cub - o-o-o Wolf - UUUU, wolf cub - o-o-o Hedgehog - FFF, hedgehog - f-f-f Fox: There is no fox cub, let's move on. Let's play a little. We will place the adult animals in a large house, and the cubs in a small one. 2 hoops. Children take the offered wild animals, either an adult or a baby, and, to the music, stand with the adult animal in a large hoop, and with the small one, respectively, in a small hoop. Speech therapist: Since we came to visit the animals, we need to treat them. Children take out treats for animals from the “magic bag” (nuts for the squirrel, meat for the wolf, fish for the bear, carrots for the hare) Well done! Speech therapist: Look, Lesovichek brought us something interesting. Let's look into his chest. Game "Who's Missing?" (with animal figures) - What animals do you see on the table? (list) Look carefully, remember them. Now you close your eyes, I will remove one animal, and when you open your eyes you will say who is gone. -Who is missing? (the hare is gone), etc. Speech therapist: Look, whose house is this? (slide with a house) Roof, walls, window, castle, who lives there? (show motor exercises) Animals also have houses, find and select the right house. Children collect puzzles (a hollow for a squirrel, a hole for a fox, a den for a bear.) Pronouncing houses from the slides Fox: Look - Little Fox. Hooray!!! we found it. Thank you guys. Goodbye, I'll go and take the little fox home and feed it. Well done!
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Wild animals of the forest

Hare

The hare lives in the forest. He does not dig holes for himself, but hides in bushes, in recesses under roots, under branches, where he builds a winter hut for himself. The hare's main food is grass, hay, and young tree branches. The hare also eats vegetables, fruits and berries, if he can find them.

Fox

The fox is a wild animal. She lives in the forest, in a hole. The fox is a predatory animal. The main food of foxes is insects (beetles, earthworms) and small rodents (voles). If the fox manages to catch a hare or a bird, which does not happen very often, she will happily eat them too. Often foxes settle next to humans and steal poultry from poultry houses. Sometimes she can also feast on fish washed up on the shore. She will not disdain berries and fruits when she is hungry.

Wolf

The wolf is an animal of the forest. Wolves live in a den. Wolves hunt in packs, so they are able to catch large prey: elk, deer. The wolf will gladly treat himself to both the bird and the bunny. In hungry years, wolves can attack livestock, but this happens very rarely. Wolves are very cautious and afraid of humans.

Hedgehog

Hedgehogs live in the forest. They rarely dig holes themselves, more often they occupy someone else’s or build a nest among protruding roots, under a bush, in depressions in the ground, dragging there a lot of leaves, dry grass and moss. In winter, hedgehogs hibernate. Hedgehogs eat mainly insects. If they come across a snake, they might eat it too. Don't mind eating mushrooms, acorns, berries and fruits.

Brown bear

The brown bear is a wild animal of the forest. For the winter, the bear builds a den for itself and hibernates. The main food of bears is berries, roots, and mushrooms. If a bear finds a bird's nest, it will feast on eggs; if it finds a hive of wild bees, it will eat honey. The bear knows how to catch fish and eats it with pleasure. He can even eat a mouse if he manages to catch it. He will not disdain carrion either.

Squirrel

A squirrel lives in the forest. She finds a hollow in a tree and settles there. The squirrel eats berries, fruits, mushrooms, nuts, acorns and grains. Stores supplies for the winter, hiding them under roots or among tree branches so as not to starve in winter.

Desert Animals

Camel

Camels live in desert and semi-desert. They don't build housing. They feed on grass (both dry and fresh), tree branches, camel thorn, ephedra, wormwood, and chew saxaul branches. A camel accumulates nutrients in its humps, so it can go without food for a long time.

fennec

Fenech lives in deserts and semi-deserts. He digs himself a hole in the sand. Fennec fox is omnivorous. It feeds on insects, lizards, bird eggs, small rodents, and plant roots that can be dug up in the desert.

When the child has become acquainted with animals, their way of life, and nutrition, let him try to tell himself about what he remembers. Pictures and diagrams with an algorithm for composing a descriptive story will help with this >>

At first, you may not be able to get a coherent story, then try printing and cutting the cards above into sectors, and ask your child to arrange the pictures correctly.

More detailed stories for children about animals can be found on our website in the sections:

We enrich and activate our vocabulary. We consolidate knowledge of nouns:

squirrel, hollow, fox, hole, hedgehog, hare, wolf, lair, elk, bear, den, lynx, forest, deer, horns, hooves, body, fangs, wool, fur, needles, skin, mouth, paws, belly, claws;
verbs:
extract, jump, scour, howl, growl, squeak, roar, hunt, hide, yelp, snort, teach, guard, suck, loop, feast;
adjectives:
large, small, shaggy, shaggy, fluffy, strong, cunning, prickly, fast, dexterous, brown, toothy, clumsy, clumsy, beautiful, sharp, striped, powerful, flexible, clumsy, cautious, predatory;
adverbs:
quickly, deftly, slowly, dangerously, scary.

We teach a child to write riddles and descriptions about wild animals

. The first words in the riddle must be the words: this is an animal. The next words may be to clarify the size of the animal (large, small, small, etc.). Then you need to talk about the characteristic features of appearance (fluffy, shaggy, prickly, clumsy) and what the animal eats.

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