Below you’ll find a wide selection of rhymes, stories, and songs!
Sing Along: Good Morning Train with Sarah
Repetition is very valuable for young children, especially when it comes to name practice, and this song is definitely going to get stuck in your head! Hearing their own name…
Sing Along: Jingle Bells
Grab your favourite musical instrument (it doesn’t have to be a bells!) and get ready for a jingling sing along! Instruments can make adults more comfortable singing and they give…
Sing Along: I’m A Big Snowman with Sarah
Telling stories is a wonderful way to increase children’s vocabulary. As you tell a story or when you sing a song, talk about the things your child hasn’t experienced and…
Rhyme Time: Up In The Sky with Amy
How about a fun game of opposites today? And I don’t mean up becomes down and out becomes in! With baby, we can practice what each of these words mean…
Sing and Read Along: We Wave Our Scarves Together with Sarah
Shared reading is the single best way to help children develop early literacy skills, so read with your child every day and talk about the books you’ve read! Do you…
Bilingual Storytime: Festivities in French with Stephanie and Mackenzee
Mackenzee is back for another Bilingual Storytime, joining Miss Stephanie to practice some festive, French words! We’re reading “Dinosaur vs. Santa” by Bob Shea (published by Little, Brown Books for…
Rhyme Time: Cookies In The Tin with Amy
Singing and dancing often go hand in hand, and with baby, bouncing along to a song add to the fun of learning through song. What new sounds will your baby…
Rhyme Time: I Bounce You Here with Sarah
Play is one of the primary ways young children learn about how the world works and learn language. A great place to start is a playful song or rhyme!
Sing Along: This New Friend with Amy
Just because your child may not know a word doesn’t mean you should avoid it! Whether it’s in a song or a story, new words create opportunities for learning and…
Sing Along: Let’s All Tap Our Sticks Today with Sarah
Singing develops memory and listening skills, which is why in our Baby programs, we spend a lot of time singing and rhyming, and repeat these songs and rhymes each week….
Sing Along: Frère Jacques with Amy
Babies brains are incredible: they can learn multiple languages at once and by the age of just 6 months, can distinguish between different languages! In the first years of life,…
Sing Along: Snow is Falling with Sarah
Children learn and practice language through play, so how can you put that into practice? Take familiar songs and add actions or props! Or, get imaginative during playtime and prompt…
Sing Along: The Elevator Song with Amy
You are your child’s favourite playmate and play is how children learn, so for today’s sing along, let’s pretend and play together! Hope in the elevator, it’s time for a…
Sing Along: Everybody Knows That I Love My Toes with Amy
Let’s celebrate baby and practice body parts all at the same time! This jazzy tune will have you and baby swaying along.
Sing Along: Boots, Jacket, Scarf and Hat with Sarah
It may be unseasonably warm right now, but cool weather is coming soon, and this twist on “Head and Shoulders, Knees and Toes” will help your child learn what to…
Sing Along: Itsy Bitsy Spider with Amy
You probably know the Itsy Bitsy Spider, but what about the Big, Gigantic Spider, the Teensy, Tiny Spider, and Eency the Spider?! Remixing classic nursery rhymes is a great way…
Rhyme Time: Icky Bicky Soda Cracker with Sarah
Play is one of the primary ways young children learn about how the world works and learn language. Singing a playful song is always a great place to start and…
Rhyme Time: Criss Cross Applesauce with Amy
Did you know that… The sense of rhythm learned from listening to songs and rhymes helps children to identify patterns, like rhyming words, which will help them learn to read?…
Sing Along: Bears are Sleeping with Sarah
Singing helps children hear the distinct sounds that make up words because songs emphasize different syllables and sounds. This makes singing a very important part of early literacy skill development!…
Sing Along: Wheels On The Bus with Amy
Sing-a-long, without worrying what you sound like! Your child loves your unique voice, so don’t be shy about singing to your child. And when you sing to them, you’re helping…
Sing Along: Twinkle, Twinkle with Sarah
DYK: children who have memorized some nursery rhymes before they start kindergarten will be more successful in school than children who do not know nursery rhymes?! Better start practicing! Join…