Colors are everywhere! Red, blue, yellow, green, orange, purple, black, white, brown, and pink are some colors you can learn to name. When you know the names of colors, you can talk about your art and the world around you.
Point out colors during everyday activities. Sort objects by color. Use color names while painting and drawing. Play color-matching games. Sing color songs. Read books that feature colors prominently.
Colors are one of the first things you notice about the world. When you look at a flower, you see that it might be yellow or pink or purple. When you look at the sky, you see blue. Colors make the world beautiful and interesting!
Learning the names of colors helps you talk about what you see. When you say "I want the red crayon," people know exactly which one you mean. When you say "I painted a green tree," people can picture it. Color names are words that help you share what you see and what you create.
There are many, many colors. Some you will learn first, like red, blue, yellow, green, orange, and purple. Then you might learn black, white, brown, and pink. But colors do not stop there! There are light blues and dark blues, bright reds and soft reds. As you grow, you will learn even more color names like turquoise, magenta, and gold.
The best way to learn colors is to notice them everywhere. Look at your food, your clothes, your toys, and the sky. Point to things and say their color. When you are making art, say the color names out loud as you use them. Before you know it, you will be a color expert!
Topics in reflective domains aren't scored by quiz answers. Read, reflect, and mark when you've thought it through.
This is a foundational topic with no prerequisites.
No prerequisites — this is a starting point.