We like how ChickaDEE balances education and entertainment.īuy it: ChickaDEE at Owlkids 10. Jam-packed full of interactive games, hands-on science experiments, amazing photos, illustrations, and stories. It’s great for newly independent readers who are excited about reading a variety of content.īuy it: Spider at Cricket Media 9. This artful choice is full of stories, poems, articles, and illustrations from around the world. Kids can also submit their own art and writing for consideration.īuy it: Highlights for Children 8. Science projects, puzzles, games, and stories encourage creativity and critical thinking skills. This magazine sparks kids’ interest in nature and gets them ready to read.īuy it: Ranger Rick Jr. Little ones love the fun activities, simple stories, wild animal features, and seasonal crafts and recipes. Humpty Dumpty has stories, poems, cartoons, puzzles, games, recipes, and crafts that are designed with an emergent reader in mind.īuy it: Humpty Dumpty subscription 6. We also like to save back issues that relate to curriculum topics.īuy it: National Geographic Little Kids 5. National Geographic’s signature photos draw kids in, and the content is great for a quick, engaging read-aloud or kids’ own browsing. This is our favorite science and social studies magazine for preschool and kindergarten kids. National Geographic Little Kids (Ages 2–6) Each issue is filled with charming characters, activities, songs, poems, and stories.īuy it: Ladybug at Cricket Media 4. This is such a great resource if kids in your classroom speak (or are learning) Spanish! All the same great features of the original magazine in a bilingual format.Įvery page of Ladybug is beautiful, colorful, and a delight to read. It has fun recurring features they can access independently-hooray for Hidden Pictures! There are also diverse short stories, poems for shared reading, and awesome how-to directions for projects and recipes.īuy it: Highlights High Five subscription 2. This is our top choice for the best magazine for pre-K and kindergarten kids. We only recommend items our team loves!) 1. (Just a heads up, WeAreTeachers may collect a share of sales from the links on this page. Whether you get a classroom subscription or stock up on back issues that fit your curriculum, we think these are some of the best magazines for kids to land in your mailbox. There are so many classroom uses, from adding variety to your classroom library to using excerpts for reading or writing mini-lessons, or to boost kids’ background knowledge about a topic. No matter how many awesome tech tools we find, we’ll always love a great print magazine.
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