Apples, apples, apples! It doesn’t feel like fall without some apple activities. While the internet is full of toddler and preschooler apple crafts and printable packs, you don’t need a lot of prep to make apple activities enjoyable and developmentally meaningful.
With just a few intentional rhythms, you can use your child’s natural curiosity about apples to build the invisible skills that matter most for future learning.
Table of Contents
Sound Apple Activities
These playful sound games help build phonological awareness, the foundation for reading.
Apple Clap Game
Say an apple-related word and clap once for each part (syllable).
Examples: apple, pie, core, applesauce, tree, Macintosh, Gala, Fuji, peel, stem, Honeycrisp, shiny, crunchy, yellow, red, green, tart, sweet, crumble, muffin, filling, topping, orchard, blossoms, harvest, season, autumn, seedling

Mapple Monster Game
Have your child turn into the “Mapple Monster,” who only eats things that rhyme with real apple-related words. Ask them if they want an apple. Then they say, “No! I’m a Mapple Monster! I don’t eat apples! I eat _______ (ex: snapples, apples, bapples, happles, etc.)”
Example:
Parent: Do you want to eat a blossom?
Kid: No, I’m a Mapple Monster! I don’t eat blossoms! I eat zossoms!”
Apple Books for Interactive Reading
Interactive reading builds vocabulary, comprehension, and confidence by turning story time into a back-and-forth conversation.
Apple-Themed Books
As an Amazon Associate, I may earn commission from qualifying links.
The Apple Pie Tree by Zoe Hall
Apples, Apples, Apples by Nancy Elizabeth Wallace
Ten Apples Up on Top! by Dr. Seuss
Apple Farmer Annie by Monica Wellington
Apple Trouble by Ragnhild Scamell
For more Apple Books and ideas, check out this 12 Apple Books for Preschoolers.
Example Questions:
What do you think will happen next? How do you think _____ feels right now? Does this remind you of anything?

Apple Activities That Build Language
These activities build vocabulary, expressive language, and background knowledge without needing to “teach” anything directly.
Taste Test
Do a mini apple tasting with a few different varieties. Encourage describing with all five senses:
- “This one is crunchy like…”
- “This one looks like…”
- “If it had a name, what would it be?”

Apple Pretend Play Ideas
Set up a pretend apple stand, bakery, or apple orchard using play food or loose parts such as pom-poms. Take turns being the “shop owner” and the “customer.”
Vocabulary Examples: juicy, crunchy, sour, sweet, basket, sale, MacIntosh, etc.
Oral Language Skill Examples: “How many apples do you have for sale?” “How much for a pie?” “What kind of apples should we pick?”
Apple Field Trip
The best way to build background knowledge is through experiences! If possible, take your child apple picking at an apple orchard. When they read about apples, they will have something to connect their experiences to! Can’t visit an apple orchard? Visit your local grocery store or market and shop for apples together, or do a virtual field trip to an apple packing facility!
Apple Activities That Encourage Observation Skills
Observational play builds visual perception and flexible thinking, which support letter recognition and early print awareness later on.
Hide the Apple
Place a small apple (or apple picture) under one of three cups. Slowly shuffle the cups around while your child watches. Then ask: “Which cup is the apple under?”
Odd One Out
Place 3–4 objects on the table. For example:
- A red apple
- A red toy car
- A blue block
Ask: Which one doesn’t belong?” and “Why do you think that?”
Be open to different ideas, such as your child picking the apple because it’s the only one you can eat, even if you were thinking the blue block because it was blue.
Build Attention & Self-Regulation With Apple Activities
Apple Balancing Challenge
Practice focus, perseverance, and impulse control by balancing a small apple, a small stuffed apple, a beanbag, or a rolled sock. See if your child can balance it on their head and walk a short “apple path.” Add challenge: tiptoe, red light green light, follow-the-leader.

Apple Mindful Breathing
This simple breathing activity supports self-regulation and body awareness. It’s playful enough to feel like a game, but still calms the nervous system. It’s perfect before reading, resting, or transitioning between activities.
Hold hands like you’re holding a warm apple pie (pretend or real!) Say, “Let’s smell the apple pie… mmmm…” and then inhale slowly through the nose. Then say, “Now blow to cool it down!” and then exhale slowly through the mouth. Repeat 3–5 times, slowly.
Keep It Simple, Stay in Rhythm
You don’t need 15 crafts or a fall curriculum to support early learning. A few simple apple-themed activities, repeated with intention, build far more than a busy day full of checkboxes.
They build confidence, language, memory, and joy.
And most of all…they build ROOTS!
