- The school transformed the pre‑primary wing into a sea of crimson, marking Red Colour Day on 20 December 2025.
- Children arrived dressed head‑to‑toe in red outfits – dresses, shirts, scarves and even red‑themed accessories.
- The classrooms were decked with scarlet banners, balloons, streamers and a wall‑display of red craftwork created by the tiny artists
Key Highlights
- Welcome Assembly: A short assembly began with a “Red Day” song (“My red balloon…”) and a chant of “Apples are red… Roses are red… I love red”. Students took turns showing a red object they brought from home and shared a sentence about it.
- Creative Corner: Art stations offered red paint, crayons, glitter and recycled material for collages, pom‑pom sorting and red‑fruit stamping. Children crafted red paper flowers, heart‑shaped cards and origami, building fine‑motor skills.
- Sensory & Food Activities: A red‑themed sensory bin filled with pom‑poms, buttons and fabric let kids explore texture.
- A healthy snack break featured strawberries, apple slices, tomato cubes and red‑jelly treats, with a short discussion on nutrition.
- Story & Music Time: Teachers read a red‑focused story (e.g., “Clifford the Big Red Dog”) and sang an interactive colour song. Children acted out parts using red props
- Games: A “Red Light, Green Light” variation and a red‑object scavenger hunt kept energy high while reinforcing colour recognition ⁴.
Learning Outcomes
- Colour Identification: Children confidently named red objects and distinguished shades of crimson.
- Fine‑Motor Development: Cutting, gluing, painting and sorting activities strengthened hand‑eye coordination.
- Social Skills: Parade, group crafts and sharing snacks fostered teamwork, confidence and inclusion.
- Cultural Awareness: Brief discussion linked red to festivals and symbols of love, courage and celebration.


