Fun and Learning Bus Activities #5: Bus Sensory Play

A bus and a sandbox = bus sensory play. While this might be a simple formula for sensory play, it’s also two for one. Kids are not just exploring the sand, but also their own reactions and senses. There’s a lot happening on the outside and on the inside.

sand and dirt science play

The wheels on the bus go round and round. In the sandbox or on the dirt pile they also go up and down and over. While the wheels go, so do the senses. Stimulation for the sense of touch is the most obvious. The sand, dirt, or rocks feel rough and cool. Besides the texture, there is resistance and children’s muscles respond. There’s interaction and feedback about what’s the right amount of force to use for pushing. A small bit of sand, dirt, or rock barely weighs anything, but a whole big amount is pretty heavy and dense. The sun, temperature, and air are also part of the touch experience.

nature and sand play

Eyes are busy watching the bus and the hands. The wheels make patterns and lines in the sand. The sand, dirt, and rocks may not make much noise but ears are picking up sounds in the yard or neighborhood, like cars, people, birds, dogs, and more. If you want proof, just open something to eat in the house and notice how soon your child scurries inside. Hopefully, the sense of taste isn’t involved, but there may be smells of dirt and the immediate area.

outside play with transportation toys

Sensory play activates the brain. Young children often engage in this type of play. Brains are also solving-problems, testing ideas, observing, gathering information, planning, and creating connections and pathways. In EarlyChildhood News, Angie Dorrell writes, “Sensory experiences provide children with the opportunity to feel good about their decision-making skills – they control their actions and the experience. Self-discovery occurs as children become eager scientists.”

bus sensory play sand

This sand + bus sensory play adds up to a great activity for brains and bodies. How do you rate this play-of-the-day?

Fun Bus Activities #4: Block Construction Play

The wheels on the bus go round and round but instead of people going up and down, this time blocks do when kids engage in block construction play. Blocks are a versatile toy enjoyed by very young toddlers and much older ones. Many block sets are made of wood, but they also are available in plastic, foam, cardboard, and rubber. Sizes, shapes, and colors all vary. Whatever kids have, blocks have tremendous play value.

building with blocks

For a play-of-the-day, after reading a Wheels on the Bus book and singing the song, the kids got out a bin of blocks and started to play. Big Sister set up some bridges for a road to go under. Little Sister checked out the other items in the bin.

block and train play

To make a bus or other vehicle that moves, wheels are needed. Duplo has large bricks with wheels attached and some pieces marked with a line down the middle for roads. Some people and animals are riding this one.block construction play Lego

Some Lego pieces have wheels too for making all kinds of vehicles. Building with small pieces exercises the small muscles in the hands and fingers. Because fine motor control is still developing at this age, manipulating blocks and other toys is challenging. Strengthening these skills is important for learning to print.

empty box play

For block construction play on a really big scale, bring home a large cardboard box. It doesn’t have to be as big as a real bus, but it might feel like it is to a child. Or, it might be a whole town with buses like the ones in this video.

Construction play, no matter what kids create, involves a great deal of higher-order thinking skills. The most obvious one is figuring out cause and effect. When kids build towers only to knock them over, they are exploring over and over what happens when they push. It works every time and when the tower falls, it’s pretty exciting. Kids are also solving problems. There is so much to discover as they build. Imagination is another part of the play. Where will the bus go? What will happen on the bus?

Ordinary events like seeing or riding a bus can inspire play and deliver extraordinary fun and learning. Ready to ride?

bus-123krg

Learning and Fun Bus Activities #3: Bus Pretend Play for Kids

What’s Powering the Bus? Imagination!

Have imagination will travel; hop on with us for a bus pretend play activity for kids. Destination: wherever we want. Adults must be accompanied by kids.

bus pretend play

Pretend play happens anytime and anywhere with kids. Plus, they can turn anything into what they need. For bus pretend play, a few chairs are useful and often kids will place them in a line to be the rows on the bus. Whoever is the driver, places hands out in front to steer the imaginary wheel. Likely for back-to-school, photocopy paper came in boxes that looked like buses. Little Sister could hardly wait to get in the box and start playing.

Nearly every time we get in the car, Little Sister wants to sit in the driver’s seat and pretend she’s driving. Especially during the preschool years, young kids don’t feel like they have much power at all. Adults get to say when kids stay home, where they go, and what they do. Kids can express their feelings about the situation—and they often do so loudly—but they don’t have a lot of choice in the matter. It’s no wonder they like to pretend being in charge. Bus drivers do more than steer the bus, they get to say where it’s going and ask people for their ticket or money. School buses don’t have money but they still have drivers.bus pretend play

Bus pretend play can be simple with one child pretending to be the driver and another child or stuffed animal to be the passenger. Some children may make tickets and use bottle caps or other items for money. They will often suggest to whoever is playing with them when it’s time to get on and off. With two or more children, there will likely be a great deal of negotiating and planning. That’s part of the play. Kids can play pretend bus with toys too.

The only action we see might be a lot of wiggling and hand movement as kids vigorously drive their bus. On a brain level, there is a tremendous amount of planning, remembering, and connecting what kids already know to feelings and emotions they imagine are appropriate in the real situation.

bus pretend play

Children as young as two will engage in pretend play. It meets a need for adults too. For the young-at-heart, some actors have been pretending and imagining on stage, in movies, and television for almost a century. After all, with imagination we can go everywhere. Einstein proclaimed it’s more powerful than knowledge.

For a fun and imaginative play-of-the-day, how about some bus pretend play?bus-123krg

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Fall Nature Treasure Hunt – Golden Moments of Time

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Before I Go to Kindergarten #17: Language Stimulation is Critical for Kids

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