Play Activities

Summer Fun, Kindergarten Readiness and a Parade

During the summer, many towns and cities have parades along with other celebrations, and letting kids play parade is a great way to encourage fun, learning, and kindergarten readiness. Little ones may only want to march around and make noise, er…music but older kids can include dressing up and maybe even making their own instruments and decorations.
summer fun and learning
Costumes for a parade can be as handy as a few clothes for dressing up. Big t-shirts, blouses, and shirts are handy because they are not too long for kids. Old costume jewelry and scarves are also fun as are grownup shoes. Of course, some of these might require extra supervision to be on the safe side. Parades have clowns and princesses.

summer fun and learning activitiesTo make instruments, two disposable pie plates make cymbals by taping some spools to the centers to be handles. Coffee cans, cookie tins, and plastic ice cream pails with lids can be used as drums. If there’s a handle on the pail, it can be attached to a belt so both hands will be able to play. To make shakers, just about any small plastic container will work with a few things inside to make sound.

summer fun and learning activitiesThere’s lots of learning in this activity. Rhythm and coordinating movement to a beat are physical skills that are developing in young children. Just marching left, right, left, right can be tricky, let along making sound on an instrument at the same time.

A parade promotes sharing and cooperating strategies and, probably, some negotiating ones too. After all, not everyone can be first to lead the parade. A paper towel roll covered with foil can be the baton for leading the parade and kids can take turns.

Music is optional. Usually, when just a few kids start to march around, others will be eager to join and the parade gets bigger and bigger. The fun gets bigger and bigger, too. Know any great songs that are simple enough for singing, marching and playing on homemade instruments? Best of all, since it’s summer, kids can have the parade outside. Can your children celebrate summer with a parade?

Happy International Mud Day

(photo by Amy Rem Birnkrant)
(photo by Amy Rem Birnkrant)

If you need an idea for some fun, learning, and play this weekend, June 29th, 2013 is International Mud Day. For skeptics, there is a FB page for Mud Day with some wild photos of people in various parts of the world playing in the mud. Not all of the players are young children, there are some grownups having just as much fun too.

Playing in the mud can be hands, feet, or the whole body and it is certainly sensory play. Not only are kids having fun, they are learning at the same time, and developing skills and brain connections for kindergarten readiness and beyond.

  • Squeezing, mixing, stirring, splashing, and rubbing the mud all over, exercise small muscles in the hands and arms. Stomping uses the big muscles in the legs and the little ones in the toes.
  • There are great words for talking about mud like slippery, squishy, liquid, and others. Kids will love to share and tell about what they are doing in the mud.
  • Seeing what happens to dirt and water and how it combines is basic science. What else does mud do? Why does it get hard and lumpy after a while?
  • Kids can play in the mud by themselves or with friends. It’s inexpensive and ordinary items like spoons, cups, pails, little shovels, and other things hiding in kitchen drawers will extend the play. Kids can bury and find little plastic toys like dinosaurs or animals.
  • Mud play is definitely imaginative. The mud can be cakes, pie, secret potions, and more. Kids mold and shape with mud exploring and creating.
(photo by Kimberly Plumley)
(photo by Kimberly Plumley)

After playing in real mud, kids can come in the inside and have some cooking fun–after getting all clean, of course! Good thing kids are wash and towel dry. Bananas and chocolate milk or a bit of chocolate icecream make a yummy muddy smoothie. Or thick yogurt with a bit of chocolate milk makes a dip for fruit cut into slices and chunks.  Would you believe this flower is planted in edible mud? The bottom half of the clean pot is cake cubes, then ice cream, and cookie crumbs on the top. The flower is in a straw but it isn’t for eating. How will you and your child celebrate International Mud Day?

Playground Fun, Learning, Kindergarten Readiness & PLAY

playground fun and learning, L of  Congress, 1955Kids and playgrounds seem like a natural combination but did you know that playgrounds are a relatively new invention? Although there were some before, in 1907 President Roosevelt stated “….since play is a fundamental need, playgrounds should be provided for every child as much as schools.” Check out this Library of Congress picture of a playground from 1955.

Besides providing a space for all kinds of movement activities, kids also interact with others using early social skills such as taking turns, waiting, sharing and making friends. playground fun and learningThere’s math fun by counting and comparing, science fun seeing seasonal changes and small critters, imagining and pretending, certainly lots of language, learning about shapes and colors, patterns and rhythm, risk management, practicing safety, stretching beyond fears and hesitations, and gaining confidence. Best of all, these and other skills, are all learned as children play and explore. More than skills for kindergarten readiness, these are life skills.

playground fun and learningSince the early days of playgrounds, there has certainly been more attention to how they can support children’s learning and development. In response, the equipment and designs of playgrounds have changed. Now there are adventure playgrounds, construction ones with loose-parts, neighborhood tot lots and many more. Playgrounds often include more natural materials and areas. Sandboxes are not as frequent as they used to be but now there are water parks. What can be more fun on a hot day than sprinklers and squirters going off in all directions? One problem though, the adults are usually pretending that they are getting wet by accident.

playground fun and learningPlaygrounds are more than spaces for kids. These play areas have a community function, bringing neighborhoods together. Often, groups will form to fund raise and even assemble playgrounds. In all of them, children can explore and discover and PLAY. Are there some playgrounds nearby and some space in the day for fun, learning, and playground PLAY?

Playgrounds Help Kids Learn About Risk

Management studies for adults talk about learning to deal with risk and how to manage risk is also important for kids. Some children have a Geronimo reaction to risk, launching themselves into activities that are scary and causing their parents and caregivers grey hairs and near panic attacks. Can you relate to these daredevils? Many … Continue reading Playgrounds Help Kids Learn About Risk

Kindergarten Readiness, Children’s Books, and Playgrounds

One of the most important activities that parents and caregivers can do to support children’s learning is to read books and share stories. Did you know that reading 3 or 4 a day, a few times a week adds up to about a thousand in just one year? That makes a tremendous number of brain … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness, Children’s Books, and Playgrounds

Playgrounds Exercise Imaginations Too

Playgrounds are not only fun spaces to play, they are great places for learning and kindergarten readiness too, exercising bodies, brains, and imaginations. In only a few minutes of watching kids playing on the playground, we can see how varied are the places they are imagining. Not all playgrounds have a pole for sliding down, … Continue reading Playgrounds Exercise Imaginations Too

Playground Fun, Learning & Kindergarten Readiness #3

Rhythm is an important concept for many activities and children need lots of rhythmic experiences for math, language, memory, kindergarten readiness, and more. So much of our bodies have a built-in rhythm, such as breathing, heart beat, walking, day-night cycles and others, that adults do not realize that children need to develop an understanding of … Continue reading Playground Fun, Learning & Kindergarten Readiness #3

Kindergarten Readiness: Buttons Sensory & Loose Parts Play

Button, button, whose got some buttons for sensory and loose parts play, along with some fun, learning, and kindergarten readiness? Our house has buttons from several drawers and containers and getting them out is a favorite special day activity treat. Because it is so easy for kids to put buttons in small places like noses … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness: Buttons Sensory & Loose Parts Play