Holiday Activities

What Makes Christmas Magical for Kids? Part One

When it comes to Christmas and kids, are you a super-elf-parent trying to fit in everything? What does make Christmas magical for kids? In a really popular article over the summer Bunmi Laditan declared she was done being super-wizard: “I’m Done Making My Kid’s Childhood Magical.” She’d had it with themed birthdays, elaborate crafts, and contrived memories and instead remembered the simple things that had made childhood magical for her. Some of those same points are relevant for a magical child’s Christmas.

magical Christmas for kidsThe holiday season can be special for kids because the family has fun together. If you think back to your childhood, are there some great memories of fun times? And did they involve family? The particular event or reason is much less important than having fun with the family. It could be as simple as sharing hot chocolate or popcorn together after running errands. It could be watching a parade all snuggled under a blanket on the sofa or doing a puzzle. Or perhaps, a mini-adventure or a car trip to visit family and friends in another location. In the letter below, Christmas is: spending time with your family, drinking hot chocolate with marshmallows, eating gingerbread cookies, and having fun.

what Christmas is about for kidsOf course, at this time of year there are some events especially for families, such as free times at the swimming pool or skating rink. Some communities will have hands-on activities such as decorating gingerbread houses or making crafts at a local museum, store, center, or shopping mall. This will vary from year to year, depending on your children’s ages and interests, and even if they don’t remember the details, they will remember the feelings. That’s at the heart of Christmas.

magical Christmas for kidsSome of the most magical times for kids may not be play but work. Children love to help other members of the family. Hanging Christmas lights may not be your idea of fun, but it could be a highlight for kids.So could baking cookies for a neighbor. These are time for kids to connect with the significant adults in their lives, and, later on, these connections are often what gives us the strength to deal with challenges, make changes in our own lives, and persevere through difficult times. We share both joy and tears with our friends and family.

Calendars are more than busy during the holidays, but hopefully there will be some time to play and work and have fun together. Whatever it is that your family will be doing, will you be able to have some magical time for fun together?

Are Turkeys and Dinosaurs Cousins? Easy Craft for Both

This same craft idea can be used for either a turkey or a dinosaur, which is quite appropriate because it turns out turkeys and dinosaurs are related. After yesterday’s blog post about dinosaurs, manners, magic words, and the holiday of Thanksgiving, a quick on-line search showed there’s evidence of a link between dinosaurs and turkeys. Not only are birds the closest living relatives of dinosaurs, the huge Tyrannosaurus Rex and turkeys both have a wishbone.

tureky hand-foot craftTo  make a turkey, help your child trace around either the right or left foot on a piece of brown paper. It’s easier to leave a sock or shoe on, but be careful not to use a felt marker. It will stain. A dark crayon is better. Sometimes, little hands need help cutting around the shape. That’s the head of the turkey. For the turkey feathers, use yellow or orange paper. Kids spread the fingers of one hand apart while a helping hand traces it. This is even trickier to cut out, but little hands can glue the hand on the top of the brown foot. Attach an orange triangle for the beak and some red tissue paper beside or underneath. Kids can draw on two eyes.

dinosaur foot craftFor the dinosaur, the first step is the same. Help your child trace around either the right or left foot on a piece of green paper. Once this is cut out, kids can glue on some brown triangles for the claws. One foot but two different crafts or kids can make a turkey with one foot and a dinosaur with the other. To make a bigger foot for the dinosaur, kids can trace around the foot or shoe of a grownup. That’s even better for the dinosaur.

Isn’t it good that turkeys aren’t extinct? What we do at Thanksgiving and Christmas without turkeys? How big is a dinosaur wishbone? How much stuffing would a dinosaur need?

Halloween Treat Learning Activities: Colors

Learning comes in many colors, and the ones of Halloween treats can help young children as they make the brain connections for this challenging skill.

Halloween treats help learn colors

What makes learning colors so tricky? Here are a few reasons:

  • Each color comes in an endless variety. Think of blue, just at Halloween.Both Elsa and Spider-man costumes are blue, but so is the dark sky and they are all the same color but quite different.
  • Not only is there variation in each color, but many different things can belong to that color. Oranges and pumpkins are similar, but fire, leaves, flowers, carrots, and candy are orange.
  • As if that isn’t hard enough, not everyone agrees on colors.

A number of experiences are needed for kids to link up colors and names. Halloween treats come in practically all colors, so can be used for some color fun and learning.

An easy activity is to sort candies by color. When that’s done, kids can use Smarties, M&Ms, or Skittles for some color science. Using small, clear plastic bowls or fruit cups, kids can measure in a spoon or two of water, pop a different color in each container and see if the water turns that color. This doesn’t usually take very long but it’s fun to watch the water change. Check if your child can identify the name of the color. If not, you can give the color word. We had fun mixing the colors to see what would happen. All the colors together looked like muddy chocolate.

Kids can even paint with the colored water using a q-tip or little brush. The candies do not look as tasty after their water bath but they have been another way that brains can sort, compare, and identify colors. They have also helped us get a peek at a child’s thinking and development.

What color seems to be the biggest group or the most popular for Halloween treats?

Halloween Lights Up Early Learning

Halloween is a celebration for kids, and for the rest of us too. In a way, it’s a celebration of opposites, of light and dark, of spookiness and friendliness. The dark night is lighted with shining jack-o-lanterns, candles, fireworks, and flashlights. What could be more friendly than sharing sweet treats no matter the scary costumes?Learning … Continue reading Halloween Lights Up Early Learning

Carve a Pumpkin Fairy House (or Superhero Fort)

Have you heard of a pumpkin fairy house before? I hadn’t until recently, but a fairy house is a delightful change from a jack-o-lantern. That’s thinking outside the box, or rather, inside the pumpkin, and encourages creativity and imagination. Jack-o-lanterns do not need to be a face, they can be anything kids can imagine. A … Continue reading Carve a Pumpkin Fairy House (or Superhero Fort)

Halloween Costumes Dress Up Children’s Fun and Learning

Kids don’t need a magic wand to transform themselves into superheros, princes and princesses, fairies, knights, animals, pirates, warriors, robots, scary creatures, and movie characters. They only need a costume and Halloween is the biggest costume party of the year. Kids do not only dress up at Halloween; often, they do it all year long. … Continue reading Halloween Costumes Dress Up Children’s Fun and Learning