Nature Activities

Kindergarten Readiness: Fall Nature Activities #2-Shoe

Fall is such a special time of year and there are many kindergarten readiness learning and fun activities. For an upcoming radio show, I was putting together some ideas for encouraging children’s connection to nature. To make it easier to remember, there are 10 nature posts and each one rhymes with the number. Here is today’s: #2 shoe, or rather boot. Shoes and boots come in twos and boots are needed for the fun of splashing in puddles.
boots
Rainy days have lots of opportunities for children to connect to nature. Splashing in puddles, watching the rain fall on the sidewalk and little rivers of water flowing along the curbs, and standing under trees where the leaves act like an umbrella. Rain stimulates the senses: what does the rain sound like, feel like, look like and smell like? Put a cup out to catch some rain and bring it inside. Show your child how the rain water can be a little dirty or cloudy from the air. But plants love rain water.

There may be bigger puddles called ponds or lakes to explore—with adequate concern for safety. Water play may start in the sink or bathtub at home but can expand to puddles and rivers and lakes and oceans. Children also need to learn to be safe and respectful of water, that’s part of the nature connection, too. Do you and your child like rainy days?

Kindergarten Readiness: Fall Nature Activities #1-Sun/Mud

This morning,  I was doing some research for my radio show on the topic of children and connections to nature and read that not just healthy physical development, but emotional and mental too are affected; kindergarten readiness would also then be impacted by children’s bond to nature.

(Learn and Play with Mrs. A is on the RockStar Radio Network, Mondays at noon Eastern time.)

To encourage fun and learning, the next 10 posts will each have one idea for encouraging nature play. Being a kindergarten teacher, the clue for each activity will rhyme with the number. Here’s the first:
mud-play
ONE: as in fun, sun. Or sometimes rain. Just being outside helps children in many ways. Outside, they are not limited by space as they are inside and children can play actively, developing their large muscles and practicing regulating their energy levels. When it rains, the water mixed with dirt makes wonderful mud. Kids are attracted to mud, but it’s just dirt and doesn’t hurt. Instead, kids develop their sensory awareness as they make and squish mud. They notice the texture and the feel and how it changes when water is added. Nature is linked to what they create and what they imagine.

Mud play also helps little ones develop small muscles in their hands and adds new words to their vocabulary, like squish, slippery, sticky and more. Playing in the mud is a safe way to get rid of tensions and anxieties. Mud play is not limited to outside, although it’s definitely easier. Grownups sometimes play with mud inside. That mud is called clay and gets hands just as dirty. In some areas, there may some children’s pottery programs for more mud play.

For  post number one’s learning and play in nature, can you and your child have some fun in the sun? Or the mud?

Some Handy Ideas for Kindergarten Readiness: Autumn

Since it’s fall, how about an autumn kindergarten readiness learning and fun activity? In the fall, there are some wonderful nature treasures to touch and collect.
fall-leaves
What do trees and leaves feel like in the fall? Careful about touching prickly blackberry bushes, especially that have no more blackberries. Are there some nuts that have fallen, or pinecones on the ground? There may be berries or rosehips on bushes and trees. Any birds on their way south? A walk around your block may not reveal many nature items but you and your child may be able to visit a park or playground.

I have mentioned the book “Last Child in the Woods”  by Richard Louv a few times. He writes that children are at risk of a Nature Deficit Disorder. We know that kids need outside time for physical development but they need to connect to the natural world around them for healthy emotional development, too. Children are also practicing observing and gaining basic science knowledge about what happens in the fall. They are noticing that some things have changed and some things haven’t. fall-adventure

dead-flowerKids often cope with change in their own lives, so noticing how some things change, like leaves on trees, but other, like the trees, stay the same may give them some reassurance.There’s lots to talk about in the fall, especially the beautiful fall colors. Some of these findings can create lovely nature-inspired art. Now there’s some fall inside, too. What will yours and your child’s hands find on a fall quest?

 

 

Play & Learn for Kindergarten Readiness: Nature Play

Learn and play everyday, for brain connections, kindergarten readiness and healthy development. Are you familiar with the book called Last Child in the Woods, by Richard Louv? Louv talks about nature-deficit disorder and the huge impact this is having on kids today.  He links the lack of a connection to nature to some of the pretty … Continue reading Play & Learn for Kindergarten Readiness: Nature Play

Kindergarten Readiness Rocks! Collecting Rocks

I remember getting into trouble for filling my pockets with rocks when a few made it into the washing machine, but that’s because I didn’t know that collecting rocks is a great activity for all kinds of kindergarten readiness learning and fun. When kids collect rocks, they practice paying attention to what they see and … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness Rocks! Collecting Rocks

Kindergarten Readiness – Learning About Colors, with Bugs

Yesterday, while working on another kindergarten readiness and bug learning activity blog I saw this fantastic photo on Play, Create, Explore’s facebook page. Isn’t this pink worm cool? Or maybe that should be hot, as in hot pink! In any case, it’s perfect for talking about colors. Learning colors is a challenging thinking skill. First, … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – Learning About Colors, with Bugs

Kindergarten Readiness – Bug Catcher / Sucker

Don’t panic when you read the title, it doesn’t mean kids have to suck up bugs as a kindergarten readiness activity. That’s the name of the tool. This super idea comes from Greening Sam and Avery via Teach Preschool. The entire post is so great you will want to read it all!                our new bug tool  … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – Bug Catcher / Sucker

Kindergarten Readiness – June Bugs For Fun and Learning #6

Helping your child develop kindergarten readiness can come in all kinds of packages, including this one in the video below. With summer coming, we hope, kids are outside more. At this time of year, they often discover bugs and other creepy crawlies. Then, of course, they want to bring the critters home. While you can … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – June Bugs For Fun and Learning #6

Kindergarten Readiness – June Bugs For Fun and Learning #2

Weekends were included in the calendar so at least one day there would be time for getting outside and connecting to nature, which is part of supporting the development of kindergarten readiness. Recent studies are finding more and more benefits to spending time outdoors such as improving health and fitness, increasing the length of attention span, … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – June Bugs For Fun and Learning #2

Kindergarten Readiness – Nature Smart Activities for Kids

Any day is great for kindergarten readiness no matter if it’s sunny, windy, rainy, warm or cold. Weekends sometimes have more time for nature activities but we can encourage and help children to be nature-smart every single day of the week. (Nature-smart is the child-friendly version of naturalist intelligence, part of multiple intelligences.) Following is … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – Nature Smart Activities for Kids