Kids Need Play

Beginners Connect the Dot

Dear Reader,

Do you remember the first time you connected dots to make a picture? I certainly don’t. I wanted to introduce my children to it slowly, see where they were at. Later I will add the numbers, but letting them connect different dots to make their own picture seemed like a good way to introduce my children to the concept.

I know I made a whole lot more work on myself, but I made dots on 3 papers to see what my girls were capable of. For the most part I just let them draw lines between the different dots. I let them choose any dots to connect.

The idea behind this activity was to work on controlling the crayon and practicing the correct grasp. My oldest really struggles holding her writing utensils correctly so this was a great way to practice.

They really liked it, but I may have put too many dots on the paper. Next time I think I will just try to dot them randomly on the paper, if my OCD doesn’t kick in and force me to make them evenly spaced.

Summer at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Cups and Ball Trick

Dear Reader,

I confess, this isn’t the activity I had planned for today, but watching my preschooler use her imagination from something she had seen before sparked my interest and we went with it. Living in the moment with preschool-aged kids is essential.

I also confess that in order for this game to be real, as in the “magic” game adults know and love, using all the same color of cups is essential. But when I tried that, my preschooler wasn’t nearly as interested. To vary even further from the real cups and ball game, there is a ball under every cup. But my preschooler was not content with only one ball in play. So instead of the real cups and ball game, it was more of a “guess what color is under the cup,” game. Which required a lot of “don’t peek,” moments.

(I tried all green cups. It didn’t seem a interesting to my preschooler)

I think, developmentally, she got more from playing it her way, anyway. We reinforced colors (she knows them all), we built up the basic science skill of guessing as we took turns switching what color was under which cup, and we still got the benefit of bilateral movement as she switched the cups around (which she thoroughly enjoyed). We even video-called Grandma and got her in on the guessing game, which was also a highlight.

After a while, the game kind of evolved and I just let her keep going. She pulled out her stamps and built towers out of the balls, cups, and stamps. It became a sand castle. I left her to play in her new way, as I had to get back to my daily tasks (and harvest season), and watched her imagination soar as the cups became a sand castle, equipped with flags on the towers.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Nesting cups

Dear reader,

There are a ton of nesting toys for kids, and we even have some. Toddlers love them. I would assume it’s kind of the same thrill people get when they complete a puzzle, but I have no real idea. We have this ball, and rainbows like this, (no affiliate links, just toys we own), but I wanted something that they could just collect and stack together no matter what order they were in, and all of our stacking toys have a very specific order. I feel like that is a later skill. So I walked around my house looking for things that stacked together. At first I was going to use real cups, but then I remembered we had these plastic ones, and I had more of them than I had regular cups, so I could scatter them around and let the girls collect them, instead of just handing each of them 2 or 3 cups.

It was a nice day, and the girls were all being super destructive and dangerous in the house (seriously, I’ve gotta come up with a way to convince my toddlers to stop trying to climb onto the piano!) so I scattered the cups onto the deck and sent them outside. Score some points for hand/eye coordination and spatial perception skills, and I sound like a cool and with-it mom! All for distracting a few toddlers with some cups.

Actually, it was a great reset, since we were all getting a little wound up from all the “don’ts” that had been happening just a few minutes earlier. And I’m convinced sunshine is a good thing for little kids. I mean obviously, this activity could have been done indoors, but let’s soak up all the cool weather while we have the chance.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Rainbow Foam

Dear Reader,

My kids were sick over the weekend and I decided that now they are starting to feel better playing with soap would be a good thing.

To make the foam all you need is water, some soap (I used baby bath soap), and some food coloring. Mix the solution together with a blender, hand blender, or even an electric mixer.

As you can see I chose to mix this in my blender. The solution is 1/2 cup water, 2 T soap, 4-5 drops of food coloring. For most of my colors 4-5 drops was enough but you can’t really tell that the green is green in my foam.

I made 4 batches, but by the time I was able to get my foam out for my kids to play the first batch was already returning to water state, so I suggest you don’t do more than that or somehow make bigger batches.

My kids loved this, though the youngest was wierded out by the whole thing. He got a little on his hands because older siblings were flinging the soap around and didn’t know what to do with it.

As I said earlier the kids started flinging the foam around, so be prepared for this to be messy. I knew it would be a little messy and so I had them go outside to play with it. The great thing about this is that you can just hose off any mess.

Hope you enjoy this activity as much as my children did!

Summer at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Wheelbarrow Walk

Dear Reader,

As a kid we used to have vacuum races. Now I know how that sounds, but it was pretty fun as a kid. No we weren’t racing actual vacuums around but doing what i have recently learned most people call the wheelbarrow walk.

This great activity works on both the bilateral coordination and helps kids seeking proprioceptive input. Proprioception is the perception or awareness of the position and movement of the body.

For the wheelbarrow walk the larger person (usually the adult) holds the legs of the secon near the ankles. The second person walks on their hands around the room.

If you feel your child has mastered the wheelbarrow walk there are other ways to customize this activity. You could set up a course, or you could race other siblings or even thier own time.

If you can come up with any other ways to customize this activity be sure to let us know.

Summer at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Clothespin catapult

Dear reader,

We needed something fun at our house as we are about to hit major harvest season and be pretty busy, so I searched through multiple ideas and found a picture that turned a clothespin into a catapult. It seemed basic enough, so my thought was, “eh, why not.” To be fair, I probably would never bother if we haven’t been challenging ourselves to play with our kids intentionally.

I could easily reverse engineer what I saw in the picture, as it used a block of wood, a clothespin, a large popcicle stick (we always called them tongue depressors. Is that still a thing?), And a lid from a juice container.

The picture had the clothespin glued into the middle, but as we (my husband and I) tested it out before we showed our daughter, it was incredibly pathetic, hardly doing anything except shoot straight up; and not that far, either. So we pulled it off (as best we could. I gave up on the last piece after the clothespin broke and I had to go get another one.

Moving it to the end helped a ton. It gave much more leverage to the clothespin. Tossing anything heavier than the marshmallows turned out to be a disappointment, too, but marshmallows worked pretty well. So we showed the catapult to our daughter, and all took turns shooting the marshmallows to the target plates.

As far as catapults go, this one isn’t that great, but it was super easy, and my preschooler can operate it herself (although it definitely helps if I hold the base). If my preschooler were a little older, I would make a few other types of catapults and we could have a science day trying them all out and comparing them and then learning what works best and why.

But for now, we are just having fun. And there will be more chances to experiment. Interestingly enough, her favorite part wasn’t shooting the catapult… it was collecting the marshmallows. And it gave all of us a nice reprieve from picking apples, harvesting green tomatoes, and all the adventures of storing food for winter.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Toddlers and Chalk

Dear Reader,

I didn’t exactly know how well it would go, but when my preschooler asked if she could play with chalk, I decided to see how well the toddlers did with it. It was nice weather (although the forecast said it was supposed to be cold today), and these two love to go outside! They beeline for the door if anyone grabs any shoes, so they were more than happy to get to go outside with permission this time.

And boy was that an adventure. I will say, they did “draw.” But it was about 10 seconds in duration. Then I spent the rest of the time chasing after one and then the other to keep them on the concrete instead of booking it to the rocks or the grass or eating the chalk. Part of me hoped that by leaving them barefoot, they’d be more apt to stay on the flat surface but the bumpy rocks didn’t even slow them down.

I mean, I didn’t expect much, they’re still really little for chalk, but I figured that exposing them is the first start. And since winter is right around the corner, now seemed like a good enough time. They knew that holding the chalk and touching the concrete was the general idea, and made a few marks. But, alas, the joy of being outside was much more of a pull than putting color on the cement.

The preschooler, however, did enjoy her time to be artistic, so all the chasing was worth it. She started with drawing lines (or 1’s), then we drew shapes. She just discovered that she can spin around with the chalk and it makes a circle. I was kind of impressed when she turned those circles into fruit. One was a pear, one was an apple and one was an orange, all with added green leaves.

I’m sure there will be more time to play with chalk, but it may not happen until next spring, so it was a good time to get in a little practice. And some sunshine. Around these parts, we could always use a little more sunshine.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Safari hunt

Dear Reader,

Today I combined my Toddler and Preschool activities because you can use the same activity to focus on different things for the different ages. For toddlers we talked about the different animal sounds and following in a line. For preschool we talked what the different animals ate and worked on seeking/finding.

To set up your safari hunt hide animals around the house. I mostly used animals that you would find on a safari but you could use other animals as well. Make sure you make your animals visible so your child can find them, otherwise it won’t be a safari but will be more like hide and seek.

Ride the train around to seek the animals out. We used a jump rope to form the train, but you could just hold hands.

As you find the animals discuss the different aspects of the animals.

“What sound does the elephant make?”

“What does the monkey eat?”

Have fun on your safari!

Summer at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Animal Feelings Dice Game

Dear reader,

As we have said before, we are focusing on feelings this week. It actually started by accident when we were talking about activities we wanted to do, and both of us mentioned activities that had to do with emotions. We just decided to make a week of it! Today’s feeling activity is a good game to help get wiggles out while also thinking about “others” and their feelings.

It’s a pretty simple game, but that makes it fun! Roll the dice, and act like the animal if it felt like what is on the feelings dice. I even made this free printable to go along with it!

I just printed mine off on regular white paper, but I highly recommend cardstock, because by the end of the game, our dice were pretty hashed. And I just have to vent my frustration at how awful Elmer’s Gluesticks have become. It’s a brand new gluestick I bought for back to school and it is sooo worthless. Doesn’t glue anything. Therefore, I also recommend tape instead of glue. Super frustrating.

Anyway, I put a lot of work into this activity, so I’m glad the preschooler loved it. I’ve never designed animals on the computer before, but now I think it’ll be fun to make more!

She played with them while the twins napped, so it survived their little fingers, and I loved her budding acting skills. An angry elephant stomped through my living room. A sad monkey swung his arms in despair.

It was fun to think about how an animal would behave when it was feeling surprised or scared or angry. I may have even gotten in on the action.

What do you think? What would a happy flamingo do? Or a sad penguin?

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Calm Down Jars

Dear Reader,

As we have said in previous posts, we decided to take a week and focus on emotions and feelings with our kiddos this week. This is easier said and done when said kiddos are still super little. While thinking about what toddlers need as far as emotions, I realized that what toddlers need fairly regularly is redirection and distraction when things just aren’t going their way.

I’ve had these for a while, but I decided to pull them down and see how my toddlers responded to them. Of course, they love them, and they are a great diversion. I usually just pick them up while I clean the house and set them out of reach but somewhere central and easy to access when babies just need a distraction.

Although they’re kind of heavy for littles, they can roll and shake them and that is enough for their little attention spans.

There are multiple recipes all over the internet and I highly encourage you to play around with the exact proportions because it is nice having multiple jars that “calm down” at different intervals. My dark, “galaxy” themed one takes the longest to get all settled, and my patriotic jar goes the quickest. But you can see the trinkets in the patriotic one better, making it ideal for toddlers.

Also, I used clear glue for my patriotic bottle and regular white glue in my winter hearts bottle, and it has totally different vibe, so don’t count out the regular white glue! It makes the hearts kind of appear and disappear.

… okay, I can’t really take credit. My mom made the winter one, but I added the teal because she had it in a cute little bottle and it broke 🙁 But when I put it in the smart water bottles (seriously perfect for this project), it just looked so blah, so I added the teal (that was the color of the bottle she had it in, so it didn’t change the feel of it, really). Actually, she made it and my kids loved it so much that I made the other 2. They worked really well while I was watching my brother’s kids. I intended to make a bunch and keep experimenting but 3 seems to be a good amount and I’m not constantly picking them up if there is only 3. Maybe when my toddlers get old enough that these are “old news,” I will make the others.

So, to make a calm down jar (I know, finally, a recipe… but I wanted it at the end because these aren’t rules, they’re “guidelines”), you will need:

  • a clear bottle (Smart water bottles are seriously great, but as long as it’s mostly solid and will hold up well, it doesn’t really matter. We have some distilled water bottles from a local grocery store that I think will work well and they’re not so huge.
  • glue. Best choice by far is clear glitter glue, but there is flexibility here.
  • water. HoT water!
  • Glitter (yes, more glitter).
  • Little sequin and trinkets to go in the jar. My patriotic one actually has little beads I had been saving just because they were cute, so this was a good use for them!
  • Food coloring

I’ve found for me, personally, the sweet spot is about 1 part glue and 2 parts water. And then as much glitter as you want. I personally like lots of glitter, but I have 3 different variations and they all have obviously different amounts of glitter. Just know, you want hot water so the glue mixes in!

FYI it is really hard to get a picture of all 3 at their prettiest! Which is your favorite jar? What would you put in a jar? Let me know!

Keira at searchforseven.com