Sunday, February 17, 2013

Spring Activities



Spring activities for the little ones. 

At any given time the age range of the children is roughly 21-38 months. 
All of these activities cross developmental areas but mostly focus on sensory, fine motor and discovery.



 St. Patrick's Day



 We spiced up our shaving cream in march with green washable paint and shamrock confetti. 





For a little fine motor action we poked sparkley pipe cleaners into holes cut into a 
recycled yogurt container. Cheap and easy!


 Here we filled an old apple juice container with green pom poms. Over and over and over. 
I think the best part was shaking them out. 


Weather Time




We made a chart and graphed pictures of objects in the room that we could move by blowing through a straw. We also read The Wind Blew by Pat Hutchins before this activity.  





After using the straws and testing the objects, 
the children found the pictures and glued them on the appropriate side. 



Water Transfer



Here we talked about rain clouds and transferred water from one bowl to another using cotton balls. 
Never under estimate the ability of a child to get wet- no matter how little water is involved. 

Cloud Painting


We combined shaving cream and glue to make a fluffy concoction. 
Then they created clouds on their paper. 


Like most activities with two year olds-It started out clean and ended up messy!



Brushy Brushy



Forth dental health study we brushed giant teeth using upside down ice cube trays and egg cartons, shaving cream and toothbrushes. I think I eventually added some paint to extend their interest. 


Painting a Vegetable Garden 


We read stories about gardens like Little Bunny's Lunch by JoAnne Nelson and planted flowers and vegetables in our garden on the playground.
Then we dipped a variety of vegetables into trays of different color paint to make prints and textures. 







Then it turned into a runway. 



Later that week we had to water our garden. 


And paint with some flowers too. 








Saturday, February 9, 2013

Winter Activities




Winter activities for the little ones. 

At any given time the age range of the children is roughly 21-38 months. 
All of these activities cross developmental areas but mostly focus on sensory, fine motor and discovery. 


Snow Painting


We brought real snow inside for art time and painted it with water colors. 
You could always take the paint outside but we were too cold from playing in the snow. 



 Ice painting


We filled ice cube trays with water and food coloring. Then we stuck mini popsicle sticks in each cube before freezing. Once frozen we poped  Next time I'll try washable paint so it doesn't stain their hands. 



Wax Hearts for Valentines Day




 The children sprinkled red, pink and purple crayon shavings on wax paper. After they played with the shavings, I ironed them between two pieces of wax paper as they looked on. 




I cut hearts out to hang in the window. (of course I don't have a picture of that)


Then I let them cut up the scraps and make a collage. 



Valentines for Children


I made these Valentines for the children in my class. They definitely helped contribute to the cup of broken crayons. I found a silicone heart mold and melted the crayons in the oven. Then I cut out hearts, wrote a note and tied them up with my trusty Martha Stewart kitchen twine!


Snow Pile 


We reused some packing peanuts in our sensory table to make "snow."
We used shovels, scoops and of course our hands to dig and scoop.


This is a smaller version using cotton balls. We added some winter animals and bowls for igloos. Apparently some felt shapes were needed as well! :)



Ping Pong Ball Chase


This is really simple and the kids love it!
I toss/bounce about 12 ping pong all across the room and the kids run and collect them. They put them back in the bucket and we start all over again. Genius, I know!


Great way to burn off some energy in the winter or on a rainy day. 


Great for hand-eye coordination. 
You can also incorporate position words when they are searching for them. 
Count the balls or count down before you throw them.  
You could always write letters, numbers, words, shapes etc for the children to identify before dropping them in the bucket. 



Menorah Spin-off



 During December we combined Hanukkah candles and popsicle molds for sorting and fine motor.



Other times of the year we used popsicle sticks with the molds. The possibilities are endless.