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Category Archives: Uncategorized

Motivate Kids to Write with a Boogie Board

Boogie Board to motivate reluctant writers

Most kids I teach (including my own) need encouragement and motivation to sit and write. Writing is a hard skill for children to master – the fine-motor skills, the brain process connecting to the motor movement, . . . it’s not easy.

To motivate my oldest daughter to write, we gave her a Boogie Board. The Boogie Board is an LCD writing tablet (think magic slate) that kids can use to capture thoughts and images.

Would your kids like this as much as mine?

How about some ideas to get them started. Here are ten ideas for your child to use with a Boogie Board.

10 Writing Ideas for a Boogie Board

1. List of favorite movies, books, or toys.

2. Favorite colors.

3. A story about something magical.

4. A nature poem.

5. Clues in a treasure hunt.

6. Secret code.

7. Self-portrait with words that describe you.

8. Trace your hand. Write a poem inside your hand print.

9. Make a funny cartoon.

10. Invent your own bubble letters.

Watch this YouTube video to see the Boogie Board in action.

What else can you do on the Boogie Board?

  • tic-tac-toe
  • doodles
  • notes
  • {insert your idea here}

What are your ideas for the Boogie Board?

Pinterest Favorites for St. Patrick’s Day and Easter (Linky)

Link Up for Easter and St. Patrick's Day

If you’re like me, and I think you are, you’re slightly addicted to Pinterest. Am I right? And, do you love Pinterest for holiday ideas with kids?

Me, too!

So, with St. Patrick’s Day and Easter coming up, what great ideas are you finding on Pinterest?

We’ll share ours if you share yours!

Link up 1 or 2 of your favorite pins in the linky below! All we ask is you link directly to the pin, share no more than 2, and that you repin the other pins listed in return.

St. Patrick’s Day Favorites

Leprechaun Kisses
Leprechaun Kisses Box from Dating Divas 

anti pinch polish tag

Anti-Pinch Nail Polish from Eighteen25

Easter Favorites

Easter printable

Mix and Match Egg Sculptures from Mr. Printable

Necklace

Easter Necklace from Artsy Fartsy Mama

eggheads

Eggheads from Nurture Store

Powered by Linky Tools

Click here to enter your link and view this Linky Tools list…

Birthday Printable Treasure Hunt Clues

treasure hunt clues

My kids love to search the house for their birthday gifts. In fact, we just had a birthday party treasure hunt yesterday for my daughter’s 8th birthday! I want to give you our clues and some extra for you to use with your kids. They’re great activities for a rainy day, too.

Oh, and if your kids don’t yet read, just read the clues to them. This activity is especially great for beginning readers because there is a lot of motivation to read!

Treasure Hunt Clues for Kids

(Click here to download the printable version)

1. ANSWER: Fridge
When you play with your food, you can make a bridge.
But when you’re hungry for milk, you look in the ________________

2. ANSWER: Shoe
Look in a place
that smells “peeeouuw”
No, not your socks,
it’s your _______________.

3 ANSWER: Bed
I’m hiding where you sleep.
Under the covers, don’t peek.
Here is where you lay your head.
Look for me in your ____________.

4. ANSWER: Sink
Wash your hands,
get a drink.
Look for me
in the ___________.

5. ANSWER: Chair
You sit on me,
I’m just over there.
By the table,
I’m a __________.

6. ANSWER: TV
Find the remote so you can see me.
Watch a movie, a show or sport,
on the _____________.

 

How to Write Treasure Hunt Clues

Do you want to write treasure hunt clues of your own?

It’s easier thank it seems.

Think of the answer first.

Brainstorm words that rhyme with the answer.

Write the rhyming word at the end of the 2nd line so for example, if the answer is bed, you could use red, head, said, Fred, and so forth. You write the first line about the bed, and the second line, ending with the rhyming word you choose like said. Then write two more lines leaving out the last word in the 4th line – the answer.

Now you try.

Make up a rhyming clue with the answer of BOOK.

Happy birthday parties – have lots of fun!

 

 

5 Ways to Encourage Open-Ended Play

5 ways to encourage open ended play

We all want our children to be capable of independent play – play full of imagination and creativity. So, how do we facilitate that?

1. Make your play and craft things accessible to young children.
Organize things in small tubs or bins so that a child can get to them, and carry to his or her play spot. I love the ideas Raising Lemons shares for keeping supplies in-sight of the kids.  Also, for more ideas, read what The Artful Parent shares in about creating art spaces for kids.

2. Provide only materials and supplies that are okay for your child to use.
Don’t have child-accessible areas or supplies that are “off-limits” – if it’s not safe for kids or too messy to use, don’t keep it around. (Like glitter or a hot glue gun — store up and away from the kid supplies.) See some clever ideas at Merriment.

3. Rotate toy bins.
Every quarter, pack up some of the toys that aren’t being used and store them. Get out your new-old toys from storage. Now they’ll be fresh and fun.

4. Set out supplies and toys for discovery.
Provide a 4-5 items for play and creating on a table for your child to explore. It could be things to sort, things to build with play-dough, things to paint, or things from nature. See an example of tabletop loose parts on No Time for Flashcards and invitations to engage at Playful Learning.

5. Prepare busy bags ahead of time for on-the-go.
Busy bags are collections of small toys and activities to engage your child. Get ideas for busy bags at My Small Potatoes’ busy bag round-up.

How do you encourage open-ended play with your kids?

Nature Crafting with Kids

Use the natural materials around you, sticks, rocks, and leaves, to create and play. Remember when I showed you how to make Story Stones? That’s just one of the many playful craft ideas I want to share with you today. These nature crafts are inexpensive and help your children appreciate the possibilities in the natural world.

nature crafts with kids

Rocks and Stones

Story Stones

Conversation Stones

People Rocks

Domino Rocks

Blarney Stone (St. Patrick’s Day)

Rock Crystal Garden

 

Twigs and Branches

Bow and Arrow

Bird’s Nest 

Fairy Treehouse

Mobile

Story Stick

Handmade Book

 

Leaves

Leaf Collection Book

Leaf Person or Animal 

Leaf Cards

Shaving Cream Leaves

 

Pinecones

Pinecone People

Pinecone Birdfeeder

Painted Pinecone

Pinecone Jewelry

 

So get outside, collect leaves, pinecones, rocks and twigs, and start crafting!

P.S. You’ll love this calendar from The Grass Stain Guru. It shares daily inspiration for natural play and learning.

8 Ways for Kids Decorate Their Own Room

8 ways kids can decorate their own rooms

One of my all time favorite books of parenting wisdom is The Last Lecture. In it, Randy Pausch shares how his parents let him draw on his walls and decorate his room however he wanted. He credits them with allowing him to dream and fulfill his dream. He adds, “Anybody out there who is a parent, if your kids want to paint their bedrooms,as a favor to me, let them do it. It’ll be OK.”

I love this advice. After all what a great place, your own room, for a child to create and imagine!

8 Ways for Children to Decorate Their Rooms

1. Colors and theme
Pick a theme – or not. Then, pick the colors your child loves.

2. Paint
Decide what color you’ll paint the walls.

3. Comforter and sheets
This is the easiest one. Let your child pick out a comforter that matches his or her colors. Sheets, too.

4. Wall Decals
My kids love decorating with wall decals. They peel off easily and move around the room.

5. Furniture
Think bed frame, night table, bookshelf, desk and dresser.

6. Lamps
Lamps make great decorations.

7. Posters
Buy posters at the book store or book fair. Believe me – you can decorate completely with cute animal posters.

8. Artwork
Hang the child’s own artwork around the room.

Pick one or more of these categories and allow your child the freedom to imagine the possibilities.

Look on Pinterest, go shopping together, look through catalogues, and work side-by-side to facilitate your child’s unique creation (maybe not gorgeous?).

It’s okay if it’s not like you would do it. In fact, I can promise you it won’t be like you want. Let it go. Let it be.

If you’re going to have childhood dreams you should have great parents who let you pursue them and express your creativity.” – Randy Pausch

Well said, don’t you think?

Photo credit: jessica wilson {jek in the box} / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-ND

Are You Ready for Valentine’s Day Round-Up O’ Fun?

Valentine's Day Crafts, Food, Games & Card Ideas

Kids adore Valentine’s Day — is it just the candy that gets them so excited? I think it’s all of it. The friendship, the cards, the crafts, and the food. (At least until you’re a heart-sick teenager.)

The BEST of Valentine’s Day Ideas for Kids from Around the Web

Food

Cupid Crunch from Plain Chicken

popcorn

Stained Glass Cookies from The Outlaw Mom

stained-glass

Crafts

Heart Boxes from Mr. Printables

printable-valentines-heart-favor-boxes

DIY Valentine Fortune Tellers from Design Mom  

fortune-teller-valentines2

Heart Strings from Hands On As We Grow

hearts

Games

Valentines’ Bingo from Makeoodle

bingo

Valentine’s Day Mad Libs from My Sisters Suitcase

Valentines-Day-Mad-Lib

Cards

Playing Card Valentines from Martha Stewart

playing-cards

Kid-Made Cards 5 Ways from Mama Pea Pod

kid-cards

Bookmark Card from Martha Stewart

bookmark-cards

I’m already excited, aren’t you?!

Don’t forget to follow us on Pinterest for more Valentine’s Day ideas!

All Kids Know about Catapults — Take It One Step Further

catapult

It’s cold outside so you need some fun inside ideas.

Channel your kids energy from flicking their food using a fork or spoon at their siblings into making an even better food flicking system. Because what they don’t know is they were making a simple machine –a catapult using a lever and fulcrum.

If they’ve played Angry Birds, they’ll understand the concepts more fully.

Ok, maybe not for food ir bird flicking but I bet your kids are up to the challenge of making their own catapults! Just replace the food with small toys or cotton balls.

Make a Catapult

1. Make a fulcrum – use an empty toilet paper roll or a rolled up and taped newspaper.

2. Make a lever – use a plastic spoon. Attach with a rubber band or tape.

3. Test.

4. Try substituting the plastic spoon with a stick with a glued-on plastic bottle lid or different silverware. See what happens.

Fun, right!?

This teaches kids about force, energy, simple machines and the scientific method.

What will your kids shoot with their catapult?

Turn Your Photos Into Coloring Pages

My kids and I made our own coloring books using our photos and photos from Google Images. It’s simple, free, and colorfully delicious fun.

Photo to Coloring Page

Step by Step Photo to Coloring Page

1. Go to Be Funky.

2. Click “Get Started” and upload your photo from your computer.

If your kids, like mine, wanted to include Google images, have them search for those first, save in a special folder to use now.

3. On the left sidebar, click “Artsy” and select “Sketcher” and “Sketcher 2″.

4. Don’t click on print! Save to your desktop – you have to rename it twice for some weird reason. It will say error, but it does save it.

5. Open the file. Print!

You can use other photo editing programs besides Be Funky. Try one of these: Coloring Page Creator, iPiccy, orPixlr.

Have a coloriffic day and let us know how it goes!

Life Lessons From Our Cat

Life Lessons from Pets

Two months ago, my kids and I spent several hours at a cat shelter, playing with cats, in order to find the perfect cat for our family.

 

We adopted Betty Lou, a two-year old cat the size of a kitty. Petite. Sweet. Cuddly. Perfect.

 

I had forgotten how awesome it is to own a pet.

 

(Well, a pet that’s interactive – fish don’t count.)

 

Watching my girls light up with their new cat, I realize that she gives the something cuddly and playful to love. Something that is easy to love. (Except when she’s not – after all, she is a cat.)

 

It’s helping my kids express themselves emotionally. Saying “I love you,” has always been difficult for my oldest daughter – okay, she doesn’t say it. So it’s a joy to see her telling the cat that she loves her, and giving Betty Lou kisses all over her gray and black fur.

 

What’s more, Betty Lou teaches my kids life lessons:

  • Not to take it personally. If she’s not in the mood to cuddle, it’s not because she doesn’t like you, it’s just her nature to need time alone.
  • Unconditional love means we love even when someone doesn’t deserve it – like Betty Lou urinating outside her litter box or throwing up a hair ball on the kitchen floor.
  • Persistence is important and necessary. We tried different foods to see what Betty Lou would eat. We tried different toys to see what Betty Lou would like. (Puff balls!)
  • Happiness comes from giving to others. So true with a pet! Petting her until she rewards you with a purr is the best gift ever.

Of course, we, just like you, had to feel like we were ready for a pet. In retrospect, I wouldn’t do it differently. When you’re ready, you’ll know.