Archive for December, 2008
5 Super Smart & Simple Infant Activities (6-9mos)
Ok, your baby can sit up now. He engages with the world around him. She wants to hold and grasp things. Here are some ideas that will both entertain and teach your little one. It’s helpful to avoid talking too much or distracting baby while exploring.
1. Sensory Basket
Put away the plastic stuff! Find a wicker or woven basket, wooden box, or shallow cardboard container. Put a few items of various weights, textures, sizes in the box. Items like a dry washcloth, spoon, soft toy, clean sponge, ball, yarn, shiny or scratchy materials, etc. Watch as he grasps and explores all the items. Even the basket is an interesting! Everything will obviously go into the mouth but these new and exciting things will engage your baby’s senses.
When finished, remove any breakable or choking hazards (sponge, yarn, etc.) put the other items back in the basket and leave it on a low shelf for baby to reach for or find on his own.
2. Pull That Ribbon
Tie a string/ribbon to an object (stuffed animal, truck, anything). Demonstrate pulling the string and making the object move toward you. Then place the string in front of baby and ask her to try. This teaches cause and effect, hand-eye coordination and taking turns. Again, keep on a low shelf so she can do the activity again.
3. Pots and Lids-
Give baby a pot and a lid. Demonstrate how the lid lifts and sits. Then, watch as he copies and puts the lid on and off. Eventually introduce other easy on and off lids (oatmeal container, food containers, eventually twist on tops and cookie tin tops). Designate a low drawer in the kitchen for baby. He will go back to it over and over throughout the next few months looking for fun.
4. Pull the Scarf
Place a scarf between you and your baby. Let her grab one end, you grab the other. Play a little tug of war. This social activity will engage her interest. Exaggerate leaning forward when she pulls. Of course, she may just want to explore the scarf’s texture…that’s fun too!
5. Pick It Up and Drop It!
Babies this age can generally pick up but not drop in. Place two baskets or boxes in front of your baby. Put a ball in one of the boxes. Pick it up and drop it in the other. Then, ask baby to do it too. You’ll probably have to pick it up from one box but your baby will enjoy dropping it into the other. Eventually, he’ll pick up and drop! This is a grasping drill and a coordination game.
Activities are adapted from the North American Montessori Center’s Infant & Toddler program. I am certified birth through three through this program.
Add comment December 29, 2008
this year, no Christmas cards. (you’re welcome.)
One of the hovering stresses of the Holiday season is, no matter what, dealing with the Christmas card scenario. This year, 7 billion cards will go out and I’m happy to say I canned the whole thing. Instead of feeling guilty, I decided to put the money into something more meaningful and mention the donation in an e-card. Booom. Done. The result? 20 children in India’s Himalayan villages will receive support for a full year and everyone I know won’t have my kids’ faces stuck to the fridge all yr!
If you’d like to see (and pitch in!) this project or find your own, visit Global Giving.
Add comment December 19, 2008
snow day? quick ideas for inside fun!
Need some indoor distractions? Try these!
Gas Balloon
- Funnel
- 2tsp baking soda
- 1 small bottle
- 1/3 c vinegar
- 1 balloon
Have your child pour the baking soda into the bottom of the bottle. Pour vinegar into the balloon. Carefully stretch the balloon over the opening (without spilling the vinegar into the bottle). Lift the balloon so the vinegar spills into the baking soda…watch the balloon fill! (you can use alka seltzer & water instead).
Shiny Pennies
Preschoolers can mix, stir, pour and retrieve…just help out and guide with this one.
- 4 TBS salt
- 1/2 vinegar
Gather piggy bank pennies…the dirty grimy ones. Dissolve the salt into the vinegar. Dump pennies in. Stir, stir, stir. Retrieve and place on a paper towel to dry. All shiny and bright!
Catapult
You need:
- Foam or rubber ball or bouncy items (like rubber dinsaurs or something)
- C-clamp
- Ruler or yardstick
- Take the ruler, c-clamp it to a table. Put the ball or whatever on the end. launch! Remember to take it apart or your keys and other little essential might end up in mysterious places….
Kazoos
- Wax paper
- Toilet paper roll
- Rubber band
Stretch the paper over one end; secure with a rubber band (like a drum). Make a tiny hole about an inch from the blowing end, so the paper doesn’t blow off. Remember to hum….not blow.
Junk Sculpture
- Take anything and make a sculpture out of it…get creative.
“Run Through Delight”
- Think of this as a mini curtain rod & curtain.
You need:
- A dowel or some sticklike thingy.
- 2 dish towels, pillowcases or whatever.
- Wrap them around the dowel, pin in place (like a curtain). Hold above your toddler’s head and let him or her run through back & forth.
BOXES
Even Christmas morning can pale in comparison to the fun that comes with a box.
Try building these: boat with cardboard paddles, house, puppet show theatre, tv (black construction paper in the background, let kids make a show), box kitchen (include fridge), simple dollhouse, rocket. etc.
Wheel-n-Axle
Need:
- 2 jar lids
- Dowel or pencil
- Poke a hole in the center of each, watch the wheels turn.
- Marshmallow-Toothpick Structure
You remember these. Take toothpicks and mini-marshmallows to construct a building.
Ideas adapted from The Father’s Almanac by S. Adams Sullivan
Add comment December 18, 2008
how do you really feel about great grandparents?
When I introduced my son (at 5yrs) to his great grandparents, he looked them over and said
“they don’t look so great.”
1 comment December 17, 2008
holiday travel game: bad idea (great for long car rides!)
Bad Idea
We play a wholesome game called, “bad idea.”
We go around stating things that we could do or say at inappropriate times or that show poor judgment.
For instance, we’ll be driving and when boredom strikes…I’ll say, let’s play “bad idea.”
DS (9) will immediately say something like, “don’t stop to fill your gas tank when the light comes on” and the whole family (in unison) will say ” bad idea”. We go around and come up with stupid things that if we did, hypothetically, would generally be bad ideas.
Note- it’s funny & even your three year old will remember not to “leave your bike in the rain” or “touch the bbq when daddy’s grilling”… all those things you nag & warn about about can come up in this one. It’s also a nice time to slip a few “friendly reminders” of what hubby shouldn’t do without nagging. Seriously, try it. It’s addicting.
Add comment December 16, 2008
