Friendship Garden Nursery School

Made Up Games

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When we give children resources they create their own games. This group of children used materials to create a “basket ball” game up off the ground.

We too often limit children’s imagination with our own constraints. The joy of children making up their own games and playing them teaches so many skills at once. Collaboration, communication, consequences, risk assessment, eye hand coordination and other skills are innate to play. These skills are skills we think we should teach. We do not need too if we just let the children be.

What will you allow children to do today?

Collecting Water

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The children are learning the concept of conservation. They have discovered different sources for collecting water. One idea was to put out buckets to capture the rainwater. They quickly found that the air conditioner run off tubes were much more consistent source of water than depending on mother nature’s rain fall.

Surprisingly on our hot and humid days they were able to collect bucket loads which they enjoyed in a variety of ways.

What concepts are important in your program/life?

Light and Color

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The children enjoyed investigating where the colors on the ground came from. Science in its naturally occurring form.

The joy of discovery. What will your children discover today?

Painting Ideas

I have been working on this list of painting ideas for the last half year. Here is my start. 

Try painting:
WITH
Water color
Water color then cover with plastic wrap, let dry and remove plastic
Do a dot (bingo dabber)
Do a dot on dark paper
Frozen paint
Pudding
Kool aid
finger paint
tempra paint

Watercolor on ice block

How about painting on:
ON
Newspaper
Cardboard
Boxes
Laminating
Tubes
Crumpled paper
Ice
Tin foil
Wax paper
Paper towel
Felt
Big branch
Mirror
Rocks
Shells

You might try:
USING
Pine Cone
Pine needle
Flower
Weed
Yarn
Balloon
Ball
Bumpy ball
Cotton ball
Marble roll

Tea bag painting

Lego
Dinosaur
Animal
Brush
Foam brush
Roller
Sponge
Squeeze bottle
Eye dropper
Kitchen gadget
Fork
Scrub brush
Fly swatter
Spray bottle
Spaghetti
Rocks
Cups
Tubes
Bow
Comb
Bubble wrap
Car
Truck
Train
Cardboard scrapper
Teabag
Feather
Painty elastics around a tray, twang
ADD this:
Spice
Sand
Corn syrup
Baking soda ADD vinegar after for fizzy

 

ADD AFTER painting:
Salt

Can you add to this list?

Trusting young children

When did we stop trusting our young children? We believe that young children will not exercise good judgement about being safe even if we have provided a backdrop for safety including supervision.  We say, “stop”, “be careful”, “you’ll get hurt” long before we give children a chance to investigate, explore, discover and problem solve on their own. We need to teach children about safety without being over cautious and “helicoptering”, allowing them to take risks because we trust them. This is not a conversation about keeping children safe by using sound judgement when it comes to safe practices like car seats and helmets.

This past week our canopy made of branches was taken down. How that came to pass is another story. The branches were left lying on the playground. The children investigated and began to build. This is what I saw as I SUPERVISED the area by watching and listening. Toddlers, all under 3 years old able to wield large branches and not hurt each other. Sure they got beaned on the head a few times but they figure it out without any adult help. I also saw children figure out how to duck as long branches moved around them or over their heads. I witnessed them knowing enough to leave if they didn’t like it. I saw children being safe, smart, inventive little humans. I saw cooperation, communication, negotiation, reasoning, problem solving, imagination, language development and compassion. I watched self-esteem go up and pride abound!  These are all skills I want all children to develop.

It was not without some lip pursing moments where I wanted to shout out, “oh, sh*t” and bite my tongue. The result was worth it and the next time was easier! The branch building area is an incredible area to supervise!

Will you try it?branch building for blog

Patriotic Cupcakes/Muffins

Feeling Patriotic? Let’s make patriotic cupcakes or muffins for a Fourth of July celebration!

Here’s how.

Purchase a white  cake mix or muffin mix. Follow the directions for making cupcakes/muffins on the box. Let the children add the ingredients as directed and stir the mix.

IMG_0094After sufficiently mixing, divide the batter into three bowls. Now it is time to add color! Add red food coloring to one bowl, mix well. Add blue food coloring to a second bowl. Mix well. Please leave the third bowl uncolored.

IMG_0097Use one color to fill 1/3 of your individual muffin cup.  Here we used red first.

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Use the second color to fill the next 1/3 of the individual muffin. Here we used the uncolored batter.

IMG_0099Scoop the last color to fill the muffin cup. We scooped blue last.

IMG_0096Bake according to the directions on the box. Here is the final baked muffin! Enjoyflag

Spin Art

As a child I loved to watch spin art at the local agricultural fair every summer. For a while my colleagues and I attempted to replicate the experience using and old record player. This produced a rather interesting splattering of paint everywhere, which was a different kind of fun! One day I saw instructions on making spin art with a salad spinner. My life as a spin “artist” came alive. Now every summer the teachers at preschool dig out our collection of salad spinners and let the children create their own fair inspired spin art!

Here’s how. Measure and cut circles of paper to fit in your salad spinner. IMG_0150Tape a paper into the bottom of your spinner. Fill some squeeze bottles with slightly watered down tempera paint. Squeeze the paint onto the paper adding lots of colors and designs (or not as the child chooses).

IMG_0152Put on the top and turn the crank! Young children love to be in control of the spinning. Try different speeds.

 

IMG_0154Take your masterpiece out and hang it to dry!

spin art imageBeautiful!

Potato Container Garden

Want to try container gardening with your little ones? We had success with potatoes! Here is why it worked for us!

First, seed potatoes or potato eyes are large enough for little hands to manage. Have you ever tried planting tiny carrot seeds with young children………you get the idea, potatoes are doable!

Second, the potato grows under the soil so there is minimal disruption if a child or children pick the leaves of the potato plant. Unlike, if  a just forming tomato is picked, the project is over!

Third, the potato is not delicate. Children can dig into the box at the end of the growing period and find the potatoes without harming the produce.

Here’s how to set up a potato container garden.

You will need some kind of big container, soil, starter potato, a trowel,water and mulching material.

We used an old window box, filled it with soil, dug a few holes into the soil, plopped the potato in and covered the whole box with more soil and a layer of old leaves and straw. Place your container in a sunny location.

Water your container steadily if you don’t have rain from time to time. Water it, watch the plants grow and when the plants die off sometime about 10 weeks from the start of the project, it is time to dig up your potato!

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IMG_0453 Small potatoes, big impact!

Valentine Box

This Valentine’s Day let’s use a recycled cereal box to make a Valentine box for cards and treats.

This is a fun inexpensive interactive Valentine’s Day project for young children.

You will need an empty cereal box for each child, some wrapping paper (or paint) and stickers or cut out hearts.

Valentine boxProcedure:

Tape the box closed.

We opted to wrap each child’s box as painting took several layers to eliminate show through. It is possible for an adult to spray paint the boxes first.

Our children enjoyed the process of wrapping the boxes in festive Valentine wrapping paper.

Next we laid the wrapped box down and cut a slit in our Valentine Box for cards and goodies from our friends.

We labeled one Valentine box for each child.  Finally, the children decorated with cut outs and glue. Some children added stickers. Our Valentine Box is complete.

Time to deliver the Valentine cards and treats!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Sensory Experiences

Creativity is inventing, experimenting, growing, taking risks, breaking rules, making mistakes, and having fun.
-Mary Lou Cook
By now you’ve heard young children learn actively by using all five of their senses. Keep your young child busy by providing sensory experiences. Eliminate the word “mess” and let them explore and discover using their whole body!
At school we take of our shirts or wear smocks. We cover the floor or stay ready with the broom always keeping safety in mind. We keep the “rules” simple, try to keep the contents in the bucket/bin!
At home try the bathtub or the kitchen sink for wet sensory explorations. A small basin on the floor, with a towel on a plastic trash bag to catch spills will work as well. Baths are a great place for sensory investigation. There is so much to explore and learn with very little equipment or cleanup. Supply your child with props such as sponges, basters, colanders, strainers and pitchers.
For dry sensory investigations any shallow bin will work. Shovels, scoops, containers, tongs, and so on work for dry investigations.
Go outside for sensory exploration, get into mud, plants, rocks, sticks and so on…..
Remember it is only water, mud, paint etc. The benefits for your child will outweigh the cleanup!

sensory

Idea list
Dry
cut straws, rice, flour, noodles (cooked or uncooked) all shapes and sizes, salt, sand,
yarn, cotton balls, dry cereal, oatmeal, dried beans, soil, rocks, pompoms,
easter grass, bottle caps, fish tank rocks, rocks, shells, sponges

Wet
ice, pudding jello, bubbles, mud, water, colored water