active play

Silly Crafts and Ways to Get Silly with your Kids!

Who doesn't love to get silly once in a while, whether it's jumping in leaves in the fall, playing dress up or even making funny goo!  At momstown this month, we are getting our "silly on" with creative crafts, funny books, crazy dress up or hilarious snacks!

 

great ideas to get silly with your kids

 

 

Here are some fun ways to get silly with your kids;

 

Tell Silly Knock Knock Jokes or make up your own!

 

 

Start Clowning Around!  Create a circus in your own house!

 

 

Fun with Magic Mud and Silly Putty

 

 

Silly Handprint Monsters

 

 

Giggle together when you share embarrassing and silly stories that happened to you!

 

 

Nothing is sillier than a dance party with homemade microphones!  Here's a great song to start you off!

 

 

 Read some Dr. Suess books and act them out!

 

 

Make a Animal Cracker Carousel

 

 

Have a tea party, dress up like pirates or princesses and speak in a new silly language!

 

 

Silly Snacks - or how about this silly apple smiles from athriftymom.com

 


silly activities for kids

 

 

 

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Shredded Paper and Cereal Sensory Bins for Baby

At momstown Burlington's Baby Basics program, we are all about sensory activities.  And one of the best activities for your baby is to create a sensory bin.  Sure it sounds like a great idea, but so many mamas brush it off as being too hard or too messy.  But babies love new experiences, new textures, new shapes and colours.  And making your own sensory bin doesn't have to be hard.  Babies are interested in the simplest things and you can turn every day things into sensory activities for baby. 

 

Shredded Paper Sensory Bin

Sensory Bin One - You know all that paper you've been meaning to shred, but haven't quite gotten around to getting rid of yet? Spend 5 minutes with your shredder and not only have you done your good housework deed of the day - but you've got sensory material right there! Toss the paper into a bucket, a bin, or even a pile on the floor could work. Let baby explore and even climb right in.

 

sensory play for baby, momstown


 

 
Cereal Sensory Bin

 

Sensory Bin Two - So when I was a kid, every once in a while we'd wind up with those giant bags of puffed wheat cereal. Seriously? Who eats that stuff? However, it makes for a fantastic sensory activity. Check out momtown Burlington's bins filled with puffed wheat cereal, and a few letter shaped cookie cutters. Two minutes of work to throw together, and a whole morning of exploring and fun for baby.

 

sensory play for baby, momstown

 

You don't have to be super mom to make a super sensory bin.  Any new shape and texture can become an exciting new thing to explore for baby. 

 

For other sensory bin ideas from momstown;

Farm animal water bins

Making cloud dough

 

 

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How to Make Dragon Feet

As the weather gets cooler, it is good to have a variety of indoor active play activities on hand to keep kids moving, exercising, and working on their gross motor skills. On miserable days when it is too wet or snowy to go outside, we often watch and participate along with Bo and Desidore Dragon from the Kids' CBC show Bo on the Go. Today, we made our own Desi Dragon (or dinosaur) feet out of empty cereal boxes and craft foam.

 

 

Here's what you need to make your own set of dragon or dinosaur feet:

  • two empty cereal, cracker, or cookie boxes (we used Baby Mum-Mum boxes)
  • green paint
  • 2 large sheets of green craft foam
  • cream coloured craft foam (optional)
  • glue
  • scissors


1. Glue the open end of each box closed.  Paint bottom and all sides of each box green:

 

 

2. Apply a second coat of paint, if necessary:

 

 

3. Turn boxes over.  Use scissors or a craft knife (an adult's job) to cut an oval opening large enough to fit a child's foot into in the top of each box:

 

 

4. Draw a dinosaur or dragon shaped footprint large enough to completely cover each box on a sheet of green craft foam.  Cut out:

 

 

5. If desired, cut out toe nail shapes from cream craft foam and glue onto the top of each dragon toe (Desi Dragon doesn't actually have visible toe nails, but we liked the look they gave our feet):

 

 

6. Glue a foam foot onto the top of each box, covering the opening.  Use scissors or a craft knife (an adult's job) to cut an "X" into the top of each foam dinosoar foot so that your child can slip his or her foot into it:

 

 

Here is what the feet look like from the side:

 

 

 

Slip on your feet, and you'll be ready to exercise right along with Desi and Bo as you watch "Bo on the Go".  Here are a few activities to try with your feet:

  • turn on dinosauar music ("We are the Dinosaurs" by Laurie Berkner is a favourite here) and stomp around the house like dinosaurs
  • count how many "dinosaur feet" it takes to cross the room.  Compare this with the number of your regular footprints fit across the room
  • try turning around, walking backwards, and jumping up and down with your dragon feet on.  The feet make all of these gross motor activities an extra (fun!) challenge
  • make extra sets of feet and have a dragon race with your friends
  • create dinosaur feet in different sizes, and see whether it is easier or more difficult to walk in larger feet
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Ghost Bowling and Halloween Fun for Preschoolers and Toddlers

Hosting a Halloween party for preschoolers or toddlers does not have to be scary. There are many activities that are easy to set up, relatively mess free, and not so spooky, including this ghost bowling game.

 

 

Here's what you need to make your own Ghost Bowling Set:

  • white styrofoam cups
  • sharpie markers
  • "eye" stickers, or googlie eyes and glue
  • a soft ball to bowl with

 

1. Stick eye stickers onto a number of white styrofoam cups.  If you don't have eye stickers, you could glue on googlie eyes, or simply draw on eyes with permanent markers.

 

2. Use permanent markers to draw mouths on your ghosts.  Choose a variety of emotions, including "happy", "sad", "angry" and "unsure".

 

 

3.  Let your child stack the cups (a great fine motor activity), and then stand back and roll a ball at them to see how many he or she can knock down.

 

There are many other ways to use your ghosts too.  Here are just a few:

  • as math manipulatives.  Count the number of total ghosts, divide them into groups of a certain number, add and subtract ghosts, or award and add up points for the number of ghosts knocked down
  • to each emotional awareness: Have your child identify ghosts that appear happy, sad, angry etc.  This is a wonderful way to work on emotional awareness with your toddler
  • to practice sorting: Have your child sort ghosts by eye colour, facial expression etc.

 

Happy Halloween!

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40 Fun Fall Activities For Kids

 

1. Jump in a pile of leaves.  Make sure you take pictures!

2. Make baked apples

3. Visit a corn maze

4. Make leaf rubbings

5. Make a things we're thankful for tree (more on this soon)

6. Have a bonfire or campfire

7. Make people, shapes, and letters out of sticks and leaves

8. Roast pumpkin seeds

9. Pop popcorn in a pot on the stove

10. Watch the geese fly south

11. Make apple cider

12. Plant paperwhite bulbs for Christmas gifts and decorations (plant in mid November for Christmas blooms)

13. Make a scarecrow

14. Visit a fall fair

15. Go apple picking

16. Visit a favourite park and observe how it has changed since the summer

17. Join in a turkey trot fun run for a local charity

18. Donate food to the food bank. Consider canvassing your neighbours for donations too

19. Read "Pumpkin Soup" by Helen Cooper, and make pumpkin soup of your own

20. Help a neighbour rake their leaves

21. Spot an owl

22. Bake pumpkin cookies

23. Take a flashlight walk through your neighbourhood

24. Make pumpkin pie smoothies

25. Make leaf prints by dipping leaves into paint

26. Go for a walk in the forest to see the fall colours

27. Visit a pumpkin patch

28. Make thank you cards and give them out to people just because

29. Pumpkin Lattes! (order steamed milk for the kids)

30. Go through last year's winter gear, and make puppets out of single mittens

31. Plant tulip bulbs outside so you'll have flowers in spring

32. Visit a local farm and buy produce

33. Make apple butter

34. Have an indoor campout: set up a tent in the living room, roll out sleeping bags, and have hot dogs, smores, and other camping foods for dinner. Turn off the electronics and lights and read stories and games by flashlight

35. Embrace the wind and fly a kite

36. Collect pinecones.  Try to find different types and sizes.

37. Make a bird feeder

38. Go on a hayride

39. Host a winter kids gear swap with friends. Trade last year's too small coat for one that fits, and let the kids have a fashion show.  Donate any extra gear to charity

40. Make pumpkin pie playdough

 

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On the Go Active Alphabet Activities and Busy Bag Fun

 

Learning the alphabet can be a fun, active play game with this set of alphabet activity cards that is easy to make. Many studies have shown that kids understand new concepts best when they are physically experienced. Moving cements learning, and also has a host of other benefits, including increased attention span, and better overall health.

 

If your kids are fans of Bo on the Go on Kids' CBC, you will know how easy it is to get them moving when the energetic blue haired host, Bo, asks them to swim like a shark or hop like a kangaroo. These cards work the same way, providing a fun movement activity for each letter of the alphabet:

 

 

We printed the list of alphabet activities out on computer paper, and then cut out each letter activity and glued it onto scrapbook paper printed with an alphabet theme:

 

 

Here is the list of activities:

a: put your arms in the air and snap them like an alligator
b: bounce up and down like a ball
c: crawl across the floor like crab
d: pretend you are digging like a dog
e: act like an elephant
f: flap your wings and fly like a falcon
g: gallop like a gazelle
h: hop like a hare (that’s like a rabbit)
i: ice skate across the floor
j: jiggle like a bowl of jello
k: karate kick your legs up high (just don’t kick other kids!)
l: lean to the left and right
m: march to music, or make music while you march
n: nod your head nine times
o: go over an obstacle (crawl over piles of pillows, or hop over a line)
p: pounce like a panther
q: quickly move as quietly as you can
r: roll round  the room
s: slither and slide on your stomach like a snake
t: tiptoe and turn around on your toes
u: up, up, up! See how high you can reach
v: vroom! Pretend you’re driving a van at various speeds
w: wiggle like a worm
x: x marks the exact spot – make an x with your arms and legs
y: yawn and stretch
z: zip! zip up a zipper from your toes to your nose

 

You can use the cards in a number of ways. Here are just a few:

  • Place the cards facedown, pick a card, and do the activity on the card
  • Place the cards facedown, pick a card, and point to someone else who should do the activity
  • Pick a card, do the activity, and have others try and guess what letter of the alphabet you are doing
  • Sort the cards into alphabetical order
  • Choose a simple word such as "cat", and find the card for each of the letters in the word.  Do each of the activities in sequence so that you are spelling the word through movement (e.g. CAT = crawl like a crab, snap your arms like an alligator, and then tiptoe and turn around on your toes).  Try spelling each other's names through movement too
  • Use the activity on the card as part of your letter of the day, or letter of the week activities

 

The back of the cards provide a shape and colour sorting busy bag activity. We cut out circles, squares, and triangles from purple, green, and yellow paper, and glued one shape onto the back of each card.  Younger kids can help with gluing, and preschoolers can practice cutting as well:

 

 

This pretties up the back of the cards and turns them into a perfect quiet time or on the go activity for your toddler or preschooler.. 

We started by sorting the cards into shapes:

 

 

Next, we worked on colours:

 

 

We practiced a bit of pattern making and pattern identification too.  So far, we have worked on a basic a-b-a-b shape pattern:

 

 

We tried the same a-b-a-b pattern with colours too:

 

 

Patterns are a great early math activity, and you can progress to increasingly more complex patterns.  See what your little one can come up with.

 

With this "Bo on the Go" inspired active alphabet and shapes and colours busybag set, you will have everything you need to get your child physically active, teach the alphabet, work on early math, and have a lot of fun too!

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