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50 things to do with a precocious toddler so you can get a little school in.
I didn't do all these - pick and choose what will work for you. Often,
I'd spend a portion of the summer collecting a supply of Toddler or Preschool
activities to use the following school year.
- What
can you do to INCLUDE your toddler in school –
- Special
coloring books with large crayons
- ‘magic’
coloring books with markers that only mark on special paper
- ‘magic
slates’ that you lift off the plastic covering to ‘erase’ the
impression you drew
- flashcards
(shapes, colors, ABC's, numbers)
- simple
workbooks
You
may be surprised at what your toddler picks up on just being around all the
learning going on! I always read
statements like that and thought it was fine for some people’s kids, but mine
wouldn’t learn by osmosis that way. Then,
I walked by the table that we had a world map laminated on with my 2 year old
sitting ON THE TABLE (which is a spankable offense at our house).
I was just about to swat his behind as I passed by when he said, “Look,
Ma, Stailia!” I stopped my swat
in midair because I didn’t know what he was talking about.
“What?” “STAILIA,
Mama, STAILIA”. He was looking at
the map upside down and pointing to Australia.
“Cockadiles – Stalia.” “YES,
SWEETIE! Crocodiles come from
Australia. I was blown away so much
that I forgot to spank him.
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- Draw
roads, houses, etc. on large paper or cardboard and have them use cars and
trucks on it.
- Several
cardboard boxes (cereal boxes, shoe boxes) to make a train or a town or just
to stack and build with.
- Give
them their own photo album of friends, family, pets and familiar things.
- Small
cars in a cardboard tube (like Christmas wrap).
- Make
a necklace or snack chain with yarn (masking tape on the ends) and any
cereal with holes (like cheerios). If
the toddler is old enough, they may be able to string them himself.
- A
retractable measuring tape to measure with.
- Nuts
and bolts to sort.
- Crochet
hook and a length of yarn. You
can stitch a few stitches for them and let them “sew” on their own –
some toddlers may be very persistent.
- Stack
cups or containers of different sizes.
- Game
pieces from lost games & cards (NO EATING!) Find old games at garage
sales if you don’t have lost pieces.
- Make
tunnel of kitchen chairs.
- Writing
tray – put a layer of rice (that just vacuums up) in a baking dish for
them to write with their fingers.
- Lacing
cards (just use a cardboard shape with holes punched for yarn.) Attach yarn
with masking tape.
- Stencils,
paper, colored pencils.
- Chalk
or light colored crayons on dark construction paper.
- Painting:
water colors, paint books or food coloring in water with Q-tips.
- Blocks
(fabric ones that may not stack well, but also don’t hurt when hurled
across the room).
- Play-doh
with a plastic knife, rolling pin, cookie cutters, small plastic toys.
- Pringles
can with a slit cut in the top to drop cardboard or plastic coins.
- Look
through a button box.
- Watch
a bug move across a table (NO EATING!)
- Beanbags
and a bucket.
- Magnet
and paperclips, washers, a nail, etc.
- A
large box (that’s all they need – they’ll do the rest).
- Books!
- Throw
a blanket over a coffee table or card table.
Give them clothes pins. They’ll
figure it out.
- Sticky
notes and pencil.
- Refrigerated
cookie dough and a cookie sheet. They
can play with it and you can eat all the results.
- A
variety of magnets (like ABC’s or just refrigerator magnets) and a metal
cookie sheet.
- A
stack of puzzles.
- Ice
trays and buttons, beads or marbles for sorting (NO EATING!)
- A
marble maze – set it in a shallow cardboard box to cut down on the lost
marbles.
- A
plastic bottle (clean milk jug, well rinsed detergent bottle, etc.) and
small items like clothes pins, pennies to drop in and shake out again (this
can be a little noisy during school).
- Damp
washcloth and wall or window to “clean”.
Paper towels and a spray bottle with a little water in it.
- Colored
rice to pour through a colander or funnels.
- Colored
rice or colored cereal to glue on construction paper.
Write the child’s name in big block letters and let them glue stuff
inside the letters.
- Tape
a sheet of freezer paper or newsprint the floor and trace around the child,
having them lie still with their legs and arms a little outstretched – let
them color a self-portrait.
- Let
them have a ride toy in the house if they don’t get too rowdy.
- Matching
shapes – cut out shapes, then draw around them on another sheet of paper.
Let the kids match the shapes.
- Box
of paper dolls.
- Ziploc
bag of small plastic toys such as farm animals or little people.
- Make
a mural with butcher or banner paper.
- Sort
Duplos by color & size.
- Soft
foam balls or daddy’s matched sox in a ball to pitch into the laundry
basket.
- Have
a stuffed-animal tea party with real crackers.
- Do
exercises together.
- Dominoes
- Paint
with watercolor books – use Q-tips instead of paint brushes and a muffin
tin with water to limit spills.
- Toy
shopping card to collect things around the room.
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