For the Two to Five Set
- If the day is sunny, try just about anything that involves water. A sprinkler to run through, a small pool to splash in, a hose to spray on the garden, are all fine. Editor's note: We found that our grandchildren loved a sand and waterway type of structure that we purchased and would set up on a hot day in the backyard.
- The very youngest will love having a large paintbrush (clean!) and a bucket of water to 'paint' the patio or the driveway. The water dries quickly, but it makes a satisfactory darkening on cement or brick. Small children are engaged by the process, not the product, so they don't have to be asked "What are you making a picture of?" They’re just spreading 'paint!' This trick also works indoors, if you give them a smaller brush and some water, and sheets of newspaper. The newspaper absorbs the water, and the child can 'paint' quite a credible design.
- Three and four year olds might like a series of containers with which to experiment. Pouring water from one to another, they can learn quite a bit about the relationships between volume and shape, at the same time they're developing skills in eye-hand coordination. When they've got down the business of pouring let them pour the family’s drinks for the next meal.
- If you don't think the neighbors will object to the mess, turn the child loose on the driveway with a piece of chalk. If the sun is shining, trace around the shadow of your head or hand, and let her decorate it. Or have the child lie on the ground while you trace around him, and let him draw in the features and clothes. Stand back and let the child decide what to make. Make big letters. Make animal pictures. If you want to erase, just get out the garden hose, and squirt the driveway, while the child takes a broom and sweeps the water and chalk away.
- You can do your grandchildren a great favor (and their parents, too) by teaching them some self-help skills like buttoning, snapping, zipping, shoe tying, tooth brushing, hand washing, nose blowing, etc. In this busy world, often both parents are working and there is no time to wait while little ones struggle and learn even the simplest of tasks. More than half my last class of four-year-olds didn't know how to wash their own hands or blow their own noses!
- Their parents are probably too young to have things like old sheets and bedspreads lying around, so your grandchildren may never have had the fun of making a "camp" in the living room. Help them to drape tables and chairs and desks to make tunnels and tents and rooms. (You’ll want to remove breakables before you get into this).
- An absorbing and quiet activity is sorting – sorting anything at all, from shells on the beach, to pebbles in the driveway, to leaves, to the buttons in Grandma’s grandma's button box. A child may need a little push to start ("Can you put all the things that belong with this red button into one pile?"), but in no time you’ll be amazed by the number of attributes a child can think up: all the four-hole buttons here, all the no-hole buttons there; or maybe all the round buttons that aren't red in this pile, and all the other round buttons in that pile, and all the non-round buttons back in the box, etc. It’s important to listen to the child’s reasoning as he decides how to sort the objects. If he just wants to design with the buttons, that's fine too. When she is through, let her choose one favorite object from the field "for keeps," and help her to put the buttons away for another time.
- Providing a "white board" (any size) and washable markers can lead to all sorts of creative play. Be sure the child understands that the markers are to be used only on the board, and must be capped if not in use. If the child cannot yet write let him draw. Offer to label the drawing. Let her copy your words. Play with the ABC's.
- Teach the child to write her name. Compare it to yours. Sit back and watch as the child draws pictures, and don’t worry if they look like scribbles to you. Scribbling is the first stage of learning how to draw. That's where we all started. The next stage is called "named scribbling," and I promise you that other, more easily discerned, stages will follow.
- Help the child to make a scrapbook out of magazine pictures. You may have to give lessons in scissors and glue, but what a feeling of accomplishment when he or she succeeds in using them well!
- Teach your grandchild how to jump rope. How many jump rope rhymes do you remember?
- Play "balloon ball." How many times can you bat the balloon back and forth? Teach the names of body parts by asking things like: "Can you hit it with your forehead? Your knee? Your elbow? Your ear? Your shoulder?" as you demonstrate the action.
- Look for "sewing cards" in a toy store. These lace-through-the-hole cards are a precursor to sewing. They exercise the same muscles with which the child will one day write with pen or pencil.
- Don't forget music! Introduce an instrument. Play kazoos, harmonicas!
You've got your assignments. Next time, Julia's article will take you from age six on up to fourteen and beyond.
©Julia Sneden for SeniorWomen.com
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