Play Guide - Drawing and Painting Play Guide - Building and Constructing




Play Guide - Drawing and Painting
Bring out the Van Gogh in your little one with some arty games and activities.

Crayons

Drawing and painting not only offer a child a way of expressing themselves creatively - they are also excellent activities for improving eye-hand co-ordination and the control of tools, primarily pen or pencil. This is a skill they will also need for school.

This is reason enough to give a child plenty of practice, but there are more benefits to art and painting activities;

* Learning 'I can do it'
* Learning to sit still and concentrate.
* Learning to express themselves (especially if you talk about what they have done).
* Building self confidence (especially if you show how proud you are - and if you put the drawings on display)
* Structured painting activities teach a child to work from beginning to end.
* Learning that learning and doing things is fun

Before you start

Accept there will be mess and prepare for it. No child can enjoy painting if they are afraid of making a mess!

* Find a place - if you can’t put a table or easel in an easily cleaned area, put down a plastic sheet or table cloth. If you cover this with newspaper too, you cut down the possibility of slipping.
* Expect children to take care - but don’t be critical of reasonable mess, it’s all part of the fun.
* Dress for the occasion - you can buy painting aprons or one of your old shirts, T-shirts or blouses can be cut down to make a painting overall.
* Cleaning brushes is a source of frustration to children because they tend to get their paintings too wet. You could either show them how to wipe the brush on kitchen paper or have a different brush for each colour.

Tools - Brushes, pens and crayons

Have a variety of different sized brushes to hand, these produce different kinds of pictures. Crayons are also good. Felt tips are okay for older children but not recommended for under threes. Chalk is a great choice as this can even be used on the garden path for fun outdoor art, and then washed down with the hose.

Paper and paint

Art shops offer a range of paper which you can buy in rolls - but for everyday painting you can use make use of lots of your rubbish! The back of cereal boxes, washable wall paper, old letters and circulars, computer print-outs, they are all fine for painting. Do check the absorbency though –too shiny and paint slides off - too absorbent and the paper will rip when it is wet.

Structured and free
First and foremost painting and drawing must be fun - and that means children should paint and draw exactly what they want.

Structured
* Colouring in a drawing
* Drawing to order
* Tracing or drawing around objects
* Printing

Free
* Having a pot of paint a brush and a piece of paper and doing what he feels like.
* Hand and foot prints
* Finger and sponge painting, blow painting

After they finish

Clearing up should be part of the activity
* Encourage him to wash out brushes and put them away.
* Wash down surfaces with a cloth.
* Put paints away

And remember drawing does not have to be messy - A soft pencil and a bit of paper can be used anywhere and everywhere and you carry these around in your handbag for impromptu play. Alternatively you could try a mess-free creative product like Doodle Pro, that lets them explore their creative side without the mess.




Play Guide - Building and Constructing
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Construction is great for developing hand-eye co-ordination and also for building confidence and a sense of achievement. There are lots of construction toys available in a variety of formats but you can also use boxes and items from around the home.

building blocks

Over the counter play sets
These come in a wide variety and in all sizes.

* Sets which do not need to be put together in very precise ways are best for the very youngest children.
* Sets that require more precise positioning but come in big pieces are best for the middle age range – Pop Onz are suitable for children from 18 months.
* Sets with small parts that require precise positioning can be used to make more realistic models and are best for older children.
* Some sets are based on bricks - others on rods. A child who loves constructing will enjoy any kind of building play.

Collecting bits and bobs

Instead of throwing out all your packaging collect it in a bag that he can rummage in for inspiration for today’s construction. Useful items include;

* Bits of stiff card to make a firm base.
* Boxes of various sizes.
* The inner tubes from toilet rolls.
* Bits of wool and string.
* Sticky backed paper.
* Paper plates.
* Card cut into circles for wheels (or foil milk bottle tops if you can find any).
* Cotton wool balls

Prepared items (to make things easier)

* Tubes – these are always difficult because very little of the tube is in contact with a flat surface. Cut the base of the tube in four or five places and fold these out. Staple these to a card. Prepare both ends of some tubes so he can use them as pillars.
* Wheels - make a small hole in the centre of the plate and pass a split pin into it. She can use this to attach the wheels to a large box.

Find what you need to fix things

* PVA Glue is best for most things but flour paste can be used to stick paper.
* Paper clips and rubber bands hold things together until the glue dries.
* Split pins for fixing wheels (she may need help with these)
* Staples help the stability - but do this for her.

Tip!

How to make flour paste
* Take a handful of plain flour, a pinch of salt and add water slowly.
* Stir continuously.
* It is ready to use once it becomes gooey.
* You can add food colouring to this if you wish. (it makes it easier to see where he has spread it)

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* Play & Learn activities reprinted from "Preschooler Play & Learn"
with permission of its author, Penny Warner, and its publisher, Meadowbrook Press (2000.)

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