Enjoy these activities with your 2 to 2½-year-old:

Play Guide - Rhyme and Reading Play Guide - Pre-School Skills Reading Play Guide - Science and Nature Play Guide - Learning 2 - 3 years
Play Guide - Social and Emotional Development 2 - 3 Years Toys and games to help mobility 2-3 years Play Tips For Parents Play Guide - Sand and Water
Play Guide - Water Play Guide - Drawing and Painting Play Guide - Building and Constructing Learning About Space
Play Guide - On the Go Play Guide - Activity Rhymes More Outings Play Guide - Songs for Bouncing on the Knee
Play Guide - Traditional Games More activities for nature study Go Together Hide the Music
Storyteller Toddler Bowling Wash 'em Up Dance 'til You Drop
Scribble Scrabble Dress-Up Parade Flannel Tale Glad, Sad, and Mad
Sticker Magic What's Wrong?




Play Guide - Rhyme and Reading
Believe it or not, rhymes help children learn pre-reading skills. Here are some rhymes to start you off.One of the most helpful pre-reading skills to learn is that words are made up of sounds. To sound out c-a-t is cat and d-o-g is dog. This is the basic principle behind phonics – you might have come across phonics before. Lots of experts believe that practicing lots of rhymes from an early age seems to lower the probability that children will have reading problems when they reach school.

Playing games and singing songs that feature rhymes can be of great benefit. Here are a selection of favourites:

Songs that emphasize the little sounds with a rhythm

This is the way the ladies ride
Trit- trot trit- trot trit- trot
This is the way the gentlemen ride
Gallup, gallup,gallup
This is the way the old man rides
Hobble-dee hobble-dee
And down in a ditch.


The actions (trotting, galloping or hobbleddeing on the knee) emphasise the rhythm. The down in the ditch is a surprise that makes her laugh- and the excitement improves listening next time around.

We do not need to restrict ourselves to nursery songs. Any song that fits the words to a clear rhythm or emphasizes the little sounds works well, even pop songs old or new work!

Rhymes that emphasize the little sounds through repetition.

Humpty Dumpty

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall
All the kings horses and all the kings men
Couldn’t put humpty together again.


Baba Black Sheep

Baba black sheep have you and wool
Yes sir, yes sir three bags full
One for the master and one for the dame
And one for the little boy that lives down the lane.


Rhyme it

I saw a cat and he was wearing a………… hat.
I saw a pig and he was wearing a………….wig.
I saw a hen holding a …………pen
I saw a stoat and he was wearing a ………coat.


You can either take turns to make up the sentences or you can provide the animals and he can provide the rhymes.

Silly

Silly rhymes are great fun, he’ll be having so much fun he won’t think for one minute he’s learning! The sillier the better!

Where did the chuckle puckle go?
I don’t know.




Play Guide - Pre-School Skills Reading
Back to top
Playtime hints and tips to help develop pre-reading skillsIt can sometimes feel like you’re under pressure to have your child reading before they’ve even started school. But this really isn’t something you need to worry about. There is no need to rush to give them a head start – did you know that some countries don’t even start their children reading until the age of 7 and those children actually do go on to be better readers than those who start earlier!

The most important things you can do to help are to foster a love of books in your child, even if he can’t read yet and always positively encourage his efforts towards reading. If you help him understand that books are good fun, he’ll learn without even realising it!

Below are some easy tips and pointers for preparing your pre-schooler for reading:

1. Reading is fun!
Encourage a positive view of reading by;

* Setting a good example * - let him see that mummy reads too!
* Enjoy books together * – let him get to know the feel of books and enjoy looking through them.
* Bedtime stories * – sharing story books when you’re safe and cuddled up in bed builds positive images of reading that will last for a lifetime

It’s all in the detail!

Reading needs concentration and attention to detail, so practice these skills through play;

* Look for the surprises * - Look for picture books that have a hidden character on each page.
* Search in the shops * - have him look for one of his favourite foods in the supermarket as you do the weekly shop. Watch out for logos and familiar labels.
* Out and About * – When you’re out and about look carefully at things like leaves, flowers and shells. Point out the details.

Familiarity with Letters
Start building early familiarity with letters through simple play ideas;

* Books * - look for individual letters in books. S for snake or F for Freddy.
*Out and About* - look for individual letters on car number plates, street signs etc
* Toys * - look out for toys with letters for added play value- especially those that tell you the sounds when you press a button
* Food * - look for letters on food packets.
* Words * - look for frequent words like the in his story books.

Familiarity with sounds

Words and sentences are quite rhythmic and built up of a collection of sounds, get them used to this idea with some of these tips;

* Poems and rhyme * - read poems, nursery rhymes and books written in rhyme.
* Game play * - play games that use rhymes.
* Names * - clap out the syllables of his name. Can he do it? Can he clap out his whole name? Freddie is two claps Freddie Walker is four. Who do you know with the most claps?

Familiarity with shapes
Words and letters are just shapes, for example A is based on a triangle, recognising shapes is a good building block for reading;

*Books* – look for objects in picture books that are a particular shape
*Out and About* - look for shapes outside, wheels on cars, round-abouts, road signs, paving slabs etc




Play Guide - Science and Nature
Back to top
Playtime hints and tips to help your child discover wonder of science and natureFrom the mument he can get about by himself, you’ll see that your baby loves to investigate and explore everything! Many of the simple activities that he loves actually do help him learn basic scientific principles. For example, playing with bath toys will teach him simple lessons about solids and liquids, and, the best thing is, he is learning all the time without even realising it.

All the things surrounding him provide ample material to develop his ’scientific’ side. From leaves and animals in nature, to toys and furniture – they all have a part in play as he explores his world.

Early on, he’ll want to know “what happens if…” and will often come up with his own answer. Don’t feel like you need to give any kind of a scientific explanation of the principle at play, the most important thing is to let him experience what happens.

Day to day there are lots of ways to help bring out the scientist in him!

How do things move?

* Try pushing balls down a slope with him to watch what happens
* What happens if you send different shapes down, do they move quicker or slower, or do they get stuck half way?

What floats?

Bath time is a brilliant time to investigate water and its effects.
* What floats? Give him household bits and pieces made of different materials to try.
* What sinks? Try different shapes and materials again.
* Which things soak up water? Try paper plates, face flannels, sponges, ducks, plastic cups.
* What happens to bubbles when he puts soap in the bath?

How does your garden grow?

Growing things is a great way to learn about nature, and the best thing is that children love to grow! They also love creepy crawlies so there are lots of great things to explore in the garden.

* Plant sunflower seeds in pots. How tall will they grow? Watch how they turn to face the sun.
* Put some grass seed (or better still cress) on a wet flannel - keep it damp and watch the roots and shoots pop out of the seed.
* Plant some radishes- it only takes 6 weeks from planting to harvest.
* How many legs do spiders have? See if you can catch one and count the legs.
* How many birds come to the bird table?
* What happens when you put a piece of celery in a jar of coloured water over night? It will come out the colour of the water!
* How quickly does a bamboo cane grow? You will need a tape measure!

These are just a few ideas, I’m sure that you can think of lots more to make everyday learning discoveries.




Play Guide - Learning 2 - 3 years
Back to top
Playtime tips and games to encourage learning.

Rubber Duck Bathtime

Pour Away

At this age he will really love playing with water in the bath. Not only does he find out 'how'and 'why' but he’ll also be practicing eye-hand co-ordination.

* Give him something to pour water from like a jug, and something to pour in to, like a plastic cup
* Also give him something that floats when empty but sinks when full, like a plastic bottle.
* Give him a selection of sponges that soak up water.
* Give him floating ducks that he can send away, with a wave of water
* Let him explore what he can do with these objects and he’ll have great fun

Making butterfly prints

This is a simple painting activity that works like magic and its one that is a real classic. It teaches children to work towards an end, that creating is fun and of course improves hand-eye coordination too.

* Take some thickened paint in two or more colours
* Take small pieces of paper and fold down the middle
* Show him how to put paint on one side of the paper
* Gently fold the paper over and press to get paint on both sides
* Open up to show him the beautiful butterfly he made!


Tip!

*How to make your own thick paint*
To make your own thick paint put a desert spoon of flour into a saucepan with a little water, whisk, bring to the boil and add a little colouring.

For older children you could add powder paint rather than food colouring.

Sorting the socks

Get some help with the laundry and help him to learn very basic maths principles and matching too!

* Put all the socks in a bag
* Ask him to sort them in to pairs!

Heads and bodies

Another pairing game that helps teach basic maths ideas.

* Take about 5 – 10 small pieces of card and on to each stick pictures of animals cut from magazines
* Cut each card in two, so that the head is on one side and the body on the other
* Ask him to pair them up with the right head and right body
* Ask him to do mismatches – what is the silliest animal he can make and what would he call it?

Picture match

On a variation on the game above, this pairing game encourages him to look for what objects have in common – this encourages early maths and also as he will be looking for the detail, this also helps develop early reading.

* Take 10 – 20 pieces of card and stick objects on them, there should be two of each different kind of object – so for example two cars, two mugs and two sofas. Some pairs should be identical pictures but some can be the same sort of object but different pictures
* Ask him to form the pairs – this will help him understand that things can have something in common even if they are a different size or colour for example.

Find the sticker

This is a simple hide and seek game that helps him look carefully - an important skill for early reading.

* Take some sticky backed shapes or cut them out from sticky backed paper
* Ask him to wait outside the room while you stick these to various objects around the room
* Tell him how many you have hidden and let him have fun looking for them
* If he needs help, give him hints when he is getting 'warm'!




Play Guide - Social and Emotional Development 2 - 3 Years
Back to top
His social development will come in leaps and bounds when he is old enough to play with other children. Although children like being with other children before they are two it really isn’t until the third year when their lives extend beyond family and carers.

Story Book

He will start being more considerate of people when they are upset, to learn to read moods a little more. Although this is great, he might also start to worry more too! During this time, he might start to be frightened of things that he wasn’t at all worried about before. During this time things like ghosties and monsters might start to feature in his concerns!

By the second half of this year, he will have become more easy going, more caring and more social. His tantrums should hopefully be on the decline too!

Games

* Finding faces *
This kind of play helps reinforce ideas of other people’s feeling and emotions.
Flick through a magazine together
Count how many smiley faces you can see?
How many sad faces are there?
Play at drawing faces and seeing if he can tell how they feel

Stories
Children love stories they can join in with and reading books together is great for your together time - look for books which have repeated phrases such as “I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down “ from the three little pigs. Read these often and get him to join in. The three Billy goats Gruff, Chicken Licken and Red Riding Hood are obvious examples.

Whispers
A good game for a child who always shouts!
* Whisper to your child what he should do next.
* He then does it.
* Then he whispers to you.

Here we go round the mulberry bush for one or two
Imitating is a social skill and games that encourage this are good choices. Here we go round the mulberry bush is a classic...

You can play this by dancing round in a circle but you don’t have to;

“Here we go round the mulberry bush, the mulberry bush the mulberry bush,
Here we go round the mulberry bush on a cold and frosty morning.
(Then he stops and mimes as you sing)
This is the way we brush our hair, brush our hair, brush our hair,
This is the way we brush our hair on a cold and frosty morning
(You can now add any action you like!)

Snap

Cards and board games are good social games but lots are too difficult for the under threes.

A whole pack of cards is probably too much for him now, but you can take a chunk of the pack. Shuffle them and deal them out and play a game of simple Snap!

You could also try a simple game of lotto.

Copy cat
Play a game of copying faces!

* You pull a funny face - he copies.
* He pulls a funny face you copy.

Helping
At this age he doesn’t know the difference between work and play so he will be more than happy helping you with the housework!

He could
* Wash the salad greens
* Dust a coffee table.
* Collect the post or newspaper.
* Post a letter.




Toys and games to help mobility 2-3 years
Back to top
At two she runs with flat feet and can’t yet take off from her toes. She can’t change speeds easily. She can just about jump off the ground and can comfortably manage a sit and ride. As the year progresses she’ll be able to walk along a log or wall, stand on one foot and use a slide by herself.

Windmill Flower

Games

* Toy Box *
Lots of toys are available to help encourage her movement and mobility. Pull alongs, push-alongs are great and many of you will have access to climbing frames or slides in the garden or at a local park.

* Don’t step on the cracks *
When you’re out and about, play a game of avoiding the cracks. She’ll be able to practice taking off as she jumps from safe spot to safe spot.

* Shadow tag *
This is a game of tag with a difference- you catch someone by stepping in their shadow. Chase games are good for her to practice stopping and starting, changing direction and learning to change speed quickly.

* Running in the wind *
Nothing quite excites little ones as much as running in a high wind. You can find an exposed spot and lean into the wind. Pretend it is blowing you both away or just run after flying leaves and bits of tissue paper.




Play Tips For Parents
Back to top
Playing games and having fun with your child will really help him to learn and is also a fantastic way for you to build your relationship with him. You’ll love every minute of his company and will collect memories to last a lifetime. Here’s how: * Watch him when he’s playing on is own. This way you’ll get hints of what he needs, what he enjoys and what will help him learn new skills.

* Always choose toys appropriate to his age and that match his stage of development. Age limits are set by child development experts for both safety and developmental reasons.

* Follow his cues to be creative and resourceful, without dominating, and let him dictate the pace. If he starts to lose interest he’s probably had enough so stop and resume your play when he seems interested again.

* Create time for him to enjoy playing. He learns best through play and he will learn best in an environment that allows him time to explore, investigate and discover things.

* Keep an eye on him. He will like to see you nearby just as much as you need to supervise him. Provide him with a safe, hazard-free play space indoor and outdoors.

* Regularly check his toys are safe to play with as they will receive a lot of use and abuse! Encourage him to play with toys that suit the space where your child will be playing and anticipate potential dangers, such as trying to carry a large toy upstairs.

* Surround him with a variety of toys to hold his attention and encourage his learning in both active and quiet times, and when he is playing alone or with other children.

* Limit the number of toys he plays with at any one time. If he is playing with one toy the others will distract him and it is easier for him to concentrate and pay attention to one activity at a time. If he gets another toy out, tell him to put another one away.




Play Guide - Sand and Water
Back to top
Sand is a wonderful substance for experiments. When it is dry it flows like water, when wet you can mould it - and when very wet it forms a slurry and flows. You can run a stick through it to leave a temporary trail. It can be used to build castles, or roads for his cars. In fact it’s the perfect “I made that happen toy” for a small child.

Windmill Flower

The beach

The beach offers so many opportunities it is hard to know where to start!
* A hole to sit in. If he is not quite sitting firmly dig him a small hole and wedge his bottom. He will be able to sit- but put towels all around him so he does not eat the sand.
* Make sand castles. Fill buckets and upturn them or simply pile up the sand and mould into walls. A little wet sand dribbled over the walls makes it look a bit creepy. Decorate with sea weed, lollipop sticks and shells.
* Make a sea wall. Best played when the tide is coming in. Dig a hole for him to sit in, make a wall around it, and pile up the sand to stop the sea encroaching.
* Make holes and channels from the waters edge up the beach- when the waves reach the channel the water flows.
* Dig channels from rock pools and watch the water flow.
* Slide down banks of soft sand

In the garden

It is possible to buy sand pits with lids. Do cover it when not in use to ensure no stray bits of rubbish or stones get in. Do not use sharp sand (as the name suggests the grains are sharp). It is possible to buy finer soft sand by the bag.

* Make sand castles – give him bucket and spade or different household containers like Tupperware tubs
* Make rake patterns – have a game of making patterns with a rake or other objects.
* Make roads – use a tool or stick to make roads in the sand for his cars
* Pouring -Scoop it up and pour it in lumps from a jug.
* Mixing - Mix water with sand to make a slurry and pour this from a jug.

In the house.

There are lots of ways for creative play with sand indoors, you can use ordinary fine sand, or buy coloured sands, or even just use similar substances such as sugar.

* Touching – Sand or sugar feels good for him just to run his hands through.
* Pouring – Sand or sugar can be poured through a funnel. This is great fun and is also great for developing his dexterity as he gains control of his wrists.
* Making Pictures – Give him a tray and then fill a bag with sand or sugar. If you seal it with an elastic band and then snip a small corner off, he can play at pouring it out and make sand pictures on the tray.
* Weighing – Weigh sand with scales, is wet sand heavier or lighter than dry?
* Sand in water - A spoonful of sand can be added to water and stirred- the grains swim around and colour the water but some settles at the bottom, if more sand is added he makes a slurry that can be poured and which will flow into interesting shapes..




Play Guide - Water
Back to top
Whether in the bath or garden, water is great for play. Here are some games to inspire you.

Close up Rubber Duck

Bath-time

*Bubble bath*
This is a simple science game for children of various ages that teaches them to be observant.

Run a bath and add some bubble bath

Young babies will just enjoy making bubbles by kicking and splashing.
From 12 months he’ll enjoy seeing what happens if he uses soap or adds a little oil to his bubble bath (his bubbles disappear).
From about 2 years let him explore away, or play with a bubble maker.
Do the bubbles burst when they land on other bubbles? Do they burst when they land on the water?

*Little boats*

< This is a simple game for a young child that allows him to discover how to make things move
Have a collection of objects that can double as 'boats'. Lolly sticks, corks or just paper folded will work.
Put the boats in the bath. Show him how to make waves.
What happens if he kicks and splashes?
Play games of boat races.

*Ice science (suitable for 4-5 year olds)*

Make a tray of ice cubes, using a rubber mould with interesting shapes if you can find one - add a little food colouring to the water before pouring it in the mould.
Add small items to the ice cubes - a plastic button, a wooden toggle, a waxy leaf, a metal washer. The idea is that some objects should be heavy enough to pull the ice cube to the bottom of the bath - and others should allow the cube to float.
When the cube melts some of the objects should float (wood, sponge, sequins) while others (thin slices of carrot) should sink.
As he watches the ice cubes will gradually disappear


*Water Fun at the Sink*

Filling and pouring.
This is a simple activity that teaches a child about volume and improves his placing skills and his eye-hand co-ordination.
This is a more demanding pouring game because he needs to aim for the cups.
Show him how to fill a jug by immersing it in the water. Put the cups on the draining board and let him fill them. It doesn’t matter if he is not very accurate at first. Cups are good for this or Tupperware tubs, but you could also try her stacker cup toys, as these are different shapes and colours this will add even more to the game.
Of course you can also try this game in the bath too.

*Washing a doll’s dress*

This is a simple activity that teaches a child to work towards an end – something she will have to do when she starts school.

Partly fill the sink with water (or give her a bowl), add some baby shampoo or bubble bath (better for her skin) and let her wash a dolls dress. Show her how to squeeze the water through the cloth. She can then hang it out to dry.


*Games for the garden hose or tap*

Let him fill his watering can and help with watering the plants
Mud is great fun, let him have fun making mud pies!
Practice carrying and pouring by asking him to fill a bowl on the other side of the garden from the garden tap




Play Guide - Drawing and Painting
Back to top
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
Back to top
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)




Learning About Space
Back to top
As you watch your child putting a cube into his shape sorter over and over again, you know that through his play he’s developing skills and committing the action to memory. Did you know that this is the same when he drops his dinner from his highchair? It might surprise you to hear that he may just be practicing his spatial skills

building blocks

As his eye-hand coordination develops he may be able to line up a jigsaw piece so it fits into the puzzle and it is his spatial skills that tell him which piece to select and that it will fit. By playing with his shape sorter, or running his toy car around chair legs, he is learning how to maneuver his body through spaces and how to interact with, and avoid colliding with, other things. He is developing the skills that we use every day to get dressed, to draw, to make sure our jumper is on the right way round and so on.

On a greater scale his spatial orientation skills are the ones he develops to, for example, get his toy truck from the kitchen into the lounge and, as adults, we use these skills to understand directions, to draw maps and know where we are in relation to landmarks and so on.

Children need to learn both orientation and spatial manipulation and you can encourage his development with the many tools and activities designed to help him.


Games To Develop Your Child’s Orientation Skills:

Coconuts!

Set up a coconut, or something else he can throw balls at! Encourage him to throw balls or beanbags at the coconut with the aim of knocking it off. For a summer party, daddy could sit in a chair while the children throw wet sponges at him!

One Step, Two Step.

Ask him to count how many steps it takes to cross the room? From the bedroom to the bathroom? Get him to measure how many standard steps it takes him to walk up the garden path.

Gotcha.

Scrunch up an old newspaper into soft balls. You and your child each has a chair to defend and the aim is to try and hit the other person’s chair with your ’ammunition’!

Moving House.

Ask him to move a pile of things, such as leaves, from one side of the garden to the other using his wheelbarrow.

Relievio.

This game is a variation on the childhood favourite, ’tag’. More than two people can play the game where, once you’ve been caught, you must go to the box until you are relieved, or rescued, by someone who hasn’t been tagged.

Toy Box Tips - Orientation Skills

* Bikes, tricycles and, ’sit and rides’. Try the Stride to Ride.
* Skates
* Trucks, toy pushchairs, toy wheelbarrows
* Climbing frames
* Balls

Games To Develop Your Child’s Spatial Skills.

Let’s Pour.

Let him practice pouring during bath time, using jugs and beakers and so on. Once he has mastered the skill, you could let him use a tea set to pour drinks for his teddies.

Snake!

Draw a long snake and divide it into a few sections, then ask him to colour each section in neatly.

Where Is He?

Books with faces hidden in the crowd or drawings with familiar objects hidden in the picture are great to amuse children. You can make your own by hiding simple shapes, such as triangles or circles, in drawings.

Tangrams.

Take a large square piece of card and divide it into a number of different shapes, like squares, oblongs and L shapes, of different sizes. Ask him to make new shapes with the individual pieces, or try to assemble them into the original square shape.

Mosaic.

Draw a simple shape or picture and cut gummed or sticky coloured paper into little squares. Let him have fun by sticking the pieces into the picture to make a mosaic.

Toy Box Tips - Spatial Skills:

* Puzzles
* Shape sorters. Try the Peek A Blocks Shape Sorter
* Stacking cups
* Linking toys, such as linking rings. Try any Link-a-Doos toy or teether
* Play sets, such as garages. Try the Little People Ramps Around Garage
* Construction kits. Try anything in the Pop Onz collection
* Dolls




Play Guide - On the Go
Back to top
Tips and Games to keep them entertained while you're on the go!Travelling with children can be difficult at the best of times, but there are plenty of games and activities that you can do to keep them occupied.

Travel By Car

* Before leaving let them have a good run around to let off steam
* Make sure you stop at regular intervals to let off more!
* Take a good supply of story or sing-along tapes
* A story or two that you know to tell
* Take small toys for baby to hold, watch and feel – Link-a-doos will attach to her travel seat.
* A teddy or doll for an older child to cuddle and talk to
* Small or travel sized toys – think about a Travel Doodle Pro or other drawing toy. You could ask them to draw things they have seen on the journey.
* Play games like eye-spy that encourage them to look at their surroundings and spot objects.

Travel by Plane

* Before leaving let them have a good run around to let off steam
* During the flight, get out of your seat and have a good walk round
* Take along story tapes and a personal stereo
* Take a selection of books to read.
* A couple of their favourite toys and a teddy cuddle will also come in handy.
* Take paper along – this has endless possibilities. You can fold it into shapes or draw on it.
* Play noughts and crosses – a simple choice but good fun and easy to play.


Games for Journeys

* Scissors-paper-stone *

This is a great game as you don’t need any equipment! It’s a classic so you probably know how to play ! It needs two players.

Each of you puts your hand behind your back and counts to three
On three, you both bring your hand back at the same time in one of three positions –
Scissors – forefinger and middle finger ready to snip
Paper – hand flat palm down
Stone – hand in a fist
Scissors beats paper because it can cut it.
Paper beats stone because it wraps it.
Stone beats scissors because it blunts it.

Guessing games

* How many fingers have I got up? Player hides his hand (easy in the car) and the others try to guess how many fingers he has up.
* Eye-spy - One player gives the first letter of the object they are thinking about and the others guess what it is.
* What is the next animal we will see? – play similar with other searches – what colour will the next lorry we see be etc.

* Fill in the word *

Tell the story of what is happening leaving blanks for her to fill in.

“One morning a mummy, a Daddy and a little girl called Anna got up early to go on holiday. Anna had……for her breakfast. Daddy put the ….. in the boot of the car and so on and then Mummy sat in the front seat and …….sat in her car seat.

Look out for:
Car snap- Look for a car like ours.
ABC- our initial on a number plate

* Arms and legs (when travelling through towns) *

This is another classic car journey game. As you travel through towns look out for the names of pubs. How many arms and legs are there on the pub signs? Take it in turns, and if there are no arms or legs on a sign you score zero for that turn.




Play Guide - Activity Rhymes
Back to top
Because small children remember actions much better than they do words, action rhymes are brilliant.

Musical Instruments

The actions help the child to remember long songs, they also help draw the child’s attention to the little sounds that make up words – an important pre-reading skill. Action rhymes are a good option for those muments when you might be hanging about with no access to toys, waiting in line, for a bus or on a long journey for example.

This kind of rhyme is great for letting off steam, improving memory and stimulating communication.

From 6 months

*Five little ducks*
The five little ducks are the fingers, five swim away, four come back, four swim away and three come back- and so on until there are no little ducks left!
Five little ducks went swimming one day
Over the ponds and far away
Mother duck said quack, quack, quack
But only four little ducks came back

From 9 months

One two three four five
One two three four five
Once I caught a fish alive
Why did you let him go
Because he bit my finger so
Which finger did he bite?
This little finger on the right.

Count out the fingers on the one two- make a biting mouth with the thumb and index finger, then display the little finger of the right hand.

*Incy Wincy spider*
Incy Wincy spider climbing up the spout
Down came the rain and washed the spider out
Out came the sunshine dried up all the rain
And incy wincy spider climed the spout again.
Incy climbs by touching opposite thumb and index finger and alternating fingers and thumbs. The other actions just mirror the words.

From 18 months

*Peter’s hammers*
Peter works with one hammer (Hammer with one fist)
With one hammer, with one hammer
Peter works with one hammer
All day long

*Verses*
Peter works with two hammers (hammer with both fists)
Peter works with three hammers (add one stamping foot)
Peter works with four hammers (add the other foot)
Peter works with five hammers (add the head)

*Row, row, row your boat*
Row, row, row your boat
Gently down the stream
Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily
Life is but a dream.
Children sit facing each other on the floor, hold hands and rock back and forth

*I hear Thunder*
I hear thunder I hear thunder (stamp feet)<
Hark don’t you, hark don’t you (put hand behind ear)
Pitter-patter raindrops (mime)
I’m wet through (point to self)
So are you (point to her)

*I’m a Little Teapot*
I’m a little teapot short and stout
Here’s my handle (Put one arm on hip)
Here’s my spout (Put other arm out like spout)
When I hear the tea cups hear me shout
Tip me up and pour me out (bend to the side in a pouring action)




More Outings
Back to top
Getting out and about is really good fun, but it also provides lots of opportunity for learning fun.

Windmill Flower

* Learning – letters, numbers and counting opportunities are everywhere!
* Social skills – opportunities to interact with other people and their world
* Language – shared experiences will give you lots to talk about for many days afterwards

Shopping
Use the opportunity for learning. Play counting games and practice social skills.

* Look for apples. What colour are they?
* How many sorts of cabbage?
* Look for the numbers of the shopping aisles.
* How many different sorts of tinned tomatoes?
* How many checkouts?
* How many times do you see F for Frankie?
* Let him buy a carton of milk from the corner shop (warn the shop keeper or make sure the shop is empty).

On the way home

* Count the buses.
* Post a letter
* How many animals can you see? Cats, dogs, squirrels, birds, bees, butterflies.
* Spell his name – look for the letters on road signs and cars.

Crossing the Road
Use the opportunity to learn a vital safety skill.

* Stop, look, listen, cross.
* Remember you set the example.
* Always use the crossings on major roads.

In the Park

* Discover colours *
Try to find flowers in all of the colours of the rainbow

* Under the bridge *
Shout under the bridge and listen for the echo. Even better with a tunnel.
Let him put his ear to the wall, and then whisper at the wall. Can he hear you?
Look for bird pooh. Is this where birds sleep at night?

* Make a bark rubbing *
Take some small pieces of paper and a crayon, put the paper against the bark of the tree and scotble over it with a crayon. You will get the pattern of the bark. This will not work with really rough bark.

* Make a bark impression *
Take some play dough or plastecine to make an impression of some bark
If you can’t name the tree, why not take a leaf home and look it up together in a nature book
You could create a nature shelf for him – store his different bark impressions and leaves here, to help him build up a collection.




Play Guide - Songs for Bouncing on the Knee
Back to top
When your child is still an infant, once he is able to hold his head up, he will love to enjoy a song with you on your lap.

Musical Instruments

Singing along with songs like this help develop him develop socially and emotionally as he’ll love the comfort of spending this time with you. He’ll also learn about the rhythm in language. Songs that have a jump or action at the end also help him to learn to expect – to know that something is going to happen.

When he is very young, sit him on your knee facing you and hold him around his waist. When he’s a little older you can hold him by the hands.

Jogging on the Knee
For these songs, jog and jiggle him on your knee as you repeat the words.

*Ride A Cock Horse*
Ride a cock horse to Bambury Cross
To see a fine lady get on a white horse
With rings on her fingers
And bells on her toes
She shall have music
Wherever she goes.

*To Market to Market*
To market to market to buy a fat pig
Home again home again jiggity jig
To market to market to buy a fat hog
Home again home again
Jiggity jog.

Rides with a Jog and Surprise!
These songs feature a surprise fall at the end to make him giggle.

*This is the way the ladies ride*
This is the way the ladies ride trip trot, trit trot trip trot
This is the way the gentlemen ride gallup gallup gallup
This is the way the old man rides. Hobble-dee hobble-dee
And down in a ditch

Trot on the knee at varying speeds- then open your knees to let her fall through a little.

*Father mother and uncle John*
Father, Mother and Uncle John
Road to the doctors one by one,
Father fell off
Mother fell off
But Uncle John road on and on

Ride on the knee, hold him tightly and let him jog to one side and then the other.

Rides with an Up and a Down

*Leg over leg over*
Leg over leg over
The dog went to dover
When he came to a style
Up he went over

Cross your legs and sit him on the crook of your foot. Hold her hands and jog her up and down – but every time you say 'over' move your foot up and down. She’ll feel like she’s flying!




Play Guide - Traditional Games
Back to top
Sometimes the old ones are the best, a selection of traditional games.

Baby playing with a beach ball

Traditional games have been played and perfected by generations of children for hundreds of years. Some of them are very different from their original form, but many have remained almost the same throughout history. These traditional games help teach children vital skills – the reason they didn’t die out years ago!

*Traditional games help to develop many skills*:

* Social skills – learning to play with other people, taking turns, making friends and also putting yourself in someone else’s shoes.
* Predictive skills – what will he do next? Is he going to drop something?
* Physical skills – turning, dodging and getting lots of exercise
* Letting off steam
* Learning ’I can do it’.

Traffic lights

One person says the word of their choice from the list, the others do the appropriate actions - the last one to do it is out (but you can leave this bit out of the game if you want to)

Red means stop
Green means go
Crash means lie flat
Bridge means make an arch on the ground.

Farmer Farmer may we cross?

Farmer farmer may we cross your golden river?
Yes if you are wearing red (or what every colour the farmer decides)

Those in red walk across the rest have to run and avoid the farmer catching them

Red lion

Red lion sits in his den, the rest of the players have a second den which they leave to taunt the lion

Red Lion red lion come out of your den
Whoever you catch can be one of your men

When the chant finishes the red lion chases everyone home, if he touches anyone they must go to his den. Next go they become lions too. The game ends when everyone is a lion.

The Farmers in his Den

One child stands in the middle of the ring while the others walk around singing

The farmers in his den
The farmers in his den
E-I-N-G-O
The farmers in his den.

The farmer must then choose someone to join him as the children sing
The farmer wants a wife
The farmer wants a wife
E-I-N-G-O
The farmers wants a wife.

Then other children join the central group as the circle sings

The wife wants a child, etc
The child wants a dog etc
The dog wants a bone. Etc

In the last verse everyone pats the bone

We all pat the bone
We all pat the bone
E-I-N-G-O
We all pat the bone.

Kick the can

This is one of the many variations of tag. The person who is ’it’ has a can or object which he must guard, but must also leave to catch other children. If anyone kicks the can he must return and put it back before he can chase again.

Hiding games

* Hide and seek “It” hides his face and counts to twenty while everyone else hides. Then after shouting “coming ready or not she goes in search of the other players.
* Bug in a rug. In this game you race “It” for home if you get there first you are safe.
* Cuckoo – a reversal of normal hide and seek in which one player hides the others seek
* Toad in the hole- if you are found, you join the seekers. The game ends when everyone is looking and there is no-one left to find.

Grandmother’s footsteps

This game is for a group of children. One of them is picked to be ’grandmother’. She stands with her back to the rest of the children who line up a few metres behind her.

The group must try to creep up behind grandmother without her seeing them. Every so often, grandmother turns around to look at the group and they must stand perfectly still. IF she sees them move, they must go back to the start.

The first person to touch grandmother’s back without being seen wins and becomes grandmother next time.

Oranges and Lemons

Oranges and lemons say the bells of St Clements
When will you pay me say the bells of Old Bailey
When I grow rich Say the bells of Shoreditch
When will that be say the bells of Stepney
I’m sure I don’t know says the great bell of Bow.
Her comes a candle to light you to bed
Here comes a chopper to chop of your head.
Chip Chop chip chop.

Two people make an arch and the rest dance through it in turn singing the song. On the last “chop” the arch catches someone- by dropping there arms down to surround them. They then ask “Orange or Lemon”. Oranges go behind one of the arch makers, lemons go behind the other. When everyone has been caught they have a tug of war.




More activities for nature study
Back to top
Like scientists small children investigate and experiment. Many of the activities children love - from rolling balls, scooting around on bikes or playing with bath toys - teach them basic scientific principles (about solids and liquids, forces and acceleration for example) although it will be quite a few years before they can put what they learn into words or understand scientific theories.

a baby peeking

Growing

There are lots of things you can grow together from big things to small. Growing things helps him to work towards a goal, builds a sense of achievement and helps him develop his caring and nurturing side.

Cress cross

* Tear off about a dozen pieces of kitchen towel and put them on a plate. Soak the paper by pouring or spooning water onto it.
* Lay a pastry cutter on the paper. Sew the cress seed inside the cutter. Carefully spread the seed out with the back of a spoon making sure it goes right to the edge.
* Lift the cutters. Use a spoon to water the seeds each day.
* Watch the cress grow and when its ready – eat it!
* You can adapt this game to build in letter play – use letter cutters or a steady hand to sew seeds to spell out his name or initials.

Real instant garden

Help him to make his own instant mini garden.

* Take one large plant pot
* Fill with compost or earth
* Give him a selection of things (or help him to find his own) that can be used to construct an instant garden. Use moss for a lawn, mirror for a pond, mini plants that can look like trees and bushes.

Using the scraps

* When preparing vegetables, like carrots, parsnips or beetroot, save the tops.
* Put these in a plate and some water and leave on the windowsill
* Within a couple of days these tops should have shoots.

Big

Children love growing big plants. Especially if they have a measuring stick to see how they are growing. Plant sunflower seeds in pots. Water and care for them and when they are about 4 inches high plant them out into the garden. Measuer them each week. You can try the same with bamboo.

My herb garden

* Buy small herbs pots from the supermarket and grow these together. He can explore his senses with these. He can taste them and smell them.

Nature Play

There is lots to explore when you’re out and about in the countryside or garden. Looking out for tiny details really helps him to learn to pay attention and to look for the detail in things – an important pre-reading skill.

* Footprints. Can you tell which are birds and which are animals?
* Whose had lunch? Look for leaves that have been eaten by small creatures. Can you find the creature near by?
* Look who lives under small logs and stones.
* Look who lives under leaves.
* Look who visits flowers.
* Snail trails.




Go Together *
Back to top

This advanced version of the matching game will suit your toddler's higher-level cognitive thinking skills. Make the game fun by providing lots of interesting things that Go Together!


Materials:
Pairs of items that go together, such as spoon and bowl, pencil and paper, soap and washcloth, cheese and cracker, sock and shoe, and so on
Table


Classification and sorting


Eye/hand coordination


Fine motor development


Thinking skills
What to do:
1. Collect a number of items that go together, as suggested above. Keep them simple. If you like, provide one or two more complex pairs, to challenge your toddler.
2. Arrange all the items on the table, but do not place any of the matching pairs together.
3. Bring your toddler to the table and show her the items.
4. Choose one item and ask her to find which of the remaining items goes with the selected item. Give her hints if she needs them.
5. When she finds the match, praise her, set the pair aside, and choose another item.
6. Continue playing until all items have been paired.
Safety:   Make sure all the items are safe for your toddler's play.




Hide the Music *
Back to top

Your toddler uses his senses to learn about his world. His perception causes a motor response, which leads to higher levels of thinking. This game will enhance your child's two most important senses—hearing and sight.


Materials:
Musical wind-up toy or a battery-operated cassette player
Playroom


Gross motor development


Problem solving


Sense of hearing


Sense of sight
What to do:
1. Wind-up or turn on a musical toy and hide it somewhere in the playroom.
2. Have your toddler come into the room and try to find the toy, just by listening.
3. When your toddler finds the toy, praise him, have him step out of the room, then hide the toy again.
Safety:   Don't hide the toy too well—your toddler should be able to find it relatively easily, and without having to climb on or overturn things.




Storyteller *
Back to top

When your toddler likes something, she tends to want it repeated—over and over and over again! Here's a fun way to accommodate her, while enhancing her cognitive skills.


Materials:
Cassette tape recorder
Blank tape
Picture book
Comfortable area for listening


Language and vocabulary development


Listening skills


Self-help skills—reading
What to do:
1. Hold your toddler in your lap, along with a picture book.
2. Turn on the tape recorder to record your voice.
3. Read the storybook to your toddler, making sure you speak clearly enough for the recorder.
4. When the book is finished, turn off the recorder and rewind the tape.
5. Place your toddler in a comfortable area and give her the book.
6. Set the tape recorder nearby and teach her how to turn it on, or turn it on yourself.
7. Have her look at the book and turn the pages as the story plays on the tape recorder.
Safety:   Use a portable cassette recorder made for kids so your toddler can operate it safely.




Toddler Bowling *
Back to top

Instead of having your toddler just roll a ball back and forth, give her an extra challenge by setting up some objects to knock over. Then play a game of Toddler Bowling!


Materials:
6 to 10 items to serve as bowling pins, such as empty milk cartons, empty plastic drink bottles, upside-down paper cups, and so on
Large cleared area
Tape
Volleyball, soccer ball, or basketball


Cause and effect


Eye/hand coordination


Gross motor development
What to do:
1. Set up the "bowling pins" in a triangle pattern, like pins in a bowling alley.
2. Take several steps back and mark a line with tape.
3. Have your toddler stand behind the line.
4. Give her the ball and tell her to try to knock down all the objects by rolling the ball.
5. Let her keep rolling until she knocks them all down.
6. Set them up again and play another round.
Safety:   Don't use a real bowling ball—it's too heavy for your toddler to handle. Do not use breakable objects as your bowling pins.




Wash 'em Up *
Back to top

Unlike Tom Sawyer and his reluctance to paint the fence, most toddlers love to do "real work"—even if it's just pretend. Give your toddler a brush and a bucket of water and watch her clean her world!


Materials:
Large, clean paintbrush
Child-safe cleaning items, such as sponges, towels, squeegees, squirt bottles, scrubbers, dust cloths, cobweb cleaners, and so on
2 small buckets
Water


Cause and effect


Enhanced self-esteem


Eye/hand coordination


Gross motor development
What to do:
1. Collect child-safe cleaning items in a bucket, so your toddler can carry them from place to place.
2. Fill the other bucket with water.
3. Take your toddler outside and teach her how to "paint" the house with the brush and water.
4. Then let her explore the other cleaning items and use them the way she's seen you use them.
5. Praise your toddler on the great job she's done cleaning the house!
Safety:   Make sure all cleaning items are safe to be handled by your toddler. This is a good time to teach your toddler about the danger of poisonous items—in this case, various cleaning fluids.




Dance 'til You Drop *
Back to top

Most toddlers love to express themselves through music and dance. Provide your toddler with an opportunity for creative body expression, with a fun twist.


Materials:
Variety of music, such as rumba, waltz, polka, rock and roll, square dance, and so on
Cassette player
Large area for dancing


Balance and rhythm


Body awareness


Creativity


Listening skills
What to do:
1. Tape-record a few minutes of each type of music, allowing enough time to enjoy the tune and do a little dance. Tape one song right after another, so the music plays continuously.
2. Turn on the music and stand in the middle of the room.
3. When the first song comes on, dance to the music, and encourage your toddler to dance with you.
4. When the music changes, change your dance to match, and encourage your toddler to change with you.
5. Dance until you drop.
Safety:  Be sure the room is cleared so you don’t crash into anything while you’re dancing! Take breaks if you get tired.




Scribble Scrabble *
Back to top

Your toddler will soon be writing his name, but the first step toward that fine motor control begins with scotbling. Scotbling turns to design, design turns to pictures, and before you know it, he’s writing!


Materials:
Large washable felt-tip pens
Large sheets of white paper
Kid-sized table


Emotional expression


Fine motor development


Language development
What to do:
1. Place washable felt-tip pens and paper on the table.
2. Seat toddler at the table.
3. Sit with your toddler and scotble on the paper together. Encourage him to make a variety of marks, such as dots, lines, curves, and circles.
4. Instead of asking, “What is it?” ask your toddler to tell you about his artwork.
5. Try not to make designs for him to copy. Instead, just let him scotble whatever he wants. As he gains control over the pens, his work will probably become more recognizable.
Safety:  Use nontoxic felt-tip pens, and tell your toddler not to put them in his mouth.




Dress-Up Parade *
Back to top

It seems your toddler can’t wait to grow up and be just like mum or Dad. Give your toddler a chance to practice being a grown-up—or at least dress like one—then have a Dress-Up Parade!


Materials:
Variety of dress-up clothes, such as hats, jackets, gloves, wigs, shoes, pants, tops, dresses, scarves, jewelry, and so on.
Large mirror


Gender identification


Self-awareness


Self-help skills—dressing


Sequencing
What to do:
1. Rummage a thrift store for a variety of clothes that are easy to put on, comfortable to wear, and, most of all, fun to model.
2. Place the clothes in a box and set it in the middle of the room.
3. Let your toddler explore the box of clothes with you.
4. Try on some of the clothes together, then look at yourselves in the mirror.
5. After you’re all dressed up, have a Dress-Up Parade and walk around the neighbourhood (or inside your home) in your new clothes.
Safety:  Be careful that your toddler doesn’t get tangled up in the clothes and trip or choke. And be sure he doesn’t mix a plaid with a print—just kidding!




Flannel Tale *
Back to top

Your toddler’s language and vocabulary are growing by leaps and bounds, but sometimes her words can’t keep up with her need for expression. Provide your child with a simple flannel board and let her tell her tale!


Materials:
1 yard of black or dark-coloured felt or flannel
Approximately 3-by-3-foot chalkboard, bulletin board, or sheet of sanded wood
Glue
Felt scraps in a variety of colours
Favourite picture books, such as The Three Little Pigs, Peter Pan, Snow White, or Green Eggs and Ham


Emotional expression


Fine motor development


Language and vocabulary development


Social interaction
What to do:
1. Cover a chalkboard, bulletin board, or sheet of wood with a yard of dark felt or flannel. Secure with glue and let dry.
2. Look through a favourite picture book to choose characters to create. Then, cut out shapes for the characters from felt. For example, if you choose The Three Little Pigs as your inspiration, cut out three pigs from pink felt, a wolf from black felt, and a sheep from white felt.
3. Add detail to characters using felt-tip pens.
4. Prop the board up against a wall.
5. Sit with your toddler facing the board, and place the felt characters on the board.
6. Tell the story that goes with the characters, moving the felt characters as you go.
Safety:  Be sure the board is secure so it doesn’t fall over on your toddler.




Glad, Sad, and Mad *
Back to top

Your toddler began experiencing emotions the mument he was born—if not before. Some of the emotions he experienced first are distress, surprise, even anger. This game will help your toddler explore all his feelings.


Materials:
Paper plates
Felt-tip pens
Tape
Picture book


Cognitive skills


Emotional expression


Language and vocabulary development
What to do:
1. Draw a variety of faces on paper plates. Each face should express a different feeling, such as glad, sad, mad, happy, sleepy, scared, and so on.
2. Hold your toddler in your lap and read him a story that expresses some emotions.
3. When an emotion arises in the book, pull out the appropriate paper plate face and hold it up to your face.
4. Explain to your toddler what vocabulary words go with the emotion and let your toddler make a similar face.
5. Continue reading the story, holding up faces at appropriate times.




Sticker Magic *
Back to top

Combine getting clean with having fun by playing Sticker Magic in the bathtub. Your child will love to see how small characters and shapes magically stick to the side of the tub!


Materials:
Inexpensive picture book that you don’t mind cutting up
Clear one-sided sticky paper
Scissors
Bathtub and water


Cause and effect


Creativity and imagination


Fine motor development
What to do:
1. Buy an inexpensive picture book that your toddler loves, such as a book about a favourite movie or television character, or a comic book.
2. Cut out the characters in the book, and some of the props, if you like. You can cut out several views of the same character, such as sitting, standing, and running. For props you might include furniture, toys, a house, or a car.
3. Peel the backing off of the sticky paper and lay a length of it on the table, sticky side up.
4. Place the figures on the paper, faceup, leaving an inch between each figure.
5. Lay another piece of sticky paper on top of the first, sticky side down, so the figures are encased in the plastic paper. The figures will then be waterproof.
6. Carefully cut around the figures, leaving a one-eighth-inch margin. If you cut too close to the edge of the figure, the sticky paper will not stick together.
7. Fill the bathtub with warm water.
8. Place your toddler in the tub, along with the plastic-covered figures.
9. Press one of the wet cut-out figures to the side of the bathtub and watch it stick!
Safety:  Be sure you stay with your toddler while he’s in the water.




What's Wrong? *
Back to top

Your toddler is still figuring out how the world works when you introduce a game of What’s Wrong? See if she can figure out what’s so silly about this game—and how to fix it!


Materials:
Picture book
Sock and shoe
Toothbrush and toothpaste
Bowl and water
Cracker and peanut butter


Fine motor development


Problem solving


Social interaction
What to do:
1. Collect the items above, or other items that can be turned around, upside down, or made to look different than usual in any other way.
2. Hold your toddler in your lap. Hold a picture book upside down and begin to read. See if your toddler can figure out that the book is wrong and fix it.
3. Put a shoe on your toddler’s foot, then put on the sock. See if your toddler notices what’s wrong and tries to fix it.
4. Put toothpaste on the back of the toothbrush instead of on the bristles. See if your toddler can figure out what’s wrong and what to do about it.
5. Pour some water into a bowl and tell your toddler you brought her a drink. See if she notices the silly container and asks for a glass.
6. Spread peanut butter on a cracker and set it upside down on a plate. See if your toddler turns it right-side up!
Safety:  Be sure your toddler can’t get hurt doing these silly tasks.

Back to top

Previous AgePlay & Learn HomeNext Age

* Play & Learn activities reprinted from "Baby Play & Learn"
with permission of its author, Penny Warner, and its publisher, Meadowbrook Press (1999.)

Online Games & ActivitiesAll About Play

FISHER-PRICE PRIVACY POLICY | FISHER-PRICE LEGAL TERMS & CONDITIONS
© 2009 Mattel, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Use of this site signifies your acceptance of the terms and conditions of use.