Color Me Green and Healthy Living: Sunday Link Fest

For The PreSchool Mama, Odds & Ends 3 Comments

Some great reads for the weekend:

Anne Marie has lovely ideas for celebrating St Patrick’s Day with your kids.  Great time to reinforce the color green – try painting the drawings different shades of green each.

Picky eater?   JoLynn Braley at The Fit Shack has tips to help get your child to eat healthier.

For those of you looking forward to beautiful spring in your part of the world, (summer is creeping up on us here) Workout Mommy has great ideas to involve your kids in spring time exercises.   Great ways to combine Mommy time with some exercise for yourself!

And finally, these pics at Blonde Mom Blog had me racing to find my boy’s old photos for an afternoon of nostalgia.  All the more reason to cherish them – because they grow up so fast.  Sigh.

Enjoy!




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Increase Mental Alertness: Introduce Scents into Everyday Activities

Learning Fun 4 Comments

The sense of smell is the only one that sends signals to the brain, unfiltered.

Certain fragrances increase the brain’s ability to think. Mental alertness and creativity can be strengthened by smells like those of cinnamon, peppermint and lemon. Rose and lavender, on the other hand, help your child relax. Certain herbs and spices are also known to have calming effects, and can be used in appropriate situations. Use the sensory powers of these flowers and herbs to boost creativity and brainpower in your preschooler.

Encourage your child to participate in preschool activities that include the sense of smell , to stimulate these areas of her brain. It doesn’t have to be a formal activity with scented bottles – just introduce scents into everyday activities, and play around with them. Experiment!

  • Give your child scented markers for artwork, or use scented dyes and paints.
  • Create your own scented paint by mixing tempera paint with food essences.
  • Create a fun and yummy scented paint mix of your own. Mix gelatin with just about half the amount of water that’s actually needed, and let your child paint with it. When the gelatin dries, she can have fun scratching at the painting, and sniffing the smell.
  • Participate in activities together with your preschooler – make potpourri together. Put some cloves and cinnamon sticks inside a net bag, and draw it tight shut
  • Make colorful new scented crayons out of old ones. Place crayons in muffin tins lined with paper, add a touch of food essence to each, and heat in the oven. You have colorful wax discs that smell heavenly. Here are specific instructions.
  • Help her identify the smells of different food essences and extracts in your kitchen, and herbs and flowers from your garden.
  • Encourage her to take an interest in your flower garden or herb garden.
  • Fill your home with appropriate herbs that stimulate certain processes in the brain – keep rose, orange and chamomile in the bedroom to induce calmness and help her go to sleep. Lavender, vanilla and nutmeg are particularly good for those nasty irritable spells just before bed time. Place lemon, cinnamon, basil the room where she does most of her learning or art work.
  • Participate in cooking activities together that make use of brainpower boosting extracts and essences – cinnamon buns, for instance.

Enjoy!




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7 PreSchool Educational Toys That Cost Next to Nothing

For The PreSchool Mama 13 Comments

When it comes right down to it, kids are just as able to learn from the everyday stuff you have lying about your house as from pricey educational toys. You don’t have to blow a fortune on the latest fancy toys in the market to give your child an edge. There are learning aids that you can find right in your home that you can make use of for boosting language skills, counting and sorting practice, identifying objects, number practice and so on.

In the third part of my series on Money Saving Tips for Preschool Mamas, we’ve already gone through thrifty secrets for saving on clothes and art supplies.

Here are some commonly found things at home that you can use to instantly fashion learning aids for your kids.


1 – Paper Bags

PreSchool Learning Aids - Brown Paper Bags

Photo Courtesy Flickr – Nix Sidhe

These have unlimited uses. Use to play counting games. Attach a picture of a elephant to a puffed out paper bag, and make your child feed him peanuts by numbers you call out or by looking at a card with a number on it. Vary the picture of the elephant with a rabbit and use small pieces of carrot shape construction paper to feed the rabbit a required number of carrots.

Attach a picture of a rabbit to a bunch of paper bags, and write a number on each of them. Cut out pieces of orange tag or paper, to look like little carrots. Make small dots on each carrot. Ask your child to count the number of dots on the carrot, and place it in the rabbit bag with that number.

Stuff a brown paper bag with newspaper halfway through, and tie it with a string. Paint it black, and draw a pair of eyes with white paint. Tie a long string to the bag and hang it from a nail in your child’s room. Attach 8 strips of crepe paper to the bag, 4 on each side of the bag. Use this “spider” for counting activities, and making sets.

For more “legs” to count, tape 3 such stuffed bags to each other to make a centipede. Attach a dozen crepe paper legs on each side of the centipede, and hang in your preschooler’s room.

Take a bunch of paper bags, place them sideways, and staple them at the closed ends. Your child can use this “book” for any number of activities – as an alphabet and number scrap book, to draw pictures , to collect and name items she finds on nature walks etc.

Use lunch bags to create a city with your child – stuff with newspapers, and place on their sides. Draw windows or paste stickers on the bags to create a building. Name them “Central Library,” ” Wal-Mart” and so on. Your child can pitch in with suggestions for buildings she sees around town.

Stuff a bag with newspapers, tie the mouth with a string and attach to a stick. Use wool to create hair and draw on eyes and a face, and you have a puppet that you can use for imaginary games and story telling.

2 – Boxes

PreSchool Learning Aids - Shoe Boxes

Photo Courtesy Flickr – Al Fassam

Create a story box. Place small toys like dolls and cars, plastic household toy equipment and let her make her own doll house from scratch. For boys, make other buildings like a tool shed. Let her take out an object one by one from the box and weave these objects in a story. Share in the story creating process.

Take an empty box, and wrap in white paper. Write the words of a nursery rhyme on each side of the box. Use it as a rhyme dice to sing nursery rhymes.

Punch holes into the sides of an old shoe box and give your child colorful laces to create patterns by lacing through the holes. Don’t forget to wrap a piece of tape around one end of the lace to secure it in place.

Use old detergent boxes or tooth paste boxes and use to sort in order of size, or stack inside each other.

Cut out pictures of a room from an interiors magazine like a bed room, kitchen etc. and paste on separate shoe boxes. Cut out smaller pictures of separate items that go into these rooms, for instance, a couch, chair, a dresser etc. Ask your child to place all the small pictures that go into that particular room – the bed picture goes into the bedroom box, and so on.

Stick numbers on each section of a candy box, and let your child count and place the required numbers of peas or beans into each section.

Use milk cartons that are shaped like a house, and ask your child to build a house by using square and rectangular stickers.

Use shoe boxes as nature study boxes. Let her fill up with things that she finds when shoe goes out with you – dried leaves, feathers, dried twigs etc. Ask her to name each of these objects.

 

3 – Play Dough

Play dough is a thrifty mom’s best friend. Let your child use these to make alphabets, and numbers. Being able to feel the alphabet as she’s molding the dough, leads to a better awareness of the letter. Make your own play dough. Use food essences like cinnamon, lemon and lavender, and let her experiment with making different alphabets with different scents.

4 – Stationery, Stickers

Take a few boiled eggs and color by dipping them for 10 minutes in a solution of water and food coloring. Use these dyed eggs for counting games – give your child small polka dot stickers, and a bunch of index cards with numerals on each. Let her look at each card and stick the required number of stickers on the colored eggs.

Create a shape chart by drawing and painting square, rectangle, triangle and circle shapes on a cardboard. Cut out a sponge in the same shapes, and ask your child to match with the shapes on the board.

Fix paper clips to index cards with a number on each. Give her a magnet with a string attached and ask her to fish out the number that you call out.

Write names of household objects on index cards (door, window) and stick them on those objects. Leave for a week and help her read and identify the words.

Cut out the front of a nice greeting card, and paste on cardboard. Cut up into several pieces (depending on her age), and use as a puzzle. You can also use the front of cereal boxes. Stick a knob (the kind you see on drawers) on each piece to make it easy for her to lift each piece.

5 – Kitchenware

Use empty plastic cups, and disposable glasses to stack one inside the other.

Use spoons and cups to measure rice, lentils, beans and other measuring activities.

Use measuring activities for preschoolers to see how much a cup of milk weighs against a cup of rice on your kitchen weighing machine.

Color pasta shapes by dipping into a solution of water and food coloring. Use to thread into a necklace. Threading games are excellent for fine motor skills development.

Let her color ice cream sticks different colors, and sort according to colors. Or color them different shades of the same color, and sort from lightest to darkest.

Give her a funnel, a strainer and colander, a glass of unstrained tea, a bowl of salt mixed with rice and let her find the easiest way to separate the salt from the rice. Same with the tea – let her figure out how to separate the tea from the leaves using these objects.

Fill jugs with water or dry beans and let her pour into an empty bowl without spilling. It helps develop motor skills.

6 – Clothes

Use beads, and buttons for sorting activities. Socks and mittens can also be used for sorting games. Sort by size, color pattern etc.

Draw a pair of eyes and stick a piece of pink constriction paper on the toe area to make a hand puppet.

Sort shoes of family members in increasing, and decreasing order.

Don’t throw away old costumes, or accessories like scarves and costume jewelry. Use these for playing dress up or for other imaginative role playing activities.

Use laundry for sorting activities. Let her sort into whites and coloreds, clothes and linens, and so on.

7- Furniture

Use ribbons to practice tying shoe laces between the two wooden handles of a chair.

Stack up cushions and use as a narrow plank for her to walk on. It helps her gain control over balance.

Use pillows and cushions as an obstacle course at home.

Throw a bed sheet between two chairs, and let her use the tent as her personal space. It encourages imagination. Ask open ended questions and encourage her to take about her “house.”

Use pillow covers to play I Spy games – stick a card with an alphabet on it to the cover, and let her find things from around the house that begin with that letter.

Play guessing games or mystery games – have a bunch of stuff inside the pillow cover – small toys, glass beads, pine cones – let her close her eyes, grab one and guess what it is.

So, what do you grab from around the house for an impromptu lesson? I’d love to hear your ideas!




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Plan a Tea Party With Your PreSchooler

Games and Activities, Learning Fun 7 Comments

Tea Party PreSchool Activity There are opportunities to learn in the most popular games preschoolers play. All little girls love a tea party, and because all kids love role playing so much, your little boy will be ready to host one too! Give your preschooler some practice at entertaining on her own, by helping her host a tea party for her dolls and teddy bears.

First up, let her take the initiative in planning for the party. Let her decide the number of “guests” she’s going to have.

Help her make some little sandwiches or cheese and crackers for her guests. Here are some cooking ideas for preschoolers, as well as a mini pizza recipe if you want to throw a party your guests will rave about!

Let her set place mats for each guest with matching fork, spoon, saucers, cups and plates. Help her make her own placements out of cardboard or thick construction paper which she can decorate with markers, and little place cards out of tags with the name of the guest on each.

Get creative – use her bracelets as napkin rings.

Let her set the table with the cutlery, place cards, and place mats.

What this teaches her: This game is ideal for teaching her to set a table on her own, and gives her good practice using sorting skills to sort out forks, spoons, cup and saucers for each guest. It also helps her learn the importance of organization and the value of planning ahead.

Bon Appetit!




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Pretty Easter Eggs and Mama Text Talk: Sunday Link Fest

For The PreSchool Mama 5 Comments

I’ve been too busy partying with fellow bloggers from the Ultimate Blog Party at 5 Minutes for Mom, and I am late with my weekend reads.  Here you go.

Ever wished Moms had their own text speak?  Jennifer at HeyGirlMommaGo has a list of acronyms to keep smart moms up to speed on text talk.  You’ll ROFLMAO!

Easter is around the corner, and you’ll love these 13 ways to decorate and dye your Easter eggs.  Easy enough for preschoolers to do.

I’ll be back to regular posting on Monday.

Enjoy!




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Welcome to My Home!

For The PreSchool Mama, Odds & Ends 33 Comments

Hi, and welcome to all who’ve dropped by from 5 Minutes for Mom!

I am Shabana, and I am a 35 year old WAHM. I have a fairly humdrum kind of existence with my husband and our wonderful seven year old boy, and I like it that way. I love to read, write (I am a freelance writer when I am not blogging), and watch Johnny Depp movies.

The PreSchool Mama (which is where you are right now) is a labor of love that I began in December of last year. I used to be a Montessori preschool teacher, and blogging seemed like the perfect way to share what I’ve learned with other moms, and educate myself further in the process.

If you have toddlers or preschoolers, I hope you’ll look around the site, and find something that you could use with your child. Check out the Best of PreSchool Mama page for standalone articles that are informative and useful.

If you don’t have preschoolers, well, stay a while anyway, and share some of your wisdom with me!

It wouldn’t be much of a party without a few guffaws, so before you leave, here’s something to make you smile.

Enjoy!

Humorous Pictures

Humorous Pictures

Humorous Pictures

Humorous Pictures
Humorous Pictures




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PreSchool Games: What Your Child Learns Playing Doctor

Games and Activities, Learning Fun 2 Comments

Maybe because their memories of anything in white coats aren’t necessarily pleasant, kids love to play at being a doctor. It gives them a chance to torture some one else with a shot! Encourage this, and use it to introduce measuring activities and language skills.

Set up a clinic for her.  Give her a chair, and a table, with an empty writing pad to make her notes in, and a sheet of paper to record data.  If she has a doctor’s play kit, all the better.  Use her teddy bears and dolls as prop patients.

Act as the patient’s Mommy with four of your “kids” coming in to see her.   First up, let her measure the weight of each “child” by placing the doll on your kitchen weighing machine.  Let her note down the weight of the doll herself.

Next, let her use a measuring tape to measure the height of the child. D on’t worry about specifics – just the figure closest to the actual reading will do.

Tell her what’s wrong with the baby – she’ been sniffing and hasn’t been eating too well etc. etc. If she has a play doctor’s kit, she could use her stethoscope to listen to their heartbeat, give them shots etc.

Let her arrange all her patients by height, and weight.

There are plenty of opportunities to learn in everyday games.  If you play games with your preschooler that encourage learning, I’d love to hear about them.




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25 Chores for Your PreSchooler

Discipline 3 Comments

The essence of independence is to be able to do something for oneself. Such experience is not just play. It’s work children must do in order to grow up.

– Maria Montessori

My biggest nightmare as a parent is that my child will grow up to be an adult with no skills other than playing on his PS. I’ve always had my son help around the house, and now since he’s older, even run small errands outside.

Chores help a preschooler understand the different functions that are necessary to keep a home running smoothly. She understands that beds have to be made, and tables have to be set – they don’t just get that way! If you’re falling into the “she’ll have lots of time to do it when she’s older” trap, know that it might be twice as hard getting her to do things like keeping her room passably clean as a teenager than it is now. Doing chores adds to a preschooler’s self esteem and confidence. Praise her when she performs a task for you – it adds to her self belief.

The point here is not to turn your child into your slave – don’t overwork her, and never give her things to do that she absolutely hates doing. Move on to another chore. Better still, give her a list of chores and ask her to pick out five that she’d be happy doing.

Here’s a list to give you some ideas, some are ideal for a 3 year old, while for others, your child might have to be older.

  1. Put away her toys
  2. Fill the pet’s feeder
  3. Set table with plastic dishes. (Draw outlines of the spoon, fork, plate etc, on the place mat so she knows where each items is supposed to go).
  4. Clear table
  5. Sweep crumbs off the table
  6. Wash plastic glasses and cups
  7. Water plants
  8. Make her bed
  9. Chose her own clothes
  10. Dress herself
  11. Keep dirty clothes in the basket
  12. Help in the kitchen – handing you ingredients, tearing up lettuce and other preschool cooking activities.
  13. Bring in the newspaper
  14. Sort unwashed laundry into coloreds and whites
  15. Help hang out the washing
  16. Sort washed laundry according members of the family
  17. Make herself a snack that doesn’t require cooking or using the stove – cheese on crackers
  18. Mop spills
  19. Dust lightly
  20. Help you wash the car
  21. Fold small clothes
  22. Use a small dust vacuum
  23. Help you put away groceries
  24. Help with small DIY projects around the house or garden- with adult supervision, of course
  25. Help unload the dishwasher


Dos and Don’ts for Chores with PreSchoolers

Do praise her efforts. Do it often and in company. I always let my sisters-in-law know what a great help my son’s been – within his ear shot, of course!

Do set realistic expectations. The bed she made won’t be crease free and perfect. That isn’t the point, anyway.

Don’t criticize her efforts.

Don’t be anal, and go rushing to set right what she’s done the moment she’s done with her task.

Do teach her what’s’ expected of her. When she sets the table, teach her where everything goes first, and then, give her the responsibility of doing it herself.

Do have a chore chart with stickers that she can stick herself every tine she finishes a chore for that day.

Do have a reward system in place. Not all mothers will agree with this, but rewards are fine, if you keep them within limits. An extra half hour of TV perhaps…?

Do allow her time to complete her chores.

 

Doing simple chores around the house helps your preschooler learn about team work, and the importance of doing her share to keep the house going – always good practice for when she has to fend for herself one day.

What chores do you allow your kids to do around the house?




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PreSchool Science Activities: How to Use Everyday Situations to Explain the “Whys” of the World

Games and Activities, Learning Fun No Comments

The preschool years are the perfect time to introduce your child to the wonders of science though small and easy activities and games. Since everything at this age seems wondrous and breathtaking, you won’t have trouble getting your child to sit still, and take part in science activities that teach her about actions and reactions.

  • Let her use a block of margarine to scribble on a sheet of paper. Splash some water on the paper. The part with the margarine on it won’t get wet – the water will slip right off. Explain to her why this happens, that oil and water never mix. Show her more examples of this – mix cooking oil and water together, and show her the result. Point out gasoline layers on puddles of water.
  • Let her hold a candle like a crayon, and draw on a piece of paper. To reveal what she has drawn, let her paint the page. She can also use potato juice or lemon juice for the same effect. Explain the concept of invisible ink.
  • Use gardening and plants to explain the concept of photosynthesis. Place two pots of plants in two separate locations – one in a dark closet, and one in the sunlight. Water both equally, and observe the difference in the two plants after a few days.
  • Drop a few seeds in a cup full of soil, and cover with plastic. Keep in a sunny area. Monitor the progress of the seeds as they begin to sprout.
  • Play with your shadows. Switch off the lights, light a candle and make animal shadows on the wall. Compare your own shadows on the walls. Point out your shadows in the daytime and at different times of the day.

Science is actually more interesting to many preschoolers than learning counting or the alphabet. The results are always so astounding, and magical to little eyes.

Have fun with these!




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Tantrums and Shiny White Pearlies: Sunday Link Fest

Odds & Ends 2 Comments

Onward with my weekly search for the best mom advice from the blogosphere.   It’s a shorter list this week, but more than worth checking out.

First up, Char has a list of 30 foods that your orthodontist hates – you’ll recognize most of these on your preschooler’s favorites.  Just because he still has his milk teeth is no reason not to take care of that gorgeous smile.

Next, the talented Lis Garrett has some thoughts on preventing toddler tantrums .  These make perfect sense for preschoolers too, so the next time you’re in the middle of a  ear drum shattering meltdown, you might want to check back on Lis’s list to see if you’re making these mistakes.

Have a great rest of the weekend!




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