14 Ways to Entertain Your PreSchooler Using Ziploc Bags

7:55 pm Games and Activities

 

These ideas are for Ziploc bags, but you can use resealable bags too for some of these preschool activities.

  1. Put some shaving foam into a Ziploc bag, and add a few drops of food coloring. Add some more shaving foam on top of the food color. Let her squish the bag, and watch the changes in color.
  2. Add two different drops of food coloring to the shaving foam, so she can see how they mix to create new colors. For instance, red and yellow.
  3. Give your child some playing sand, lots of shells and rocks, and let her choose the number of objects and sand she wants to place inside the Ziploc bag. These make great sensory bags for kids.
  4. Fill up a Ziploc bag with blue shaving gel, and add a few plastic sea creatures and fish into it, to make her own ocean bag.
  5. Put some shaving gel into two separate Ziploc bags, and place one of them on the window sill (works only if it’s sunny), and the other in the freezer. Take them out after a while, and let her see the difference – great time to teach her about “hot” and “cold.”
  6. Put some water in a Ziploc bag, and freeze it. Discuss how the water changes from liquids to solid.
  7. Use Ziploc bags to store pieces of your preschooler’s puzzles.
  8. Use them to store the parts of her Barbie play set, different colored buttons for sorting games, beads etc.
  9. Take a bunch of Ziploc bags, and put one item in each of them – the thing should either float or sink. For instance, a cotton ball, a pebble, a toy, a leaf etc. Let her separate into objects that float and objects that sink.
  10. Make ice cubes in different colors (add food color), and drop a few of these into a Ziploc bag. As the cubes melt, the colors mix and create new ones. This is also a good color recognition activity for a preschooler.
  11. Put rice in a bag, and add color to it. Let her color the rice by squishing the bag.
  12. Put a wet paper towel inside a bag, and sprinkle some fast growing seeds. Zip and, place near a window. Or tape the bag to the pane. Or use a clothes peg and some yarn to hang the bag near the sill. Observe the sprouting, and discuss. You have a preschool science activity that takes no time to set up. Use a Lima bean for quick results.
  13. Put some glitter in a bag. Apply glue to a few objects – a small doll, pebble, a cone – and drop them into the bag. Let her experiment.
  14. If you have plastic polar bears, put them into a Ziploc bag, add some water and freeze. Discuss the Antarctica, polar bears, their habits and food.

Do you have ideas for playing with your preschoolers using Ziploc bags? I’d love to hear them.

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10 Responses
  1. Alison :

    Date: April 19, 2008 @ 6:32 am

    Oh my gosh you could have written this article especially for us! I am so in love with ziploc bags!
    Having different sizes is good too - I fill a small bag with one colour and place it inside a large bag filled with another colour.
    They’re great for helping my girls to share, as well. They divide things up between them and have their own little bag each.

  2. workout mommy :

    Date: April 19, 2008 @ 2:40 pm

    what another great list of ideas, thank you!

  3. PlanningQueen :

    Date: April 19, 2008 @ 4:55 pm

    How useful is a zip-lock bag? I think this is a great list of activities for the preschoolers.

  4. PreSchool Mama :

    Date: April 20, 2008 @ 12:16 am

    Thanks, ladies!

  5. Melitsa :

    Date: April 20, 2008 @ 7:15 pm

    Counting
    Put 1 raisin or treat of the moment in one bag.
    2 in the next up to 5 or higher depending on your child.
    Mix up the order and give to child to arrange in order of size. Largest to sm. sm to large. Try patterns like odd and even or 2x table,not necessarily mentioning these terms but just showing a different pattern. They can eat the contents as a treat. You can put anything in the bags; beads, counters, cars ( we seem to have plenty of these) Food works well with us.

  6. PreSchool Mama :

    Date: April 20, 2008 @ 8:28 pm

    Thanks, Melitsa!

  7. Michie :

    Date: April 22, 2008 @ 5:36 pm

    I like the idea of the hot/cold shaving gel. I am working on this concept with my special needs kids at school, and it sounds like this would be an easy and sensory project for us. Thanks!

  8. anna :

    Date: April 25, 2008 @ 6:04 am

    There are no polar bears in antarctica.

    http://pbsg.npolar.no/pb_faq.htm

  9. PreSchool Mama :

    Date: April 25, 2008 @ 12:09 pm

    Ahhh…Got me! Thanks.

  10. Steve :

    Date: May 5, 2008 @ 6:40 am

    This is a great. You’ve inspired me to include Ziplock bags in future adventures we create!

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