Toddler Time: Spring Bulletin Board Ideas for Home or Classroom

It’s all about spring and the green with these bulletin board ideas which include blooms, butterflies and clouds.   Top to bottom these ideas for the home or classroom will but some spring into your decorating.

Great green grass

Sure you can use green construction paper or even go three D with Easter grass or you can let your toddler get in on the work and make a magnificent field of greens with fingerpaints.

Blooming bushes and flowers

Stickers and tissue paper are features in these blooms as well as teach your little one some manipulatives and fine motor skills.

Butterflies brighten any spring bulletin board.

You can buy or create butterfly shapes in either cardstock or craft foam. Now how can your toddlers personalize their butterflies?

It’s fun to make clouds on a rainy day.

Spring may bring more sunny days but there are usually plenty of cloudy days too. Cut out blue cloud shapes on your heaviest paper and bring out those cotton balls.

Get the all the ideas and complete instructions when you continue reading Spring Bulletin Board Ideas for Home or Classroom.

 

Halloween/Harvest Preschool Arts and Crafts Lesson Plans: Spider Webs & Ghost

Preschool teachers, parents, home caregivers, and even play groups can have fun with these inexpensive and easy to create Halloween and Harvest Art Activities. Many schools and play groups no longer refer to the holiday as “Halloween” so these arts and crafts include many harvest themed crafts.

Theme: Spiders

Spider Webs: Using two popsicle sticks glued together (you may want to do that prior to the children or allow them to do it the day before to make sure it is dry – a glue gun works best) provide the children with strings or white yarn. They can twist and turn and twine the yarn around the Popsicle sticks creating their own spider webs.

Variation 1: Give children white chalk with black construction paper and allow them to trace or draw spider webs on the construction paper.

Variation 2: Give children black construction paper, straws and paint. They can blow straw spider webs across the paint. Talk about how each design is different, just like spider webs are different for different spiders.

Theme: Ghosts

Ghosts Feet: Trace the children’s feet on white construction paper. Cut out the tracing and decorate with googly eyes, glitter or allow them to color (colored pencils work best, as done card stock paper) Punch a hole in the top of the “ghost” and tie string. Hang around the room, on a string along the wall on your bulletin board.

Food Allergy Symptoms: Does your child have a food allergy?

I recently went on a weekend getaway with seven other moms. While riding in the van to our fun for mom’s destination, we realized that between us we had a total of 25 children. As moms do we talked about everything from potty training to training bras, vegetables to video games. At one point the conversation turned to food allergies. I was surprised that out of eight moms, only one mom in our group had a child with food allergies. A mom of four had a son with more than one food allergy. Her infant daughter was still nursing so the future of food allergies was unknown. I wondered, just how common are food allergies in kids? Was our group of 25 children statistically lucky, average or on the high side of food allergies?

Just what is a food allergy?

The definition of a food allergy according to FAAN, the Food Allergy and Anaphalaxis Network is “a condition in which the immune system incorrectly identifies a food protein as a threat and attempts to protect the body against it by releasing chemicals into the blood. The release of these chemicals results in the symptoms of an allergic reaction.”

FAAN attributes 90% of food allergies reactions in the United States to these eight foods:
-milk
-eggs
-peanuts
-wheat
-soy
-fish
-shellfish
-tree nuts including walnuts, almonds, cashews, pistachios, pecans

Symptoms of food allergies can range from a tingling sensation, itching, or a metallic taste in the mouth or hives, a sensation of warmth, wheezing, difficulty breathing, coughing, swelling of the mouth and throat area, vomiting, diarrhea, cramping and even a drop in blood pressure and loss of consciousness.

Just how common are food allergies in kids?

According to the FAAN more than 12 million Americans, about 4%, have food allergies. That’s about 1 in every 25 people. The statistics are higher for young children under three years of age. About 3 million young children in the United States, or 1 in 17, have food allergies.

The experts at FAAN report that the good news is that many children will outgrow their food allergies. About 19% of kid’s food allergies will continue into adulthood.

Are food allergies on the rise?

Web Md reported in 2009 that food allergies had risen 18% in a ten-year period, or at the very least parent reports of food allergies and visits to treatments centers for related care were up.

“Reported food allergy is increasing among children of all ages, among boys and girls, and among children of different races/ethnicities,” write researcher Amy M. Branum, MSPH, and colleagues, from the Centers for Disease Control.

“However, it cannot be determined how much of the increases in estimates are truly attributable to increases in clinical disease and how much are attributable to increased awareness by physicians, other health care providers, and parents.”

The results of studies by FAAN conducted in 1997, and repeated in 2002, showed that peanut allergy had doubled in children during that five-year time span.

 

Winnie the Pooh Play Dates, Lesson Plans, or Birthday Party Ideas

Winnie the Pooh Play Dates, Lesson Plans, or Birthday Party Ideas
Snacks, Crafts, Games and Playtime Fun

Both working and stay at home mothers are constantly looking for play date ideas, so why not base them on some of our children’s favorite characters. Winnie the Pooh is a beloved character from books, movies and television, and I admit to still owning the “Tigger” I had as a child. Why not combine your need for play date ideas for home, group or even the use these ideas for the classroom with Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too?

Winnie the Pooh Snacks
Winnie the Pooh Printables
Winnie the Pooh Games
Winnie the Pooh Crafts
Winnie the Pooh Books and Movies

Continue reading Winnie the Pooh Play Dates, Lesson Plans, or Birthday Party Ideas

 

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Tips for Toddler Triumphs: Building Self Confidence

C 2011 Lisa Carey

Tips for Toddler Triumphs: Building Self Confidence

All by myself” are words of joy to parents for many reasons. This means our children are ready to assert their independence, complete tasks on their own and become their own person. It means that they are already exhibiting the first seeds of self-confidence, seeds that as parents we need to nurture and help to grow. But how can we build self-confidence in such young children who often need a lot more help than they are willing to accept? These 10 tips can help to begin building self-esteem and confidence skills in toddlers, skills that they will need as they grow to be teens and adults.   You’ve got to . . . . Continue reading Tips for Toddler Triumphs: Building Self Confidence for tips on encouraging and building self- confidence

Playing with Blocks: What children can learn

Children are drawn to blocks to stack, build and of course knock down but what can they learn?  Get the most from block play time by reading What Children Learn from Playing with Blocks.

Understanding Parallel Play: How do babies & toddlers play?

Scheduling play dates for babies and toddlers?  Do they really play?  What can you expect and what are the benefits?  Get answers here in Understanding Parallel Play.

toddlers playing

Writing Thank You Notes for Gifts

The gifts have been opened. The sweaters have been worn, the games have been played and the dolls have been cuddled. The tub toys have been suds, the blocks have been stacked and the puzzled have been pieced.

But have the thank you notes been written?

Writing thank you notes is an excellent habit for all ages but it is an especially important to begin the habit with young children and instill in them that writing thank you notes is one example of good manners.

Help your child create a list of the gifts they’ve received. Often it is easy when they open several in a group at one time but don’t forget the gifts that came in the mail and the ones they received at other times from teachers or friends. Just the act of creating a list will help your child remember who gave them each of their gifts.

Whenever your child plays with a gift comment on the giver. For example, “Grandma made a great choice when she found that fire truck for you didn’t she? I know she’ll be glad to hear how much fun you’re having with it.” Help them associate gifts with the people who gave them. It is hard to be grateful if gifts appear to just fall from the sky.

Regardless of the age, all children can participate. For babies of course you’ll write the words but let your baby have a hand it by stamping it with their handprint.

Toddlers can finger paint and “dictate” their own words to you. Probe by asking questions like “What do you like to do with your (submarine)? What would you like to tell (Mary) about how much you like the (music box)?

Young children can draw a picture of the gift or of something meaning to the giver. For example, if Great Grandma collects owls they could draw or cut out a picture from a magazine of an owl to make her thank you note personal.

Children mastering writing their own name can sign each card and have a “real” reason to practice it. School aged children learning to write their address can put on the return address and older kids should address their own envelopes.More great tips.

Kwanzaa: A December Holiday that Isn’t Another Christmas

KwanzaaMillions of African American’s and others of African descent around the world celebrate the holiday of Kwanzaa. Kwanzaa is a celebration of “family, community and culture.” This holiday began in 1966 and provides those of the African culture to celebrate their heritage and culture regardless of religion or geographic location. It is a celebration of goodness and appreciation of what we have and how we achieved it, through our hard work and that of our family. This holiday is celebrated from December 26 – January 1.

Learn about this celebration and teach your children how and why it is celebrated, and about some important concepts that we can apply to our lives regardless of culture. Continue reading Kwanzaa: A December Holiday that Isn’t Another Christmas.

How They Celebrate Christmas in Australia Lesson Plans

When I first learned that Christmas was celebrated in the “summertime” in Australia, I was a little confused. Even now as an adult, it is a little confusing that Australia is nice and warm during the Unites States winter season and cold and wet during our heated summers. Then, I moved to Houston, Texas, and now I know exactly why Australia does what they do. Christmas is just a couple of weeks away and the temperature is almost 80 in the afternoon. No snow has been seen in this city for over 5 years. While I may miss a bit of the white stuff on Christmas day, it certainly gives me a new appreciation for the summertime weather that Australia has during our winters.

Geography: Show your child Continue Reading …