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Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Chalk It Up To It's Playtime



Drawing with sidewalk chalk is classic outdoor fun......but.....at the same time, gets old quickly.  Shared on previously on It's Playtime, here are some new ways to explore and learn with sidewalk chalk.  

Reading Confetti posted their recipe for Frozen Popsicle Chalk.  If you don't have popsicle molds, try simply making Ice Chalk.  

Train Up a Child shared their post, Top 10 Ways to Learn with Chalk.  Here you'll find some great learning games and play ideas for kids toddlers through school-age.  

If you were featured this week, don't forget to grab your special "featured button."

  


These activities plus more can be found over on the It's Playtime Pinterest Board.  Happy Pinning! 

Now, on to this weeks play date! 
It's Playtime is a community and Thursday link-up hosted by:

* Rachele : Messy Kids (That's me!)
* Rachel & Holly : Quirky Momma
* Jillian: A Mom With a Lesson Plan

How to Play :
* Link up a post about a playful learning experience enjoyed by kids.
* Give us love and pop a button into your post/blog. Invite your readers to the weekly play date!


* Stop by one of our blogs every Thursday and add your link about play. Your link will show up on each of the blogs in the It's Playtime community.
* Each week the playtime hosts will choose favorite posts to feature. (By linking you are giving us permission to use an image and link to you, if featured.)
* Be sure to visit some of the links that catch your eye. Commenting on posts that you find interesting or inspiring is a wonderful way to develop your own playful community.

By linking up you give us permission to grab a picture and feature you here, on a site we write for, on FB or Pinterest.   If we share your link, we will always credit you, send people to your original post and use only ONE photo.

Monday, August 29, 2011

What's for Lunch?

With school returning next week, and a picky eater who needs a lunch, I'm all in a frazzle about what to pack for her.  In the past I've qualified for discount lunches through the district, but this year our financial situation looks better on paper then it actually is, disqualifying us for reduced price lunches.  I wanted to pack more lunches for her this year anyway since there are days she doesn't eat at school because she doesn't like any of the choices offered her.  My daughter is a lot like I was at her age.  Lunch was always a battle for my parents.  I'd eat something for while, then decide I was bored, and want something else.  I also didn't eat the conventional PB&J because I didn't like peanut butter until I was in my 20s.  I remember eating bagel sandwiches (bagels didn't get as soggy as bread) for a while but my parents bought the cheapest lunch meat on earth so I quickly grew to despise the stuff.  And I didn't eat baloney either.  My parents loved when I worked in the cafeteria because it meant a month of free lunches that they didn't have to pack!

Now I am paying for all the hassle with a daughter who likes even less then I did.  She won't eat PB&J but she will eat baloney.  Heaven forbid I put cheese in her bag (although she loves it) because she claims that even with an ice pack, the cheese becomes "yucky".  She'll sometimes eat ham, usually will eat salami, but never eats turkey.  She loves grilled cheese but I can't pack that because it's "yucky" when it's cold (I don't blame her there!).  Baby carrots are sometimes, crackers too, and celery is a no, no, especially spread with cream cheese or peanut butter!  Do you see what I have to work with?

So I've been researching quick and easy lunches and although I may not have use for many of them, due to Miss Picky, I have found a number of great ideas the rest of you may enjoy.  I'd also love to hear from you all dear readers what you pack for you picky lunch eater.  It just may help!

My ideas for this coming year:
  • Homemade Lunchables- crackers (my kids like Ritz), cheese slices (or not if they get "yucky"), and a favorite lunch meat such as baloney or salami (or turkey or ham, whatever your child will eat).  Pair with whatever healthy food you can get your child to eat, such as fresh fruit and baby carrots.  
  • Homemade Pizza Pockets- My bread machine came with a great recipe for pizza dough but you could use refrigerator dough or your favorite recipe.  Roll dough to a long oval type shape (for whatever size pocket you think is best for your child.  This will take experimentation!)  Spread with pizza sauce and top with whatever your child likes on their pizza plus cheese.  Fold dough over creating a half circle shape (or calzone shape) and seal edges with a fork.  Bake at 400 degrees for 15-20 minuets if calzone sized.  Less time if making a much smaller pocket.  This is a recipe you must play with.  I'm still adjusting mine as my pockets are still coming out bigger then what I'd want to pack my daughter.  You can make these a head of time, reheat in the morning and wrap in foil to keep warm until lunch.  
  • Homemade muffins such as blueberry, zucchini (sneaking in veggies!) or apple packed alongside carrots or other veggies.  There are so many recipes out there reducing the amount of sugar that with a little research, you can find something that fits your lifestyle.  Most kids are more active at school so don't be afraid to give them carbs!  They will burn it off!  
  • Cold noodles packed alongside fresh fruit and veggies.  Cold noodles was my stable in high school.  I LOVED them!  My daughter likes them a little less, but sitting in her lunch box, they won't really be "cold" anymore.  Use fun noodle shapes or spirals, then you don't really have to pack a fork!  I think this will be a hit this year.
  • Hotdogs- Cook them in the morning and pack alongside a bun or slice of bread, packets of catchup and mustard, plus veggies and fresh fruit.  Or maybe you have a child that likes cold food.    When I was younger I liked cold and frozen hotdogs.  Give it a try!    
Veggie Options:
  • carrot sticks or baby carrots
  • jicama (My daughter discovered this over the summer and loved it.  It's crunchy and sweet!) 
  • celery sticks (add peanut butter or cream cheese for added nutrition)
  • sugar snap peas
  • red, yellow, or orange bell pepper slices (also sweet and crunchy)
  • mini  trees (broccoli)  
Lunch ideas from around the web:

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

It's Playtime: Easy Experiments



I love science!  I don't do nearly enough science activities with my children.  We've watched tadpoles change....
and read about bugs and spiders.  I've made oil and water sensory bottles...
and we've grown plants, but that's really the extent of our science time.  It's not bad, but there is so much more out there that can be done!  On last week's It's Playtime, some great experiments were posted which I hope will push me to do more...and you too!  

There are so many fabulous science experiments with eggs!  Over at Sun Scholars, they made Rubber Eggs.  This simple science activity involves 3 household items and will give you a weeks worth of observation and hypothesizing.  Kids love to "wonder" what will happen!     

  Kids love bouncy balls!  Why not Make-Your-Own!  Come Together Kids posted about the fun they had creating their own bouncy balls, along with the recipe.  A perfect summer time activity! 

 Logan and Kalia's Blog posted several Fun things to do with glow sticks.  My favorite activity involved adding them in the bath.  I have a bunch of glow sticks laying around; why I haven't I thought of that?  A cool experiment for my list!  

  Toddlers need science too!  Gratefully Growing in Grace attempted to make toys fly using planes and fulcrums.  Of course, my son, being an energetic boy, would immediately jump on the plane launching his stuffed animal high into the air.  An experiment I'd love to do, but need strong materials for.  As for the little lady above, she seems perfectly content simply pushing on the plane to launch her animals.  

If you were featured this week, don't forget to grab your "featured" button!




Now, on to this weeks play date! 
It's Playtime is a community and Thursday link-up hosted by:

* Rachele : Messy Kids (That's me!)
* Anna : The Imagination Tree
* Rachel : Quirky Momma
* Jamie : hands on : as we grow
* Jenny : Let the Children Play

How to Play :
* Link up a post about a playful learning experience enjoyed by kids.
* Give us love and pop a button into your post/blog. Invite your readers to the weekly play date!


* Stop by one of our blogs every Thursday and add your link about play. Your link will show up on each of the blogs in the It's Playtime community.
* Each week the playtime hosts will choose favorite posts to feature. (By linking you are giving us permission to use an image and link to you, if featured.)
* Be sure to visit some of the links that catch your eye. Commenting on posts that you find interesting or inspiring is a wonderful way to develop your own playful community.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Cardboard Box Challenge-Building a Carousal

I was extremely excited to receive an email from Rachelle over at TinkerLab inviting me to join her cardboard box challenge.*  She is known for hosting fantastic creative challenges involving everyday items or unexpected materials.  For this particular project, Rachelle requested we simply create something, anything, from at least one cardboard box.

What were the kids and I going to make?  Lucky for me, my 8 year old came home last Friday and declared she wanted to make a carousal from a box to take to school the following Monday.  Ariel explained they were reading a book at school called Carousel and she asked if the class could create a carousel.  Her teacher told her it would be too difficult; Ariel took that as a challenge...

 First we cut the flaps off the box.
 And cut the flaps into strips.  These will be the poles for the animals.
 Then I cut an oval from a large piece of art paper.  The slit will help it become a cone.
 Next Ariel and her friend painted the box.
 The mini roller I received in a sample set from Valspar paint has come in handy for the 2nd time!
 Ariel decided each side should be a different color.  Each animal pole was also painted a different color.
 She paints the top yellow while it is still flat.
My husband helped with the engineering of the poles.  He mapped out their location and cut slits in the top of the box.  Then he trimmed the poles slightly so they would rest in the slits.    
 Now the poles can hold the top without toppling over!
 Ariel printed several animal coloring sheets from the web and colored them.  She drew her own panda (her favorite animal) and bunny.  She placed each animal in a different position on the poles to give the illusion of movement.    
 She used tape to attach each animal to the pole.  I recommend using glue.  While at school the next day, her elephant flew off into the wind, just like Dumbo!
 Once the animals were on the poles, Ariel decided something was missing...a center to the carousel just like the real ones have.  We took another flap from the box and folded it into an odd, circular shape.  Then she cut "mirrors" from foil to glue on the center piece.  
 She drew decorations around the mirrors.  Then she glued the center piece to the box.  She chose glue sticks, I recommend white glue or hot glue.  
         Ariel and her completed project!  

This project was a child led creation; Ariel's concept.  She directed her friends in the painting, planned which animals to include, and had the basic idea for construction.

My 3 year old, on the other hand, was extremely upset that we had taken his boat away.

Photobucket

*As a new blogger, it's been such an honor to be embraced by the community of playtime loving bloggers.  I am extremely grateful for the knowledge and experience we share amongst each other, as well as the fun activities and challenges.
Inspiration:


David Shannon is one of my favorite authors, mainly because my son Michael, is so much like his character "David".  The cardboard box challenge reminded me of Too Many Toys, in which a young boy, Spencer, haggles with his mother over the fate of his beloved toys.  In the end, it's the box, which housed all the ill-fated toys, that Spencer refuses to part with. 






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