Older Children

Obstacle Course

This first activity can be set up easily in your living room, even if space is limited. Just pull out a few chairs, bring out a stepstool, roll up a blanket, and lay down a few pillows. You can also have your kids pick out a few items around the house to add to this obstacle course. This activity is always a hit because kids love crawling over and under chairs, jumping over a blanket, stepping up and down on a stepstool, bouncing from one pillow to the next, and running in a circle around a teddy bear. This is an easy activity and fun for both you and your kids.

Personalised Placemats

Why not turn a boring colouring page into a personalized placemat by laminating it. Better yet, add a few pictures of your child to make it a picture placemat. Also try making a family placemat by having your child draw a picture of each family member, then placing a photo of that family member next to each drawing.

Musical Instruments

Making musical instruments out of household items is easy and inexpensive. For example, a paper towel roll and some dry beans can make a long tamborine. A shoebox with a hole in the middle, and a few rubberbands can make a guitar. An empty oatmeal container can be decorated and used as a drum. Making their own instruments keeps kids busy and is a fun and creative idea.

Scavenger Hunt

This activity just takes some preparation before you get your kids involved. Hide a few items around the house, write up clues for each item, then let your kids find the items using the clues you wrote out. This is a great idea for older and younger children. Just make the clues harder for the older kids, and easier for the younger ones. Picture Scenes: Who doesn’t have an old stack of magazines and catalogs lying around the house? Put these dust collectors to work. Give your child a project by having them cut out pictures from these magazines and pasting them on paper to make a scene. For example, if you choose a zoo scene then have them cut and paste pictures of animals onto paper. Try a number or color scene for younger kids, this not only keeps them busy but can help them learn their numbers and colors as well. You can give an older child a sentence, then they cut out letters to make that sentence. Kids can be learning as well as having fun.

Finger Painting

Messy activities like finger painting can be done with less mess too. Just lay down an old shower curtain on your kitchen floor to contain the paint splatters. Cut open a few brown grocery sacks, bring out a few different colors of paint and you’re all set. Kids love activities that are messy, and you’ll have the mess fairly contained. Picture Hunt: This can be used as a quiet time activity, and it is still fun for your child. Get a stack of your child’s books and have them look for a particular picture in each book. You can time them to make it more exciting for them.

Guessing Game

This is another quiet time activity but still fun. Just pick out a few objects, have your child close their eyes, place an object in their hand and have them guess it. You can even have your child pick a few objects and you close your eyes and guess. Kids always get a kick out of seeing their parents play the same game.

Butterflies

Despite their small size, butterflies are amazing creatures.  Their beauty, miraculous metamorphosis, and apparently carefree flight all spark a child’s imagination.

Your children can use this simple pattern to make lots of different butterflies.  Be sure to find different colours and types of papers so that each butterfly can be unique.

Did you know there are around 20,000 different types of butterflies?

Materials List

paper
scissors
glue
pencil
decorations

Instructions

  • Fold the paper in half.
  • Draw two circles, one smaller than the other.  Both should overlap the fold line and each other (see pattern).
  • Cut along the dark line. But don’t cut along the fold line.
  • Cut out different types of decorations for your paper butterflies.  The decorations could be circles, lines, triangles.  Glue them on the butterfly’s wings in patterns.
  • Cut a thin piece of paper for each antennae.  Scrap scissors along the paper to curl it.

Pipe cleaners creatures

Materials

pipe cleaners
googly eyes
glue

Instructions

  • Choose the colour of pipe cleaner you want for your creature.  You can use a whole pipe cleaner for a large creature, or cut it in half to create smaller creature.
  • Start one end and bend the shape for the head and neck.
  • Spiral the rest of the pipe cleaner around the bottom of the neck.  Leave the end of the pipe cleaner to create a tail if you want.
  • Glue on the eyes.

Other Ideas:

  • Place all Mum and Dad’s old clothes and accessories in a special “Dress up” chest (or big box) and then encourage your kids to pick up some, mix and match and dress up.
  • Give your kids a piece of chalk and let them draw on the pavement
  • Invite your kids to paint the garden wall with a bucket of water (no paint!): they’ll have great fun drawing with water while they’re cleaning your wall!!!!
  • Give your kids some pillows, sheets and duvets for them to build tents in their room (or anywhere else!)
  • Make puppets out of lunch sacks or socks,
  • Treasure hunt: a treasure (toy or anything else) hide and seek game- you hide the treasure and your child/children search(es) for it

Organize a doll or teddy bear picnic, building forts out of chairs and blankets.

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