This entry was posted on Saturday, March 1st, 2008 at 6:00 am and is filed under Education and Homeschooling, Natural Living, Natural Play, Older Kids and Teens. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Natural Toys for Creative Play
March 1, 2008->
During warmer months it is easy to send kids outdoors for some fun in the sun and fresh air. Bike riding, tree climbing, soccer, hopscotch, and dozens of other outdoor activities provide children with hours upon hours of creative play that is healthy for their bodies and mind. Less than favorable weather such as rain and extreme cold may present a problem at times though and moms need to get creative in helping their kids to find productive play activities. In an age where video games and TV can easily become too important in a child’s life, many parents are reluctant to encourage these things. Luckily there are many alternatives for parents that want to stress productive and creative play.
Help Them Make Believe
Pretend play is particularly important for a young child’s development. It helps them to develop their critical thinking and communication abilities. The great outdoors provides a grand stage for this type of play but parents can facilitate make believe any time with just a few clever props. A box of costumes can create hours of pretend play fun as your kids pretend they are pirates, fairies, knights, or even characters from their favorite movies and books. Homemade forts also provide an excellent opportunity for kids to imagine they are playing in a log cabin, a castle, or a tent. A simple sheet draped over a table can provide hours of fun and creative play.
Creative Toys
Instead of toys with lights, sounds, and movement give your children some basic toys that they can use to build and create. Legos and wooden blocks are usually very popular among kids as they can spend hours creating virtually anything they can come up with. Take some pictures of their creations and help them create a photo journal to record all of their inventions and accomplishments as mini architects.
Play kitchens and play food can also provide hours of creative play as kids pretend to cook their favorite meals and serve their family. Even an item as simple as a playsilk can be used as a flag, as part of a costume, as a sail on a boat, or a doll sling or hammock. Give them the raw materials and watch them create!
Books for Homegrown Adventure
For younger and older kids it is great fun to read a book aloud and ask them to re-enact it in a play or with puppets. They can build the set, create the costumes, and then act out the part of their favorite character. If you have a video camera handy you or an older child can record these performances to let them view later and to create memories that the whole family will treasure for years.
For children that insist on TV time perhaps you can strike a deal asking them to select a movie that originated from a book and then after they read it you can all watch the movie together and discuss how the book and movie compared.
These are just a few of the ways that parents can encourage creative and productive play and leisure within their children.
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May 30th, 2008 at 5:34 am
Loved this blog post! Whether they realize it or not, kids are happier when creating their own play. Too much of “playtime” these days depends on batteries or a plug in the wall. Both because I am a mom and because I work for a swingset company, I see the power that creative play holds. You are right in that sometimes it just takes a few tools to stoke a child’s imagination.
At CedarWorks we make big tools for big imaginations. I know the time I spent on a swingset as a child was the stuff memories were made of! A swingset could become a pirate ship or a castle. We make sets to encourage this active play. Our sets are chemical and splinter- free. They are beautiful and safe. CedarWorks is dedicated to the environment and our children, and making sure that our products like up with those dedications.
Again, great topic and blog post…play on!
Liz R.
http://www.CedarWorks.com