Day2Day Joys » outside http://day2dayjoys.com Joyful Inspiration for the Natural Homemaker Wed, 19 Aug 2015 04:00:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.3 4 Outdoor Learning Activities for Kids http://day2dayjoys.com/2015/06/4-outdoor-learning-activities-kids.html http://day2dayjoys.com/2015/06/4-outdoor-learning-activities-kids.html#respond Fri, 26 Jun 2015 04:00:11 +0000 http://day2dayjoys.com/?p=5760 Written by Lydia @ Frugal, debt free life, *NEW* Contributing Writer I feel like Summer is the ultimate time for frugal fun. There are so many activities and events you can participate in as a family. And what is MORE frugal than your own backyard? I am big believer in free play. Free play is […]

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4 outdoor activities

Written by Lydia @ Frugal, debt free life, *NEW* Contributing Writer

I feel like Summer is the ultimate time for frugal fun. There are so many activities and events you can participate in as a family.

And what is MORE frugal than your own backyard? I am big believer in free play. Free play is pretty much my best friend. However, I do want summer to be a time of learning and enrichment for my little ones, as well.

Today I thought I would share some ways you can make outdoor time learning time. The best part is you probably have all the stuff you need.

4 Outdoor Activities for Kids: 

Go on a digital scavenger hunt

  • Camera or camera phone
  • Printer (optional)

There are a few ways you can do it. But I like to snap photos using my iPod of things through out the yard. A pinecone, a rock, a frog, some blueberries from the bushes in our backyard, a butterfly.

Then I give my boys the iPod and they hunt for the things in the yard. Or you can print out the photos out and put them in an album and do it that way.

Alphabet hopscotch

Grab up that sidewalk chalk and head to the driveway or front porch and write the ABCs. Then have your child hop the appropriate letter. Have them say their ABCs while they hope but stop at the assigned letter.

You can do the same thing with numbers or if your child is older, sight words.

Letter fishing

  • Kiddie pool/Totes container
  • Large Spoon
  • Magnet letters
  • Cookie sheet 

Do you have a TON of magnet letter? We do. Throws those suckers into your kiddie pool or a Totes container.

Have your child fish out a letter and put it on the cookie sheet. Ask your child to find specific letters.

If your child is a little older you can use this to create certain words like ish words or at words.

For example you could put “at” on the cookie sheet and have your child fish our C for cat or TH for that.

Color hunt

  • Sidewalk chalk

Color a square on the driveway or front porch and ask your child to find items in your yard that match that color. Green leaves, purple flowers, etc.

These activities not only provide educational time, they also keep kids occupied on those long summer days.

What activities do you like to do outside that create a love for learning?

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Nature Notebook for Kids http://day2dayjoys.com/2013/09/nature-notebook-for-kids.html http://day2dayjoys.com/2013/09/nature-notebook-for-kids.html#comments Fri, 20 Sep 2013 10:00:01 +0000 http://day2dayjoys.com/?p=1540 Written by Jenn, Contributing Writer As the summer heat dies down and hints of fall are in the air, exploring the outdoors with the littles again becomes one of my favorite activities. The room to run and endless supply of objects to investigate always makes for a enjoyable outing. In a beloved book on education, […]

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Nature Notebook for Kids.3

Written by Jenn, Contributing Writer

As the summer heat dies down and hints of fall are in the air, exploring the outdoors with the littles again becomes one of my favorite activities. The room to run and endless supply of objects to investigate always makes for a enjoyable outing.

In a beloved book on education, the author remarks that as we explore the natural world, “we are observing God’s handiwork. And it is spine-chillingly wonderful.”

This is the perspective I want to cultivate in my children, even if at one and three they simply enjoy digging in the dirt, picking flowers, and shouting about seeing the moon. “IT’S THE MOON, MOMMY! THE MOON! LOOK–IT’S SO BIG!”

Studying in greater depth will come later; for now I will do as 19th century British educator Charlotte Mason would suggest and just “involve them directly with the world, letting them enjoy, wonder, and question.”

With all of this in mind, we take our fair share of nature walks. Recently, I got all Charlotte Mason and decided we needed to preserve the bounty collected on these trips.

Making a real nature notebook might be a bit beyond my 3 ½ year old. But as I enjoy this sort of thing as much or more than her, I’m willing to endure a little glue mess and broken pressed flowers in the name of identifying and appreciating the flora in our little neck of the woods.

Frankly, I could probably do to say “yes” to a little more mess in our lives anyway. Which is why I encouraged the use of glitter in decorating our nature journal.

Making a Nature Notebook

Supplies:

Notebook with unlined pages
Paper towels
Heavy books
Basic Elmer’s glue or wood glue
Colored pencils/pens/crayons
Bits of nature

How To

1.) Go on a nature walk. Take it slow. Keep your eyes wide open.

City-dweller with not much nature to speak of? Find a pretty park or take a short drive to find a little more green space. You don’t need expansive forests and fields of flowers to make it an enjoyable experience of creation.

I had to force myself to slow down and let my daughter pick dandelion after dandelion. “LOOK MOMMY! ANOTHER YELLOW FLOWER! SO PRETTY!” What can I say? She has a zest for life.

flowerjrd1

2.) Point out all the plants and creatures.

Overlook the construction, stoplights, cars, and houses.  Look for what man didn’t create.

Trees, rocks, flowers, grasses, bugs, and small critters abounded. We threw rocks in the stream and ran squealing from hoards of grasshoppers in the tall prairie grasses.

3.) Let the littles pick their favorite flowers and leaves.

Ask them questions about what they see and help them find adjectives to describe their treasures.

Yes, that one has red berries. Yes, so pretty. No, don’t eat them. Or give them to your brother. I know he wants them, but he’ll just eat them/put them up his nose. Actually, it’s probably best that you don’t touch them. Here, give it to Mommy.

3.) Bring the bounty home to press.

Put the flowers and leaves between paper towels and carefully place them between the pages of a large book. Stack more books, canned goods, hand weights, etc. on top.


Nature Notebook.5

4.) Wait a few days for everything to flatten and dry.

I’ve read that it can take up to a few weeks for flowers to completely dry (and that you should change out the paper towels every few days), but our flowers were small and starting to dry out in the late summer heat anyway. It only took a couple days for them to flatten and dry.

5.) In the meantime, decorate a notebook.

I covered the front of ours so that my little big girl would have blank slate to decorate.

Nature Notebook.2

This is where I used glitter as a tool to combat my fear of mess. It was only somewhat effective.

Nature Notebook.4

6.) Glue the flowers and leaves into the notebook.

I advise using small drops of glue so you can do more pages at a time. We followed the “more is always better” philosophy on page one and had to wait a good hour to continue. The final results weren’t quite as lovely as these, but they served our purposes just fine.

Nature Notebook for Kids.7

7.) Identify and label each flower/leaf.

We picked up this helpful book from the library to guide us. But, being committed to accurate flower identification, I may also have consulted to internet to confirm my guesses.

8.) For further study:

Older kids or even eager young ones could write (or dictate) descriptions of their findings or a short poem about what they saw on their walk. I love Kristen’s free printable nature journal pages and accompanying poetry lesson idea.

What are your favorite outdoor activities now that summer is fading?

*this post is linked to: Encourage One AnotherTitus 2sdays, and WFMW*

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