Book Read Free

The Everything Toddler Activities Book

Page 23

by MEd Joni Levine


  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 part peanut butter

  1 part nonfat powdered milk

  1 teaspoon honey (optional)

  Mix all ingredients together.

  Cloud Dough

  This dough has a springy texture.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 part salad oil

  6 parts flour

  1 part water

  Mix the oil and flour together.

  Gradually add water until the desired consistency is reached.

  Oatmeal Fundough

  This dough has a unique texture. It is edible but does not taste good. In addition, it does not store well, so go ahead and throw it away after your child is done playing.

  Makes 2 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  2 cups uncooked oatmeal

  1 cup flour

  ¼ cup water

  Mix all the ingredients together. Let your child knead the dough.

  Rubber Dough

  You will be surprised at the unique texture of this dough.

  Makes 2 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 15 minutes

  2 cups baking soda

  1½ cups water

  1 cup cornstarch

  Combine all ingredients in a saucepan over a medium heat. Stir until mixture reaches a boil.

  When the dough is thick, remove it from the heat and cool it on a flat surface.

  Store in airtight containers.

  Kool-Aid Dough

  A very popular dough, this looks and smells terrific.

  Makes 2 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 cup sifted flour

  ½ cup salt

  3 tablespoons oil

  1 package Kool-Aid

  1 cup boiling water

  Mix all the ingredients together. Once the mixture cools, let your child knead the dough.

  Pumpkin Pie Dough

  Here is fun seasonal dough. Be warned that it does not taste as good as it smells!

  Makes 2 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 20 minutes

  5½ cups flour

  2 cups salt

  8 teaspoons cream of tartar

  ¾ cup oil

  1 ounce pumpkin-pie spice

  Orange food coloring

  4 cups water

  Mix all the ingredients together over low heat.

  Stir constantly until mixture reaches the consistency of mashed potatoes.

  Remove from heat. When cool, knead.

  Mud Dough

  Your child will love this dough’s muddy texture.

  Makes 2½ cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  ½ cup cold water

  1 tablespoon oil

  2 tablespoons brown tempera paint

  ½ cup salt

  1 tablespoon cornstarch

  1½ cups flour

  Mix the water, oil, and paint together.

  Stir in the remaining ingredients and knead together.

  Snow Dough

  This dough has a very nice appearance and texture.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  2 parts flour

  1 part salt

  Water

  White tempera paint powder

  White glitter

  Mix all the flour and salt together.

  Gradually add water until you reach the desired consistency.

  Sprinkle in the white tempera powder and glitter for color and effect.

  Bread Dough

  This dough is great for fine detailed work. When it dries, it looks like porcelain.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  White bread without crust

  White craft glue

  Food coloring

  Let your child shred bread into tiny pieces.

  Add glue and have your child knead the dough until it reaches a proper consistency (not too gooey).

  Add either bread or glue as needed. Add a few drops of coloring as desired.

  Clay

  Homemade Clay

  The thicker the sculpture, the longer it takes to dry.

  Makes 3 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 30 minutes

  2 cups baking soda

  1 cup cornstarch

  1¼ cups cold water

  Mix all the ingredients together and cook over a medium heat while stirring constantly.

  When mixture reaches the consistency of mashed potatoes, remove from the heat and place on a clean counter or plate.

  Cover the clay with a damp cloth until it is cool.

  Knead the clay, and mold and sculpt as desired.

  Toothpaste Clay

  This is an unusual clay. Your child can squish and mold it like putty, but it will dry overnight.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 part toothpaste (not gel)

  2 parts white glue

  4 parts cornstarch

  1 part water

  1–2 drops food coloring

  Mix toothpaste, glue, and cornstarch together. Gradually add water and food coloring.

  Dryer Lint Clay

  You will be amazed at the result of this project.

  Makes 3½ cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 20 minutes

  3 cups dryer lint

  2 cups cold or warm water

  2⁄3 cup flour

  3 drops oil of cloves

  Mix the first three ingredients in a saucepan over low heat. Stir constantly to prevent lumps.

  Add the oil of cloves. Continue stirring until peaks form.

  Remove from heat and let cool. You can shape this by hand or place in molds.

  Dry for three or four days.

  Holiday Ornaments

  This clay hardens in the oven.

  Makes 3 cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 45 minutes

  1½ cups flour

  1½ cups cinnamon and nutmeg mix

  1 cup salt

  1 cup water

  Holiday cookie cutters

  1 straw

  Mix all the ingredients together. Add more water if dough is dry and does not hold together.

  Have your child knead the dough and then roll it out to a disc ¼ thick.

  Show your child how to cut out shapes from the dough using cookie cutters.

  Use the straw to poke a small hole in the top of the ornament.

  Bake at 300°F for ½ hour or until the ornaments are hard.

  Chalk

  Spray Chalk

  Your child can spray this on beach sand or snow.

  Makes ½ cup

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 cup water

  4 tablespoons cornstarch

  3 drops food coloring

  Mix all the ingredients and put into spray bottles.

  Eggshell Chalk

  This chalk is only for sidewalk use.

  Makes 1 stick

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 20 minutes

  4 eggshells

  1 teaspoon flour

  1 teaspoon very hot tap water

  Grind clean dry eggshells to a fine powder.

  Add 1 tablespoon of this power to the flour and hot water.

  Mix until a paste forms.

  Roll paste into a cylinder an
d wrap in waxed paper.

  Allow to dry for three days, then remove the paper.

  Sidewalk Chalk

  Homemade chalk is cheaper, and creates less dust.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 3 hours

  2 cups water

  2 cups plaster of Paris

  2 tablespoons powdered tempera paint

  Stir all ingredients in a large bowl and let set for a few minutes.

  Spoon the mixture into molds. (Tape one end of a toilet paper tube closed to create a jumbo chalk mold.)

  Let chalk dry for at least three hours before removing from the mold.

  Miscellaneous Materials

  Silly Putty

  This project is messy, but the result is nicer than the commercial product. Sometimes this is also called slime or ooze.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 15 minutes

  2 parts white craft glue or starch

  1 part liquid starch

  Mix together. If the mixture stays stringy, add a drop of glue. If it’s too brittle, add more starch.

  Chill for at least three hours.

  Add either glue or starch as needed. Add a few drops of coloring as desired.

  Goop

  This is a messy but fun sensory material.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  2 parts cornstarch

  1 part water

  Let your child use his hands to mix the ingredients together in a shallow bowl or container.

  Have him explore what happens when he adds more water or cornstarch.

  Jewels and Gems

  Mix this up in a large dish bin.

  Variable Yield

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 3 hours

  2 cups rock salt

  6 to 8 drops food coloring

  ½ cup white craft glue

  Waxed paper

  Mix the salt and food coloring together.

  Add the glue and mix thoroughly.

  Mold into gem and jewel shapes.

  Set on waxed paper to dry.

  Super Bubbles

  Here is a bubble solution that will form more durable bubbles than the solution you buy at the store.

  Makes 1½ cups

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 cup water

  2 tablespoons light corn syrup

  4 tablespoons liquid dish soap

  Mix all ingredients in a jar or container with a secure lid.

  Lick-and-Stick Stickers

  Now your child can make his own stickers, and they will taste good too!

  Makes ½ cup

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 30 minutes

  2 tablespoons boiling water

  1 tablespoon flavored gelatin

  Shallow cup or dish

  Decorated bond paper or magazine and newspaper clippings

  Cotton swabs

  Add the boiling water to the gelatin powder; stir until dissolved.

  When it is cool, place the mixture in a shallow cup or dish and your child can use it as sticker glue. Stickers can be made of bond paper or even magazine and newspaper clippings. Show him how to use the swabs to paint on the glue.

  When the glue is dry, your child can lick and stick the sticker wherever he wants.

  Classroom Paste

  It is not hard to make a paste similar to the one you remember from elementary school.

  Makes 1½ quarts

  Age group: 18–40 months

  Duration of activity: 10 minutes

  1 cup flour

  1 cup sugar

  1 cup cold water

  4 cups boiling water

  1 tablespoon alum

  ½ teaspoon oil of wintergreen

  Mix flour and sugar in bowl, then slowly add in cold water to make a paste.

  Add the boiling water and transfer the mixture to a saucepan.

  Bring to a boil and stir until mixture is thick and clear.

  Remove from the heat and add the alum and oil of wintergreen.

  APPENDIX B

  Recommended Resources

  Other Toddler Activity Books

  Herr, Judy. Creative Learning Activities for Young Children. (New York: Delmar Thomson Learning, 2000).

  Kohl, MaryAnn. First Art: Art Experiences for Toddlers and Twos. (Silver Spring, Maryland: Gryphon House, 2002).

  Masi, Wendy. Toddler Play (Gymboree). (Minneapolis, MN: Creative Publishing International, 2001).

  Pica, Rae. Moving and Learning Series: Toddlers. (New York: Delmar Thomson Learning, 2000).

  Rowley, Barbara. Baby Days: Activities, Ideas, and Games for Enjoying Daily Life with a Child Under Three. (New York, NY: Hyperion, 2000).

  Schiller, Pam. The Complete Resource Book for Toddlers and Twos: Over 2000 Experiences and Ideas. (Silver Spring, Maryland: Gryphon House, 2003).

  Warren, Jean. Toddler Games: Simple Seasonal Games Designed Especially for Toddlers. (Totline Publications, 2002)

  Parenting Books

  Bowers, Ellen. The Everything® Toddler Book, 2nd Edition. (Avon, MA: Adams Media, 2010).

  Brazelton, T. Berry. Touchpoints. (Boston, MA: Da Capo Press, 1992).

  Douglas, Ann. The Mother of All Toddler Books. (New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2004).

  Eisenberg, Arlene. What to Expect: The Toddler Years. (New York, NY: Workman Publishing Company, 1994).

  Hewitt, Deborah. So This Is Normal Too? (St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press, 1995).

  Margulis, Jennifer, ed. Toddler: Real-Life Stories of Those Fickle, Irrational, Urgent, Tiny People We Love. (Jackson, TN: Seal Press, 2003).

  Murphy, Jana. The Secret Lives of Toddlers: A Parent’s Guide to the Wonderful, Terrible, Fascinating Behavior of Children Ages 1–3. (New York, NY: Perigee Trade, 2004).

  Shonkoff, Jack P., ed. From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development. (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2000).

  Books for Your Toddler

  Breeze, L., and A. Morris. This Little Baby’s Bedtime. (New York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 1990).

  Brown, Margaret Wise. Goodnight Moon. (New York, NY: Harper Festival; board edition, 1991).

  Carle, Eric. The Very Hungry Caterpillar. (New York, NY: Philomel, 1994).

  Christelow, Eileen. Five Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed. (New York, NY: Clarion Books, 1998).

  Eastman, P. D., illus. Are You My Mother? (New York, NY: Random House Books for Young Readers; board edition, 1998).

  Keats, Ezra Jack. The Snowy Day. (New York, NY: Viking Books; board edition, 1996).

  Kingsley, Emily Perl. I Can Do It Myself. (Racine, WI: Western Publishing Co., Inc., 1980).

  Kunhardt, Dorothy. Pat the Bunny. (New York, NY: Golden Books; reissue edition, 2001).

  Westcott, Nadine Bernard. I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly. (New York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 1988).

  Index

  ABC Dominoes activity, 230

  Act It Out activity, 127

  Action plays, 105–07

  Air-Travel, 46–47

  All about Me activity, 179

  All-about-Me Book activity, 181

  Animal Sounds activity, 49

  Animals, 202–05

  Anytime activities, 24–26

  Apple Prints activity, 238

  Arctic Animal/hibernation, 248–50

  Art/exploration, 63–79

  Astronomy/nighttime activities, 157–58

  Away from home activities, 45–62

  Baby Bonnet Doll activity, 123

  Back Blackboard activity, 15

  Backward Upside-Down Day activity, 40

  Backyard/nature activities, 145–58

  Bag Puppets, 130

  Ball Painting, 70

&nb
sp; Basketball, 142

  Bath-time activities, 12–14

  Beach activities, 57–59

  Beach Fantasy activity, 36

  Beach Towels, 58

  Beachcomber activity, 35

  Beanbag Toss, 28

  Bend and Stretch activity, 20

  Big Feet, Little Feet activity, 175

  Big Head Puppets, 129

  Binoculars, 158

  Bird activities, 213–15

  Birds That Fly activity, 105

  Birthday Blocks, 283

  Birthday Cake, 229

  Birthday Parties, 282–85

  Black Magic activity, 66

  Bleeding Tissue Paper activity, 98

  Blob Race, 289

  Block building, 124–26

  Block City activity, 125

  Blossom Trees activity, 252

  Blowing Games, 195

  Blown Pictures, 152

  Boats That Float, 84

  Bowling, 142

  Box Train, 38

  Brush the Tooth activity, 188

  Bubble Bonanza activity, 91

  Bubble Catch activity, 90

  Bubble Prints activity, 76

  Bubble Tools, 92

  Bubble Wrap Fun, 94

  Bugs! activities, 148–50

  Build a Person activity, 178

  Butterfly Feet activity, 149

  Buzzing Bee activity, 111

  Calming/rest-time, 15–17

  Camping Theme, 119

  Can You See? activity, 61

  Captions, 161

  Car-Travel, 48–49

  Catching Butterflies, 148

  Categorization skills, 52

  Celebration Picture activity, 259

  Changing Colors, 146

  Chanukah, 272–74

  Character in a Bag, 127

  Children, special needs, 189–200

  Children with autism activities, 192–93

  Christmas, 275–76

  Cinderella’s Shoe, 220

  Circle Chase, 137

  Circle Prints, 223

  Circus Theme Party, 281

  Clap Your Hands, 283

  Cleanup Is Fun!, 21

  Cloud Pictures, 152

  The Clown Says activity, 141

  Cobbler Cobbler activity, 55

  Coffee-Filter Butterflies, 150

  Cognitive disability activities, 196–97

  Collages, 51, 74–75

  Collect Rain activity, 34

  Color activities, 224–26

  Coloring activities, 64–67

  Community helpers activities, 205–07

  Cooperative game activities, 134–36

  Corn Rolling, 239

  Cornucopia activity, 239

 

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