Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Bedtime Chart

We are working on improving our 2 1/2 year old's bedtime routine.  He does well until the end, but lately has been hit and miss for him.  So I collected clipart of what we do and night and we printed it and made a chart with it.  He created the order (with our help, of course) and now the chart is the boss.  So far, it has helped a bit.   I wanted to share to save someone else the work:  Bedtime Chart Clipart.  

Sleep tight!

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Managing Time

It has dawned on me that I know a whole lot less than I wish I did.  I glean things from different sources, but have discovered that real people are often times a whole lot better sources than books for real-life, day-to-day knowledge.  So I have a question for you and I would love, love, love any and all ideas, tips, anything. 

How do you manage your time as a mom?

With two little boys to take care of I am constantly trying to reevaluate our schedule to fit in naps, meals, chores, exercise, me-time, one-on-one with each child, play time, grocery shopping...  How do you do it all and keep things in balance?  What have you found that works for you?

Here's one that sometimes works for us:
I noticed a recent trend, melt-downs often happy while I am making dinner.  Everything catches up with my 2-1/2 year old, he is hungry, I can't play with him and he just melts down.  So we bought a simple notebook and we started having he sit at the table and talk while he colors what we did during the day.  I am lucky, he can focus pretty well for a little while and he loves to color.  Sometimes I label what he drew or write the date and what we did like a little journal.  It has been working nicely and it is nice to have a go-to plan for both of us.


So what tips do you have for me?



 

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Learning Letters - Ideas from Babycenter.com

* Practice writing each new letter in sand or fingerpaint.
* Form the letters in play dough, cookie dough, or pretzel dough.
* Cut the letter out of sandpaper and glue it on cardboard. Trace over it.
* Make a large letter out of paste on construction paper and have your child stick cereal, beans, dried noodles, or buttons on the wet paste. {Or draw a large letter on a paper and have your child cover the letter, following the lines, with a treat like chocolate chips, mini marshmallows, or cereal.  After they finish, they can eat the treat!}
* Look for each new letter on cereal boxes, signs, newspapers, and books.
* Circle the letter on the pages of magazines or newspapers. Start with capital letters and then move to lower alphabet case.
* Make a matching game with pairs of cards made of the capital and lowercase letters.
* Start an alphabet book allowing a page for each letter. Count how many times you see your letter during the day or during a car trip.

 Original post at babycenter.com

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Hitting

What do you do with a two-year old that hits?

Monday, March 8, 2010

Bean Box

 

Fill a  storage bin with dry beans and popcorn kernels, throw in some old pans and spoons, measuring cups and an old table cloth and you have your very own "sandbox" to go.  The hardest thing for my two-year old is keeping the fun to stay on the old table cloth.  But half the fun is using his dump trucks to scoop the run-aways back up and return them to the proper area for play.  He loves it.  The table cloth eases the cleanup at the end.  Simply slide the beans back in the bin.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Edible Peanut Butter Play Dough


  

Ingredients:
1+1/2 cups natural peanut butter
1/2-3/4 cup powdered milk

Steps:
Mix! Enjoy! Eat!
(Last two steps in no particular order)

Thanks again goes out to Megan, who sent me a great list of ideas for toddlers.
I didn't have natural peanut butter on hand, so I am wondering if mine turned out a little softer than it should have.  It was still perfectly entertaining for little hands and perfectly yummy for little mouths!  I even cut up matchstick celery to stir with and got out sprinkles to roll little PB play dough balls in.

Emotion Faces


Not a new idea, but a good one.  Use paper plates and whatever else you can find to create different emotion faces.  Our public library has kits that you can check out.  It is a little themed backpack full of books, a DVD or CD, and a card full of activities and songs on the subject.  We checked out one on emotions to go along with this art project.  Great fun and super cheap!