Sometimes it just works…

        

I love painting with the children, but I have to be in the right mood, and we haven’t done it for a while.  It’s one of the many things I think we “should” do more often, and wonder how I manage to make life so complicated that we can’t find time to do it.  Isn’t that why we are home educating, after all?  It can seem impossible at times to get organised and make sure everything runs smoothly, including the clearing up, so that everyone has a good time and it is not too stressful.  I often think we need to stop going out so much, so that we have time at home for activities like this, and wonder if I need to plan them to make sure they happen.

However, there are times when everything falls into place without planning, everyone is in the right mood and it seems so simple.  On Sunday after we had been out to lunch at our local Italian restaurant, we came back and sat in the garden while the children played.  They were in a good mood, and we had Granny with us which helped to keep things nice and calm, so we took the easel outside and got the paints out.  The little three were busy for a long time painting on the easel with brushes, finger painting at a low table and painting with their feet on a roll of wallpaper.  Owl didn’t join in this time because he was busy sawing wood using his own tools and daddy’s workbench.

After Sunday’s success, I even managed to get the paints out again today with three extra small children around.  The little ones enjoyed easel painting (including the easel itself as well as the paper), painting cardboard boxes, paper plates and polystyrene cups and painting on themselves (and their clothes), while Owl and Monkey painted on the garage wall.  It was fun, the mess wasn’t too bad, and I WILL do it more often.  It is only fair to add that Suburban Dad has come home from his first day back at work and spent a large part of this evening washing up the paint pots and brushes which got mixed up with the dishes somehow, in a chaotic supper time for seven children, during which water came pouring through the kitchen ceiling – but that’s another story…

Play dough creations

It’s been a busy few weeks and I haven’t been blogging much, but it’s time to get back to normal.  I will post something about our holidays another day, but for now I am too tired.  So I thought I would just share some pictures of today’s play dough creations.  Monkey, Rabbit and Tiddler were happily occupied for a long time, and they insisted on photographs being taken, so here they are.

Monkey and Rabbit’s Thomas scene

Tiddler’s creation

Monkey’s Pizza, Spaghetti and a Strawberry

Rabbit’s Ice Creams

How to make Yummy Delight

This is a guest post by Monkey.

How to make Yummy Delight

You will need:

8 trifle sponges

1 packet of strawberry jelly (or any kind will do)

4 or 5 bananas

2 tsp honey

1 large pot of custard

What to do:

  1. Put the trifle sponges in a bowl
  2. Make the jelly and pour it on the trifle sponges
  3. Put it in the fridge and wait until the jelly sets
  4. Mash all the bananas except one and mix in the honey
  5. Spread the banana mixture on top of the jelly
  6. Spoon the custard on top
  7. Decorate with banana slices (using the last banana)

Friday round up – 10th August 2012

Saturday and Sunday

We spent the weekend at my parents’ house, which is always good but was even better as my brother was there for the middle weekend of his fortnight in the UK (he lives in Australia.)  We had seen him on Monday evening last week, but it was good to spend some more time together, and the children had lots of fun with him.  We enjoyed the peace and quiet of a weekend in the countryside and away from our to-do lists after such a busy and disrupted few weeks.  There was a Latin lesson, a lot of playing with Lego and reading stories, an afternoon playing out on the green with a friend who lives in the village and plenty of watching the Olympics.

Monday

Back to reality and living in our house while the kitchen work was being finished… It had already taken three weeks and seemed like it would go on forever, but the end was in sight.  It was hard work being in the house with the children, so we went out as much as we could.  On Monday I took them to the pub, which Suburban Dad found rather amusing.  Every Monday in the summer holidays they have children’s craft mornings, and it was a great place to hang out.  The younger three played in the sandpit while Owl read a book from cover to cover, giving me time to have a peaceful cup of coffee, then they all had a go at some of the crafts once the crowds around the tables had diminished.  We had lunch there (having no kitchen is expensive) and then walked back via the park, stopping for a while in the playground, then getting soaked in a downpour on the way home.

Tuesday and Wednesday

On Tuesday we had lunch at the deli across the road (we love it) and then walked to the library and spent a long time there reading while Tiddler slept in the buggy.  On Wednesday we went to the local church cafe for lunch (cheaper) and filled in time at the charity shop buying books, then sat outside the Art Gallery with the owner and her son reading the books in the sunshine.  When we went home half way through the afternoon the work was finished, which was a big relief.  We did some work on our Olympic project which we haven’t really been able to do much of with all the disruption, and Owl in particular was very interested.

Thursday

We all thoroughly enjoyed the first normal day in our own house for a month, and after a quiet morning doing our Olympic project (me and Owl) and playing (the others) we had a good time with our friends who came over for lunch and stayed till after supper (always a pleasure with their three well-behaved helpful children!)  I loved cooking on my new induction hob (thank you John Lewis sale) and found the new layout of the kitchen such an improvement that it was a positive pleasure to let Monkey come in and help me to make pudding (his own creation, called Yummy Delight – I believe there’s a blog post to follow…)  It was never fun cooking in there before, but now I am going to train up the young chefs till I’m out of a job.

Friday

I spent the day at the Rosemary Conley Roadshow in Essex, which was a lot of fun, and the children had a wonderful day at the beach with daddy.  When they collected me, I was impressed at how sandy and muddy, lolly-juice-sticky and happy they were.  The bag of rice cakes and fruit I had sent with them was untouched, and the lolly they were finishing and dripping all over the car was their third one – definitely a daddy day.  We arrived home in time to order a delicious Thai meal for supper and share it with my mum, dad and brother who had come down for the evening (my brother is leaving on Sunday.)  It was lovely to be able to sit out in the garden at the end of a beautiful sunny day, and good to relax after such a busy week.

Holiday clubs

I spent quite a while agonising over whether the children should do holiday clubs this summer, in my usual indecisive way.  It is tempting to take advantage of some of the opportunities that are on offer, but on the other hand I look forward to the holidays as many of our regular activities stop and it’s good to enjoy really free time together.  This summer, my decision was influenced by the fact that we are having a new kitchen put in, and there would be so much disruption that I thought the children might as well be in holiday clubs, as there would be no peace and quiet at home.  Last week’s dramabuds club was a success, and two hours every morning was about right, I think.

This week Owl and Monkey have been in a sports holiday club which was full time (really long days) and the little ones have mainly been at the childminder’s (and Rabbit had a day in London with Granny on Monday to visit the National Gallery.)  We had planned this so that I would have the best part of a week to sort the house out after the kitchen was done, but there have been many delays and the work is still not finished.  I have found plenty to do and thoroughly enjoyed sorting out mountains of clothes, books and toys to give away, but I felt that it came at a price (and not just the several hundred pounds it all cost.)

After one day at the sports camp, the boys came home overtired and emotional.  The first thing Owl said when he walked through the door was “The thing is mummy, it’s just too long to be away from you” and Monkey said “I thought it would be fun but it’s not.”  Owl also commented that when he asked to go to the toilet he was told to finish tidying up the balls first and this upset him.  As he doesn’t go to school, he was totally confused by the concept of not going to the toilet when you need to.  I was so tempted to tell them they didn’t have to go again, but as the kitchen work was still going on it didn’t feel like a realistic idea.  As a compromise I told them they wouldn’t have to go on Friday as I would have the little ones at home anyway.  It really went against all my parenting principles to make them go when they didn’t want to.  They did it and survived but enthusiastically took up the offer of staying at home today.  Owl spent the whole day in his pyjamas playing with Lego in his bedroom and was completely content.  The others played in the garden a lot as well as their bedrooms, and had three friends over to play in the afternoon.

So what have I learnt from this?  Full days are too long, especially for a whole week.  No matter how good the activities sound they probably can’t compete with what we can do at home.  Some holiday clubs are fun, but we need to choose carefully.  I think this week’s one was a bit too big and impersonal.  We need to have some space between organised activities, otherwise life feels out of balance and the children are unhappy.  We are all really looking forward to next week, when we will be at home with most days free for us to decide what to do on the day.  We can go out if we want to or stay in if we feel like it.  I am really looking forward to playing with the children, reading to them, talking to them and having time to listen.  I hope the kitchen work will be finished early in the week, and I know that we will have a lot of things to sort out when it is done, but I am determined not to let that interfere too much with what is really important.  Will somebody remind me of this when I am tempted next year by holiday clubs that sound really good?  Please tell me to stay at home and play with my children instead!

Learning together

How do you manage to teach all your children together?  I have been asked this so many times, and I’ve written about it a little bit in another post but in response to a number of requests I am going to try and write a more detailed answer.

I think that one of the issues is that it is easy to set unrealistic expectations of what we want our children to achieve, and then feel that we are failing if they don’t meet our goals.  Some home educating parents aim to replicate what goes on in school, which creates a lot of pressure to attempt to tick all the boxes of the over-complicated National Curriculum.  Having worked as a teacher, I am aware how much of the school day is wasted, and how little is achieved in comparison to an average home educating day (or even a less than average one.)

One of the advantages of home education, is that you can be flexible from day to day and respond to your children’s individual needs.  There will be many days when you achieve far more than is possible in school, so if there are other days when things are not going so well, you can write it off and have a fresh start the next day.  You don’t have to stop in school holidays (how can you make children stop learning anyway?) so you have a lot more time to play with.

Another issue is the question of what counts as work/ learning/ education.  Many people are negative about the idea of home education and doubt that is possible to teach several children at once, perhaps because they have a narrow idea of what education is.  Even those who are doing it may be unsure if they are doing it right, and want to be reassured by the sight of lots of school-type written work at the end of each day.  While there may be a place for this type of work (depending on your educational philosophy), it only represents a small part of the way children learn.  From the moment they wake up to the moment they go to sleep, children are learning all day every day.

Perhaps one way to deal with the question “How do you teach them all together?” would be “Most of the time I don’t, they just learn without having to be taught.”  I suppose you would have to be in quite a bold mood to answer in that way, but there’s certainly some truth in it.  Personally, I use a semi-structured approach so some of what I do would definitely count as teaching in the traditional sense, and often it is very successful and enjoyable.  However on some days it doesn’t work so I leave it, and they learn just as well without me by following their own ideas and interests.  I know that on those particular days by trying to teach them anything specific I would have actually interrupted their learning.

Some practical suggestions

  1. Work alongside each other.  Children can work at the same time on different activities, related or otherwise.  We often use this approach for Maths, where Owl may be working from his Junior text book, Monkey with a workbook or an activity I have made up for him, and Rabbit with a dot-to-dot book or a counting and matching activity for example.  Tiddler does not want to be left out, so he climbs up to the table and demands to “do Maths”.  He is usually happy with a pencil and paper, doing his own Maths which generally involves shapes.  As long as I respond to his requests to “make a circle” or “make a triangle” on his paper from time to time he is happy, and is getting rather good at drawing shapes himself ( he has worked on it for weeks with great determination because it was his own idea.)  When he’s had enough of this, I often give him multilink cubes, Lego or counters to count and sort which he enjoys.
  2. Work together.  This works best for practical activities – art, practical science, cooking, maths investigations.  We recently had a good time doing Smarties Maths (counting how many Smarties there were of each colour, doing a tally chart and making a bar graph) and the difference was only in how much help each child needed with the recording.  This approach can also work well for projects.  We have been learning about minibeasts recently, for example, and all the children have been bug hunting together.  The big three then drew what they had found, and wrote labels and captions according to their abilities.  They also drew a stag beetle which Rabbit and I had found at her Pre-school, and Tiddler coloured in a picture which I drew for him and enjoyed sticking it in his very own (first) project book – he was not going to be left out and luckily I had a spare book!
  3. Be flexible.  Sometimes it works perfectly as described above, but if it doesn’t, be flexible.  If I am doing some work with Owl and Monkey at the same time and one or other starts messing around, I will tend to focus on the one who is being most sensible and turn a blind eye for the time being if the other one wanders off.  That way the child who is behaving best gets my attention, and when his work is done he can go and play while I turn my attention to the other one.  If that doesn’t work, or you haven’t got time, it may be necessary to change your goals for that day.  I tend to find that if I have a completely free day it is almost never necessary to abandon any planned work, but if we are under pressure to go out at a certain time it is more likely that we will have to.  Which leads me on to…
  4. Don’t plan too much.   One of the advantages of home education is that we have the opportunity to avoid the over-scheduling of our children’s lives.  Children in school have a busy day with many different activities and constant transitions with little time for reflection, and in many cases they also have after-school clubs several evenings a week.  Home educators do not have to do this, but very often we do.  There are so many home education groups, outings and classes, all very worthwhile, and of course plenty of after-school activities to choose from as well.   If we are not careful we can create a life for our children which is not that much different from the busy school days we may be trying to avoid.  It is better to choose a smaller number of activities, allowing space between them for relaxation, reflection and down time.   It is also best to avoid planning too many things for our children to do in the time we are at home, so that we have time to allow them to develop their own ideas as well.  I am definitely talking to myself here!
  5. Value different ways of learning.  Children can learn through playing, talking, asking questions, making things, experimenting, acting, singing, cooking, gardening, shopping, using the computer, watching television, listening to stories, reading – and there does not always have to be written work to show that learning has happened.  If, like me, you love writing, you may need to keep reminding yourself of the fact that it is not the only way to learn!
  6. Accept help.  If you are lucky enough to have friends and family who are supportive of your decision to home educate, make the most of any help they are able to offer.  And get to know other home educating families in your area so that you can support each other.  Many families get together so that parents can teach subjects they particularly like, children can enjoy learning together and younger siblings can play together with supervision by one parent while another teaches the older ones.
  7. Take up other learning opportunities.  If you can afford to, you could pay for some specific teaching for your children, in Music, English, Maths, languages, and probably anything else you would like your children to learn.  There will also be free learning opportunities if you look out for them.  Obviously these will vary from place to place, but may include libraries, museums and art galleries, and small local ones are often just as good as the big ones.
  8. Encourage your children to teach each other.  It’s easy to overlook this, as sometimes we are too busy to notice what is going on under our noses, but older children really can and do teach their younger siblings a lot.  I have noticed this many times among my children.  The older ones read to the younger ones, explain things, answer their questions, teach them the names of shapes, colours, letters, numbers – and often without prompting.  Give them lots of encouragement when they do this, and they will do it more often!
  9. Make it fun!  I had to include this because I just asked Owl what is the best way to learn together and that was his answer.  For example, you can do something fun like weighing things and everyone will want to do it.  Advice from an eight year old – I can’t top that!

Friday round up – 27th July 2012

Owl, Monkey and Rabbit have been on a Dramabuds summer camp every morning this week and they have really enjoyed it.  Tiddler has been very jealous, but he had one Dramabuds lesson on Tuesday afternoon with Rabbit so that cheered him up a bit.  The big three finished the week with a fantastic performance in their show.  Rabbit was a very beautiful princess, Monkey a rather cool prince and Owl a dragon, with his own solo written for him because he sang so well in the rehearsals.  Very proud mummy moment!

On Monday afternoon we all went to see the Olympic Torch pass by the ponds, which was frankly as stressful as it sounded like it was going to be, but thankfully once the fleeting moment was over, the rest of the afternoon was much more fun.  There were some good local stalls in the gardens nearby, and Owl managed to join in a drumming lesson which he loved.  Then we escaped to the cool of our little local museum, and the children had fun doing Olympic-themed arts and crafts, playing and exploring.  Some good friends joined us and we ended the afternoon drinking tea in the garden while the children played which was lovely.

On Tuesday after all the Dramabuds sessions were finished, Owl, Monkey and I had a Chinese lesson.  On Wednesday afternoon we went back to the museum for more craft activities, before heading over to the lavender fields to meet our home education group.

On Thursday we met some friends at – I don’t quite now how to describe this unique local attraction – it started as a shop selling tropical fish, it also has reptiles, guinea pigs, ducks and chickens; over time they have added a cafe with a lovely garden, a miniature railway, some large model dinosaurs… who knows what they’ll think of next!  The children had a good time in the garden, playing in the sandpit for hours, and then looked at the fish and other animals, before taking a late afternoon stroll through the surrounding smallholdings to look at the horses (and eat our own snacks which you are not allowed to eat on the premises – we had already had an expensive lunch and a round of ice creams.)

Owl had his violin lesson before Dramabuds this morning, and this afternoon we went to visit some friends to deliver a belated birthday present.  The little children played in the garden (swings, trampoline and table tennis) while the big ones played with Lego inside.  It was very peaceful.  Later on at Granny’s house the children did some colouring for their Olympic project and the big ones looked at some newspaper articles, then they all played in the garden and Owl performed an impromptu violin concert for me and the little ones which was very good.  This evening we are watching the Olympic Opening Ceremony.  Tiddler has slept through it all, Rabbit and Monkey managed about an hour of it, but Owl is just about keeping his eyes open and it is after midnight.  I have told him he can stay up as late as he wants because I think he will remember this for the rest of his life!

Just playing

It’s probably going to be hard to explain why this picture means something to me.  It’s just a load of toys on our saggy old sofa, a scene you might see any day in our house.  Quite a nice little arrangement of dolls perhaps, but nothing special.  Just one of Monkey’s many creative play scenes which he loves to make.  The thought that he put into it, the care he took over the details, his satisfaction when he had achieved what he had set out to do…these are the reasons why this picture sums up childhood for me.

Some would say he was “just playing” but I think that is missing the point.  It’s easy to be influenced by the world around us, with its constant messages that our children need something more.  More structure, more organised activities, more early education, more targets, more testing… Loud and clear we hear it, if you don’t give your children all this, they will fail, they won’t be able to compete, they won’t get in to a good school, college, university, they won’t have a future.  How many of us stop to question it?

But we should.  We should question the idea that play is something to be fitted in only if the work is done.  Even though it has become more fashionable to talk about “learning through play” this has made little real difference.  Even with the best of intentions, it can be difficult for teachers to plan opportunities for “learning through play” without taking a lot of the joy and creativity out of it.  Children learn best when they have the freedom to lead the play themselves, and to develop it as much or as little as they need to at that time.

As a home educator it is easy to pick out examples of our children learning through play, and it is very satisfying to be able to report that they have, for example, set up a cafe, written menus, taken orders and worked out the cost and the change.  It is tempting to jump up and down with glee, and say “Look, here they are, doing English and Maths, and they think they are just playing!”  But if we only recognise that they are learning through play when their play happens to coincide with a neat and tidy list of subjects (the National Curriculum perhaps), then we really don’t know the half of it.  We may not know what they are learning, perhaps we don’t need to, but when children are given the freedom to play in a stimulating environment, and allowed time to develop their play and sustain it for as long as they want, we can be sure they are learning.  This is the kind of childhood that I want my children to have, and in this country we are lucky to be able to give our children this freedom.  We are also able to choose whether they are educated in school or at home, but it is accepted without question that every child has a right to an education.

While I was thinking about this post, I had an interesting conversation with Owl and Monkey.  It started with a rant about tidying Lego, and how we should look after our toys as many children don’t have any.  We talked about the situation in West Africa, and our involvement (with other bloggers) in the World Vision sponsorship scheme; about how it would feel to be hungry all the time, to work very hard or walk a long way to get a little water or food, and not to have time and energy to play; about how charities are working to provide food for the children who need it, but they need our help.  Owl suggested that we should get some of our toys and send them to the children, so we had a discussion about the cost of sending toys to West Africa!

Most of us have comfortable homes, warm clothes, enough food and an abundance of toys, books and other possessions.  Many children and families in West Africa have very few of these things.  We may feel helpless, but in reality we are not.  In our own small way we can each make a difference to one child, one family, and collectively we can make a bigger difference by sharing our efforts.

This post was written for a blog hop to raise awareness of World Vision’s West Africa Appeal, and the DFID matched funding they are receiving until 30th August.  Any amount you are able to donate via the World Vision website will be doubled and will go towards long term projects to help build a better future for the children of West Africa.

I am tagging two other bloggers to join in to the blog hop if they wish, to help spread the word.

1.  Holly Blog

2.  homeschoolingmiddleeast

This is a blog hop hosted by Patch of Puddles.

Friday round up – 20th July 2012

Random things I can remember about what we have been learning this week….

Science

All – learning about stag beetles, beeswax and honey, seeds and vegetables at the Ecology Centre garden party

Owl, Monkey and Rabbit – experiment about genetic difference in taste buds

Owl – learning about bumble bees and honey bees

English

Owl – writing a blog post; words with silent letters; reading comprehension

Monkey – superhero alliteration; handwriting; writing list of food in cafe role play game

Rabbit and Tiddler – Dramabuds

Rabbit – Reading Eggs

Owl and Monkey – writing Lego pick-a-brick wishlists

All – lots of stories

Maths

Owl and Monkey – number patterns (1+2+3+4+5+6)

Rabbit – addition; Mathletics

Monkey – measuring length; telling the time (analogue and digital); Conquer Maths

Owl – reading and marking scales; estimating and measuring mass and capacity; Conquer Maths

History

Owl – reading about the Bronze Age (Mesopotamia, the Sumerians)

Chinese

Owl and Monkey (and me!) – our first Chinese lesson

Music

Owl and Monkey – piano lessons and practice

Owl – violin lesson and practice

Tiddler – Musicbox

Art

Rabbit – visit to the National Gallery

Fresh air and exercise

All – outdoor play and activities at Ecology Centre Garden Party; playing in our garden, on bouncy castle, with visiting children at Suburban dad’s work barbecue; our Home Education Group Sports Day; playing outside at another Home Education Group

Owl and Monkey – Beavers Sports Day

I know there is more than this but I’m too tired and I can’t remember…

Free (or very cheap) things to do with your children

This post was inspired by a discussion on a friend’s facebook status.  I have been meaning to write something like this for a while, so having posted a rather long comment, I thought I should turn it into a blog post, which is probably what it should have been in the first place.

For home educators, and any parents particularly in the summer holidays, here are a random selection of things to do with the children that don’t cost a lot of money.  Obviously the list is endless, so please comment if you have other ideas, and let’s see how many we can do this summer!

  1. Digging and playing in the mud keeps most children happy for a good long time.  You can use garden tools if you have them, otherwise spoons or hands will do; dig tunnels; make mud pies; bring some toy dinosaurs to live in your mud pit; plant old potatoes and any seeds you can find (some will grow and some won’t but it’s fun to do either way); yoghurt pots and egg cartons make good plant pots.
  2. Playing with flour is a very popular activity in our house (or rather in our garden if the weather is okay!) Add a handful of rice if you want, just for the fun of mixing; you don’t need much else, maybe a couple of plastic spoons and yoghurt pots, and some toy cars to drive around in it!
  3. Painting with water is simple and satisfying.  A bucket of water and an old decorating paint brush (larger the better) is all that is needed, and the kids can “paint” the outside of the house, ground, fence, trees, etc. No clearing up required!
  4. Chalk drawing (and writing) can be done on all the outdoor surfaces you can find.  Make road markings for your scooters and bikes and road signs/ traffic lights on the walls; draw a snail race track, find some snails and set up a race; draw targets and throw beanbags at them.
  5. Making a rock collection is good fun, and happens by default if I remember to empty the kids’ pockets before putting clothes in the washing machine.  Instead of trying to stop children doing this, you might as well help them to find interesting ones.  Sort and organise them, compare them, study them and find out about different types of rock; display them (perhaps outside so they don’t take up houseroom)…. we also have a stick collection (maybe that’s strange, but it’s outside the front door and it came about because I didn’t want all their precious sticks in the house, so they made a “stick house” outside!)
  6. Playing with lentils, chick peas, dried beans and rice is a very versatile activity.  Make mountains and valleys, roads and railways, then add toy cars and trains; make collage pictures; fill containers and pour into a measuring jug (just for fun or estimate and check the capacity of the containers.)
  7. Making pasta necklaces and pasta pictures is a variation on the above.  For the pictures, you could make flour and water paste to stick the pasta on, which is a fun activity in itself.
  8. Mixing cornflour and water and playing with it is good old hands on messy play and a Science lesson into the bargain.  Try it if you haven’t done it before, it’s amazing! (You could also use custard powder…)
  9. Cooking is fun to do with all ages, and sharing a meal is all the more enjoyable for the children if they have prepared it together.  This is not technically a free activity, but cooking main meals rather than baking treats means there is no extra cost and it’s a more useful life skill.  (There’s a time for baking too, of course!)  My children have been experimenting recently to make breakfast mixtures out of a selection of oats, yoghurt, fruit, and cinnamon – it’s  delicious and healthy, and as far as they are concerned they are cooking. Making fruit salad and jelly are also very easy.
  10. Bug hunting  has been keeping the children (our own and their friends) busy in our garden a lot recently.  Bug viewers are fun if you have them, but there’s nothing wrong with a good old-fashioned jam jar, margarine tub or yoghurt pot.  A plastic spoon can be used to lift some creatures, but an old paintbrush is useful for transferring the more delicate ones gently.  Identifying them is fun too, and if you don’t have a book there are plenty of insect identification sites on the internet.
  11. Playing with water is hard to beat.  A washing up bowl or two of water in the garden can provide a lot of entertainment.  The children can paddle in it (feet only perhaps if it’s not sunny, though my little ones can’t resist sitting in it whatever the weather!); pouring water from one container to another is very satisfying for the younger children; older ones could have a measuring jug and try to estimate the capacity of various containers then check them; you can turn it into a fish pond by cutting out lots of fish and adding them – paper ones will do, or fabric if you want them to last longer.  We spent a long time doing this with a pack of cheap scouring cloths one summer and it was great fun.
  12. Making a den is fun, either in the bushes or using branches (go for a walk in the park or woods to find them); put an old blanket over the top if you like; take another blanket inside and have a picnic (real or pretend) with friends, siblings, toys..

I could go on but it’s getting late so I’ll stop.  What have I missed?

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