August 2

Summer Fun Ideas!

You may have heard about the dreaded summer slide- children may experience learning loss when they are out of school for an extended period. The good news is that research also shows that students who read at least six books over summer break tend to maintain their reading level. So, keep reading, but let’s set our young learners up for success by providing them with play-based activities to engage them and develop the whole child. Below are some of my favorite activities and affiliate links, should you be interested.

Chalk. Chalk can be used for so many activities. Make a hopscotch and add numbers or letters in each box. You can create addition equations, work on number sense, or even letter/sound recognition. Have your child use chalk to practice letter writing. To help develop motor skills, you or your child can use giant chalk to make a track. The track can be for toy cars or large enough for your child to ride their bike, scooter, or skateboard. Chalk honestly can provide hours of entertainment and a variety of learning opportunities.

Chalk

Pretend Play. I love pretend play! Whether playing with puppets, dolls, critters, or dress-up, pretend play allows children to role-play and use their imaginations. Recently, I added this ice cream shop to my class Choice Time activities. The children LOVE it! They pretend to take customer orders, make the ice cream, serve it, and even make change using a mini cash register.

Ice Cream Shop

Building Activities: Magna tiles are the best. They can be used for so many different things. Children can build structures, like a garage to house their toy cars or a bridge for their vehicles to drive across. I even saw a child make a skeeball game on their staircase using Magna-Tiles and ping pong balls. Have your child use a light table as the base for their Magna-Tile construction for even more fun!

Magna-tiles

Portable Light Table

Fine Motor Strengthening Activities: So many engaging activities strengthen fine motor skills. From wood-building kits to sewing kits, your child will never know they are exercising and strengthening their finger muscles. Numerous games have fun manipulatives that your child will love playing with. And Play-Doh?! Playdoh is the ultimate tool for strengthening fine motor! Set up a Play-Doh station outside, and I promise your child will be entertained. One summer, my girls spent days making a bakery. They used some of my mini muffin tins, cake stands, and cookie cutters to make baked goods.

Wood Building Kit

Sewing Kit: Woodland Animals

Sewing: Dog Stuffie Kit

Play-Doh

Play-Doh Kitchen

Play-Doh Fun Factory Tools

Play-Doh Hair Stylin’

Play-Doh Ultimate Baking Set

Dinosaur Matching/Tweezer Set

Magnetic Marble Sort Board

Pluffle

Word/Spelling/Reading Practice. Maybe your child wants some more traditional letter/sound learning activities. Grab a cookie sheet and some magnetic letter chips. You can even use the letter chips on the portable light table! Your child can identify the beginning letter of items around your house. They can spell CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) words. They can spell their name. And then, they take the magnetic wand and swipe it across, collecting all the magnetic letters in one quick swipe! Take a look at these word-building rods as well. These incorporate word-building skills as well as fine motor development.

Magnetic Letter Chips

Magnetic Wands

Word Building Rods

Decodables. Your child may be beginning to read. For beginning readers, they must have decodable books to read. Decodables are books written using words that can be read using specific sound and spelling patterns that students have been explicitly taught. Here are some that I recommend:

Junior Reading Decodable Books

Starfall Reading

Benchmark Readers Decodable Books

Orton Gillingham Decodable Reader

Charge into Reading

Tonies. Have you heard about Tonies?! A student of mine last year first introduced me to Tonies. Tonies are figurines that, when placed on a Toniebox, tell a story or sing a song. There are soooo many to choose from. I just purchased a Toniebox with Peppa Pig. There are 60 minutes of Peppa Pig stories. Plus the figurines are fun to play with! And, you can record yourself reading aloud a story! Tonies make listening to stories independent. I definitely wish Tonies were around when my own children were little!

Tonies National Geographic Starter Set

Tonies Disney Starter Set

Tonies Disney Princess Starter Set

Games. Playing games encourages social-emotional development…like taking turns, waiting patiently, problem-solving, playing fair, and winning and losing. Below are some of the games my family has loved playing over the years:

Candy Land

Walk the Dogs

Avalanche

Chutes and Ladders

Hi Ho Cheerio

Sorry

Tongues Out

Uno

Spot It!

Go Fish!

Crazy 8’s

Hearts

How about writing? There are so many ways to encourage your child to write and to make writing fun. The Happy Me journal has been a hit in my house. They now make a journal specific to different age ranges. My son was eight when he first got him, and my oldest daughter was 18! They love the Happy Me journal so much that they are on their second set!

Fine Tip Smelly Markers

Raised Lined Paper

Owl Pencil Grip

Pencil Grip

Tri-Write Pencil

Pencil Sharpener for Large Diameter Pencils

Silly Sentences Handwriting Practice Book

Happy Me Journal

Lined Paper Roller Stamp

Doodle Board

Outdoor Games: It wouldn’t be summer if we couldn’t spend time outside enjoying our beautiful weather. A sand and water table with built-in shade is a MUST! The bonus to many of these outdoor activities is that they keep your child physically active. The Ninja Warrior Climbing Course was in our backyard for three years…my son LOVED climbing, swinging, hanging, twirling, and more on this course. It always tired him out!

Toss and Catch Set

Pop and Catch Set

Sand and Water Table

Ninja Warrior Climbing Course

Balance Board

So, with about a month and a half of summer left, I hope you find some fun, creative, and engaging ideas to keep your child actively learning!