Learning in the Spirit of Wonder and Joy

Category: Uncategorized (Page 1 of 2)

Coffee Tin Activity 2!

A few posts ago I shared a simple toddler activity
Here is another idea for all those coffee tins you are recycling!

 

Toddlers love pulling and are excited to discover that they have to keep pulling.

You will need:

  • a coffee tin – empty and clean
  • some fabric

Step One: Cut fabric into triagles

Step Two: Tie the ends together

Step 3: Cut the top of the can with an exacto knife like below

Step: 4: Stuff the scarves into the tin and push the last one up through the lid just a little and snap the lid on.

Step 5: Optional – Decorate your tin. Click here to skip to my post about the first toddler activity and how to decorate.

Indoor Fun with a Roll of Painters Tape!

Last week Lisa the StrongStart Educator at Maywood posted on her blog a great invitation to her families on the possibilities of painters tape.  She said I could share it with all of you:

If you are looking for something to keep your little ones entertained, head over to the dollar store and buy a few roles of painters tape.  You will be surprised at how long it will keep your child focused and also how many ways you can explore with it.

For the younger babies, simply put some tape in various lengths on items so they can use their fine motor skills to pull the tape off.


The toddlers and preschoolers can follow lines and roads with their toys, and together you can create a little city.

If your child has lots of energy you can create a jumping game.

You can also create an obstacle course.  Try to get through without getting stuck to the tape.

Or create a spider web and see what you can throw to get stuck in the web.

You can even use the tape to create shapes or letters and see what your child does with that.

 

Community Support

Anita Olson, our Early Childhood Community Consultant has put together some resources for you:

  • Purpose Society is offering a wonderful 6 week parenting program in February and March – and it’s free! Nobody’s Perfect offers parents to meet other parents, share questions, concerns and ideas, discuss real-life parenting experiences and discover ways of positive parenting! Check out the attached poster for more details/registration, call 778-727-0786 or email elizabeth.cottam@purposesociety.org

 

  • Eating together as part of your daily routine can be a great opportunity to bond with young children. Taking this time to connect with each other has many potential benefits, including increased social skills, an understanding of family values and traditions, a strong sense of belonging, and good nutrition (source: Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council & Vancouver Island Health Authority). Learn more @ www.feelingsfirst.ca. Ask open ended questions to better understand your child.
    • Who is your hero and why?
    • What makes you laugh the most?
    • What made you smile today?
    • What are some of your favorite memories?
    • If you had 3 wishes, what would you wish for?

 

  • Burnaby Public Library continues to offer their online Babytime program on Wednesdays at 230 PM. Share songs, rhymes, stories with your baby (0-18 months) and meet new parents. Registration is required. If you would like more information check out the BPL website,here.

 

  • Establishing daytime and evening routines can help a child get a good night’s sleep. If they’re sleeping well, chances are you’ll sleep better too! Here are some tips on how to help a child get a full night of sleep (Source: Healthy Families BC). Learn more @ www.feelingsfirst.ca. You can help young children get a full night’s sleep by
    • Keep regular sleep and wake times – a regular sleep schedule has been shown to help regulate emotions.
    • Relax before bed – soothing bedtime routines can help children relax and feel ready for sleep.
    • Help you child feel safe at night – some children may feel better with a night-light or a comforting object.
    • Spend time outside during the day – natural light helps produce melatonin at the right times in a child’s sleep cycle.
    • Get daily exercise though play – explore play as a physical activity to help children sleep longer and better.
  • If you are interested in a free one-on-one consultation about your child’s development, behavior, parenting tips, tricks and education please email or call me, Anita, to set up either a virtual appointment or a socially distanced visit in the community.
    aolson@fsgv.ca 604-723-9548

Anita Olson (she/her) ECE, BA, MEd

Early Childhood Community Consultant

T 604 525 9144

M 604 723 9548

3rd Floor – 321 Sixth Street, New Westminster BC V3L 3A7

www.fsgv.ca

Toddler Activity

    Toddlers love to move and often their attention span is short.  They love to put things in and especially dump things out. They are little scientists who love to experiment with cause and effect.  I have lots of toddlers at StrongStart this year so I just finished making  a toy that was fast to make, cheap and engaging.

They love putting the metal juice lid in the slot and the sound it makes hitting the bottom of the tin.  They also love taking the lid off and dumping it out.  Maybe you have a toddler, care for one or need a gift to give one.

Here is what you will need:

  • Coffee tin (empty and clean)
  • felt or paper
  • metal frozen juice lids
  • Glue (I like using my glue gun)

 

Step 1: Cut a slit in the top of the lid.

Step 2: Glue on paper or felt to cover the outside of the tin. (I discovered my coffee tin I could take off the paper and it was beautifully silver underneath!)

Step 3: Decorate the metal lids and can (optional)

 

 

 

 

Hello Families!

Once again summer is over and school has started.

I hope you were able to spend lots of time with loved ones this summer.

I have been busy helping the new kindergarten children and teachers in their classes.

There will be no drop-in StrongStart this year.

Please find lots of details about this year and how to register for StrongStart here.

Once your registration is processed I will notify you in an email or phone call and book a day for you to come to StrongStart.

I am very excited to have my room open this year.

This year when you come on your booked day, your session will be from 9:30am-11:30am.

 

 

 

 

 

Goodbye for now……

Well friends this will be my last post.

I hope you all have a wonderful summer with friends and family as restrictions allow.

I also hope that you experience some joyful moments with your child(ren) as you play together.

I have no concrete picture of what the fall looks like yet.

Around the middle of August the district will post details on their website.

Please click here to go directly to that page!

Looking forward to seeing you in-person soon!

Goodbye for now, Teacher Beth.

The Benefits of Nature Article By Anita Olson

Nature – the magic bullet?

Since the pandemic began many changes have ensued steering families to make decisions they never thought they would ever make. Working from home with little children banging on the door demanding fishy crackers may not exactly be what you thought going back to work would look like. The low level anxiety people are faced with everyday as the pandemic lingers on, just shouldn’t be – and yet, here we are.

Children feel stress too and are really good at letting parents/caregivers know through their behaviour. Play dates are postponed, grandma and grandpa need to stay safe and can’t help out like they use to. Parents are concerned about their children’s social and emotional development and screen time. The list goes on. Stress and anxiety are real and present for many families – all members included.

Now, I am not one for magic bullets, but that’s kind of what I’m going to share with you here. Being in nature and the benefits it creates may be as close to a magic bullet as we can get. There is an ever growing body of evidence based research pointing to the power of nature for adult’s and children’s well being.

Children 3-4 years old are recommended by the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology to engage in 3 hours of physical activity spread over the course of every day. Young children need to move and challenge their bodies. Parks, gardens, beaches, forests, even the back yard are perfect spaces for children to get their move on. Children who engage in nature tend to be physically healthier because;

  • Heart health is better – they move more and sit less
  • Have better eye health – children who spend more time outside reduce the risk of myopia (nearsightedness)
  • Sleep better as the sun helps regulate sleep patterns
  • Improves the immune system

If you are feeling low, being in nature may give that needed boost. There is a vast body of research on how spending time in nature actually reduces stress, anxiety and depression for children and adults. Being in nature calms the brain by reducing cortisol (the stress hormone) and boosts endorphins and dopamine (happy hormones) in the body. Walking though a forest is call, shinrin-yoku, in Japanese, which literally means, “forest bathing” because of this calming effect it embodies.

Playing in nature offers children unstructured play where the possibilities are seemingly limitless to choose and design what and how to play. By engaging with their world by their own accord, children have the opportunity to make meaningful discoveries about the world promoting creativity and imagination.

Discoveries on colours, patterns and shapes found in nature make the great outdoors the perfect place to begin learning about early math concepts and language development. Research on learning outcomes for school aged children with regular access to outdoor lessons show significantly stronger reading and writing skills than for children without these nature experiences. The sights, sounds and smells of nature help calm the nervous system cultivating better focus and concentration, both key factors to learning. There are also many studies linking time spent in nature reducing ADHD symptoms. Being outside matters!

Getting outside and into nature has benefits for the entire family. Family programs held outside, such as Strong Start, offer families a special gift. These outdoor programs allow for multi-generational shared learning and exploration in an environment rich with information that promotes physical and mental well-being. So, it may not be the magic bullet – but it’s close!

 

Anita Olson works on the traditional, ancestral, and unceeded territory of the Coast Salish peoples for Family Services of Greater Vancouver as Burnaby’s Early Childhood Community Consultant (ECCC). She has been working with families and young children for well over a decade and as a parent herself recognizes the challenges, complexity and delight parenting brings. Understanding the foundational importance of infant and early childhood development, Anita shares information, strategies and practical tools with parents as they begin and continue their parental journey. Focusing on the parent/caregiver and child relationship, Anita’s work with families aims to create and preserve loving connection and curiosity. Anita holds a current ECE licence, BA and MEd from Simon Fraser University. If you would like to speak with Anita, email her at aolson@fsgv.ca or call 604-723-9548

Find more information on the outdoors:

https://www.csep.ca/home

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/42/eaba2578

https://www.health.harvard.edu/mind-and-mood/sour-mood-getting-you-down-get-back-to-nature

https://medium.com/parentingplace/nature-walks-f9971e064c0

https://www.ementalhealth.ca/Canada/Nature-and-Why-Its-Essential-For-Kids-Brains-Information-for-Parents-and-Caregivers/index.php?m=article&ID=52861

https://childmind.org/article/why-kids-need-to-spend-time-in-nature/

https://www.cbc.ca/natureofthings/episodes/kids-vs-screens

https://www.outdoorplaycanada.ca/research/#:~:text=There%20are%20many%20evidence%2Dbased,(e.g.%2C%20increased%20happiness)

https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/six_ways_nature_helps_children_learn

https://www.heart.org/en/healthy-living/healthy-lifestyle/stress-management/spend-time-in-nature-to-reduce-stress-and-anxiety

https://www.ontarioparks.com/parksblog/mental-health-benefits-outdoors/

 

Free Workshop “The Power of Using Connection During Challenging Times”

The Burnaby ECD Table is hosting a

Free Workshop for Burnaby families with children from birth to 6 years old

Dec. 2, 2020, 9:30am-10:30am

Guest Presenter: Georgianna Lee is a counsellor and coach who has been working with individuals and families for over 16 years.  She supports parents to create healthy relationships with themselves, each other and their children so that each person can thrive and enjoy a home filled with warmth, harmony and fun.  Georgianna is a Parent Support Counsellor at Cameray Child and Family Services and has a private coaching practice.  She is currently also teaching and facilitating for Rising Women.

Workshop: Why is it important to connect with your young child?  What are some things you can do right now to help you better connect with your child?  This free workshop will help you learn:

  • How to be more aware of your expectations
  • What can cause frustrations
  • Simple ways to connect with your child now, and  in the next hour, and next day….
  • How to connect with your child when you’re joyful, angry, frustrated…

Participants: Burnaby parents and caregivers with children birth to 6 years old.

The presentation only (not the participants) will be recorded and posted on social media

Register in advance for this meeting:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEvfuyoqTsjGtbeeJzRLWWZLmuVBJYcLGTW

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

REGISTRATION ENDS ON DEC. 1

 

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