Parks and Recreation Centers have great outdoor activities, too. |
With
a school break, there is time to read, do arts and crafts, hang around
outside checking out nature--summertime, what a great gift. (And just
for a little while of relaxing math, don't forget
http://www.coolmath4kids.com/ |
Backyard Birding
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birding/
Nature Activities & Nature Experiments
http://www.education.com/activity/nature-activities/
eButterflyhttp://www.e-butterfly.org/contents/?portal=ebutterfly
Bumble Bee Watch
Project Budburst
Community Collaborative Rain , Hail, and Snow
eBird
Outdoor Activities:Taking Science Outside
http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/lesson-plan/outdoor-activitiestaking-science-outside
Birding with Children
http://www.birdwatching.com/tips/kids_birding.html
The sky is cheap entertainment. |
SUMMERTIME: ONLINE AND OUTSIDE
Kids Astronomyhttp://www.kidsastronomy.com/index.htmature-activities/
Nature Activities & Nature Experimentshttp://www.education.com/activity/nature-activities/
Community Collaborative Rain , Hail, and Snow
eBird
Outdoor Activities:Taking Science Outside
http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/lesson-plan/outdoor-activitiestaking-science-outside
SCIENCE AT HOMEFlowers, like these verbena in my yard, will cross-pollinate creating blended colors. How cool is that? |
Kids can also identify insects and their habitats, which is important for safety reasons. The critters become like family, and kids learn to respect their lives in the garden, rather then hunt and squish them.
Mojave lizard, eater of Black Widow Spiders. Bon appetit, dude.
Knowing native plants and birds, how to use water wisely. Kids are easily recruited from an early age to be assistant gardeners and landscapers.
Checking out the weather by looking at the sky, feeling the humidity, temperature, and the wind patterns are also safety points. Plus, chatting about the weather is just a necessary social skill globally.
And realistically, the sky is cheap entertainment.
1. Go on a Backyard Botany Hunt
2. What’s Up in the Sky this Month
http://liebacklookup.com/whats-up-in-the-sky-this-month/
3. Weather Wiz Kids
http://www.weatherwizkids.com/
4. Summer Science Projects
http://www.hometrainingtools.com/summer-science-projects/a/1406/
5. Summer Birding Tips
http://birding.about.com/od/birdingbasics/a/summerbirdingtips.htm
ARTS AND CRAFTS
I want to make some chalk! |
This site is great for little kids on up.
http://crafts.kaboose.com/holidays/seasons/summer/
This site has listed a number of other sites with links.
One of a kind tie dye. |
Got my backpack, let's go on a picnic. |
Fun sewing will teach kids about needle and thread and maybe buttons. This site has more than this one project, but this looked the cutest to me.
http://familyfun.go.com/crafts/crafts-by-type/sewing-fabric-projects/sewing-projects/backpack-shirt-922871/
More sewing. Lots of choices.
Its a softie! |
This is just the beginning of a creative summer.
READING
This is Scholastic's program online. Looks like fun.
http://www.scholastic.com/summer/
Barnes & Noble Summer Readinghttp://www.barnesandnoble.com/u/summer-reading/379003570
This is sponsored free by Sylvan. Looks like fun! (Do I keep saying that? I guess I think reading is fun!)
Best sellers for kids of the last 100 years. |
This would be worth some research. And Chuck E. Cheese, too.
A List of Summer Reading Programs for Kids That Give Free Books, Money and More
http://freebies.about.com/od/familyfreestuff/tp/summer-reading.htm
Have a Do-It-Yourself with your kids' friends. Sounds like fun to me (doh! I said it again.)
I used to have a reading party with my tutoring students at the end of the summer--we'd dress up as favorite characters. Not too original, but really cool since they kids had just fallen in love with reading for the first time.
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