Photo: Yoto

Kids love to explore the world around them. They’re endlessly curious, and every experience is an opportunity for discovery and learning. Will it be easier to walk if I hold onto this couch? What will happen if I pull the cat’s tail? (Ouch!) Each new activity can teach kids something about their world, and that’s why learning and play go so well together—with a little imagination, almost everything is a chance to learn, and almost anything is an excuse to play.

At my company, Yoto, we’ve been inspired by the principals of Maria Montessori which are based largely on learning through independent decision-making, through tactile play, and by building relationships with our environments. In that spirit, here are some fun activities for your kids that they may not realize are also educational.

1. Sorting Activities: Sorting play is as simple as it sounds: it encourages kids to see or feel the differences in objects, and group them together based on similarities. This helps children engage critically with the world around them, and can be a fun way to introduce new concepts by hiding them within familiar activities. Try teaching younger kids about shapes and colors by having them sort similar objects into piles, baskets or buckets. Start with two categories, for example, a mix of yellow objects and blue objects, and have your little ones sort them based on color. Using some of their favorite toys can make this even more fun!

For older kids, sorting activities are a terrific gateway to math. Begin with the simple addition or subtraction of objects, and then increase the complexity by exploring division and multiplication: if 4 friends have 12 green marbles and 8 red marbles, how will we divide these equally so that each child has the same collection of marbles?

Sorting activities take many forms and are only limited by your imagination. You might explore objects that are hot and cold, big and small, solid and see-through, or rough and smooth. Your kids will enjoy the tactile nature of sorting play, particularly if they (like many kids these days) are spending a lot of time using screens.

2. Phonics Games: Phonics is the foundation for written and spoken language. They are primarily concerned with connecting written language with spoken sounds, but can also include rhythm, rhyme and identifying environmental sounds. This is crucial for developing reading skills, as well as giving kids more confidence in their own voice. With a little imagination, there’s tons of fun to be had with phonics!

Try playing “I Spy” using phonics instead of letters! For example, if your chosen subject is the family dog, you might say “I spy, with my little eye, something beginning with ‘Duh’. This is an easy game to play at home or in the car.

Why not adapt a classic game of hopscotch for some phonics fun? Draw out a hopscotch grid in chalk and label each square with a phonic syllable, for example: “Duh”, “Cuh”, “Buh”, “Mm”. Roll a die and have your kids hop that many squares, naming a word for each syllable as they go: “Dog”, “Cat”, “Boat”, “Mouse”. Alternatively, have them hop their way to one square and name as many words as they can for that square: “Cuh… Cat, cow, can, couch, call, cost.”

Phonics is a fun way to make reading fun for kids. You’ll be amazed at how much confidence kids will gain when they start sounding out the words in their favorite books.

3. Scavenger & Treasure Hunts: Everyone loves a good scavenger or treasure hunt, and many kids request these as fun activities on birthdays or at Easter. That makes them the perfect vehicle for teaching kids new things.

Older kids might be curious about science or nature—animals, dinosaurs or outer space make great subjects for a scavenger hunt! Hide a series of interesting facts around your house, backyard or local park, and have the kids follow a clue sheet to find them. Reward correct answers with a treat, a gold star, or with the next clue—maybe there’s a themed prize at the end of the hunt!

For younger kids, an alphabet scavenger hunt can help them relate letters to the objects in their daily lives. Give them an alphabet sheet and help them to find objects around your house and garden which begin with each letter: apple, bear, car, dress, etc. If they’re old enough, try having them write each of the words out at the end to practice their spelling. Scavenger hunts are a lot of fun, and can be structured however you like. Plus, they’re a great way to encourage kids to work together as a team.

4. Float or Sink: This is the perfect excuse to splash about in the backyard on a hot day! Fill a clear container with water—a bucket or jug is great, or a kiddie pool if you have one—and collect an assortment of different objects from around your home. Label two additional buckets “Float” and “Sink” respectively, and then the fun begins. Have your kids drop each item into the water to see if it floats or sinks, and then place each item into its respective bucket. Using tongs or tweezers can help develop your children’s fine motor skills. This is a great self-directed play, and your kids will love rushing about the house finding new objects to test. This summer, Float or Sink can get you and the little ones out of the house and into the backyard, or bring some educational fun to your bath time routine.

 

Ben Drury is a father of two and the CEO of Yoto, a screen-free audio platform for kids.

By the time they turn five, they’ve probably heard us say “Look at that cow! See the red plane? Oh, over there! A rainbow!” a million times. Is it any wonder kids are explorers by nature? Our little Magellans love finding surprises in even the most simple of settings and from your backyard to the beach, here are eight great spots to set up a search for (extra)ordinary treasures. Happy hunting!

Photo: U.S. Department of Agriculture via flickr Creative Commons

In a Forest

You don’t have to be Snow White to know the forest is full of enchantment. Take to the woods with your little critters in search of things big and small, and you’ll be amazed at what else they discover along the way! You can open their eyes with items as simple and straightforward as a yellow leaf, or as imaginative as a fairy house. In between, their list might also include a fallen tree, four ants marching in a row, a mushroom, a flower with six petals, or something furry.

Photo: Heaton Johnson via flickr Creative Commons

At the Beach

Nothing beats a day at the beach with kiddos in tow. They’ll be blown away at everything worth picking up when you send them splashing with a scavenger list on your next trip to the shore. Enjoy the view from your chair as they search for seaweed (or mermaid hair, for your imaginative child), sandalwood, a crab hole, coquina shells, a piece of string, animal tracks in the sand, and more. For the smaller set, see how many different colors they can find as you walk along the dunes.

In the Backyard

Dorothy found out the hard way that there’s no place like home. Give your kids a shortcut to this realization by handing them a list of backyard treasures to find, and watch as your home becomes more exciting than Oz. From garden tools to groundhog holes, bugs to bird nests, the letter “o” to something orange, you’ll have them looking at their backyard in a whole new light.

Photo: Umberto Brayj via flickr Creative Commons

Around Town

It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood, a beautiful day in the neighborhood, won’t you … spend an afternoon exploring town? With a list that ranges from civic (can you spot a church, a school, a grocery store, a library?) to transportation (how about a red car, a bus with a “2,” a train, or a plane), there’s end to sites to be seen. Add people-watching intrigue while you’re out and about and try to find someone with glasses, a baby in a stroller or a dog on a walk. Won’t you be our neighbor?

Photo: Ross Griff via flickr Creative Commons

On a Playground

Who knew playgrounds were full of science, just waiting to be discovered on a scavenger hunt? Before you go, spend a few minutes exploring simple concepts like a pendulum, a lever, a fulcrum, gravity, rotation, and revolutions. Then turn them loose to see if they identify the workings of a swing, a seesaw, a slide and a merry-go-round. If your small set isn’t ready for a scientific excursion yet, see how many shapes they can identify, or focus on textures (smooth, bumpy, springy, hard, grainy and squishy).

Photo: David Amsler via flickr Creative Commons

On a Farm

Old MacDonald had a farm, e-i-e-i–o. And on that farm he had a: bucket, hoe, hose, scale, tractor, mulch, fence, barn, pasture, hay bale, livestock and crops, e-i-e-i-o! Whether you head out to a nearby u-pick farm or to a working farm with livestock and crops, you won’t have any trouble coming up with new and exciting things for your own little farmers to find. The best thing about a scavenger hunt on a farm? You’ll be teaching them all about where food comes from, and they might just be inspired to eat more veggies!

At the Pool

Just when you think you’ve played every pool game, wow your small swimmers with a scavenger hunt for endless end-of-summer fun. Whether you focus on finding shapes (a diving board is your rectangle, an inter-tube is your circle, the back of the pool chair is a square, the ice cream at the concession stand is served in a cone, and so on) or colors (expand the color category from basic to brilliant and include colors like teal, chartreuse, and tangerine), a pool scavenger hunt is just the ticket for keeping it exciting well after Labor Day.

Under the Stars

Is there anything that screams “summer” more than sweaty kids racing through the grass at dusk and giggling right past bedtime into the night? Add to the thrill of staying up late with a sunset and after-dark scavenger hunt. Start with the usual suspects (lightning bugs) and then wow them with staged glow in the dark objects. Don’t forget to have flashlights and glow sticks ready, because it’s always a blast finding frogs, fireflies, and rocks that look like rabbits in the dark.

What’s on your scavenger list, and where do you do it? Tell us in the comments section below

— Shelley Massey