Kids crawling up the walls? Need ideas for a little creative, active play? Let’s get to it. (I’d love your own ideas added to the comments section below!)
- Play restaurant–maybe with a little bit of real food (today’s snacks, perhaps? Water, anyone?). Make a menu, set the table.
- Give them something to clean or organize–like whatever that gray mass is under their beds.
- Family game night.
- Facemask with your daughter.
- Race toy cars using a board or cardboard box propped up at an angle.
- Check out books and audiobooks from the online library.
- Practice an instrument.
- Have an older child make dinner.
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Tell them to design their own flag.
- Put a mattress on the floor for somsersaults and wrestling.
- Camp out in the living room.
- Let them decorate their bedroom door.
- Pick out one of these 50 role-playing ideas.
- Play dress-up (dudes can play, too: pirates, army guys). Fashion show optional.
- Take a bubble bath.
- Paint faces. (Maybe do this before #11?)
- Make an obstacle course–indoors or outdoors.
- Make a movie with your phone.
- Have a dance party.
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Play with shaving cream on a cookie sheet.
- Finger paint (you can make your own).
- Get out the toy winning the prize for “haven’t played this in the longest time”.
- Find an online class or tutorial for something they’re interested in: guitar (um, you should have a guitar); art; cooking.
- Send them outside to play soccer, baseball, kickball, or my kids’ favorite, Calvinball (from Calvin & Hobbes).
- Play with playdough (you can make your own).
- Play “store.” Line up your pantry items, grab grocery bags, set up a “cash register” cardboard box, make some paper money and pricetags. (This is great for early money lessons! You can even make pretend “checks”.)
- Take photos with your phone (perhaps using siblings or stuffies?), and put them in their own “book” to tell a story.
- Find a podcast they’ll like.
- Create a prayer paperchain of people you love.
- Memorize Bible verses for prizes. (My kids like to make it easy by downloading songs from SeedsFamilyWorship.com.)
- Read out loud one of the Chronicles of Narnia, or R.J. Palacio’s Wonder.
- DIY Pedicure with your daughter.
- Make and send cards for someone isolated or anxious.
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Get on Marco Polo with a friend.
- Give them a small budget to create a worship-music playlist.
- Feeling ambitious and homey? Make your own soft pretzels. Kids will love to choose the toppings!
- Let them pick a craft on Pinterest.
- Make a fort.
- Play library.
- Make a parade using stuffed animals, bikes, musical instruments, posters, streamers…
- Have a Nerf war. (I personally prefer outside.)
- Make a sensory bin. (Tip: Put it on a shower curtain or sheet for easier clean up.)
- Put on a play. (You can make one out of your favorite story.)
- Call Grandma or Grandpa.
- Play post office.
- Make a photo Chatbook–maybe even for someone else. (My husband adored the one my daughter made for him for Christmas, full of photos of him and the kids.)
- Camp out in the living room. Have hot dogs and/or s’mores for dinner.
- Make a scrapbook.
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Make muffins for tomorrow’s breakfast.
- Leave packaged snacks with a note for the neighbors.
- Make a maze on the driveway with chalk.
- Make your own mega-bubbles. Cut the bottoms from disposable water bottles or large plastic cups for instant bubble-makers (watch for sharp edges).
- Play “laundry” with doll clothes. You could wash them for real, or let the kids put them in a box-turned-washing-machine-and-dryer. Let them pretend to hang the clothes on a pint-sized wash line, then play-iron.
- Make sock- or bag-puppets, and maybe even a puppet stage. Put on a show!
- Build a marble rollercoaster or maze out of straws.
- Make spear-like building materials from rolled-up newspaper (start at the corner) and masking tape. You can make large structures and throw blankets over them for a hideout!
- Make your own secret code, and/or write something with Q-tips and “invisible ink” from things you have at home. (Milk works, too; let it dry and put near a heat source, like a lightbulb. Obviously, kids should be careful with that last part.)
- Make your own popsicles (No molds? You can use cups and popsicle sticks the old-fashioned way!).
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Grab an easel or clipboard and make an outdoor art-studio.
- Play veterinarian with stuffies.
- Make tissue-paper flowers to hang from your daughter’s ceiling.
- Line up chairs to make an airplane, race car, canoe, Magic School Bus…
- Make your own instruments from recycling.
- Make (or print) and color your own paper dolls (there are some for boys, too).
- Play BINGO for small prizes using at-home reading accomplishments.
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The "Fun Parent": Why (& How) to Get Weird with Your Kids - THE AWKWARD MOM - 5 years ago
[…] Child’s Play: 65 Non-Screen Ideas […]