“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
Mud play is enjoyed daily over here at Sam Goldsworthy Childminding. It is either explored at our local forest school, at the woods or in our setting garden. We feel it helps to connect the children to nature where they are enjoying the calmness of being outdoors and also builds up their childhood memories as well as being great for their immune system being out in mud and dirt!
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We have a mud kitchen that was purpose built between our trees in the garden.Ā We have added many items such as weighing scales, cake tins, bun cases, saucepans and spoons as well as a range of natural items including shells, stones with different vegetables painted on them, pine cones and sticks.
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We have noticed that this type of outdoor play encourages lots of learning opportunities to the children. These include rich language opportunities learning new words such as sticks, pine cones, berries etc - the children are communicating, negotiating, problem solving and listening to each other. It also inco...
Curiosity is a fundamental human trait. Itās a basic element of cognition, yet the biological function and neurological underpinning to this day remain poorly understood by scientists.
It can be very simply described as a desire to know or learn something. Itās that intrinsic drive towards āinterestingā situations, something peculiar, to find out about the world. How does it work? What will it do? Why is it there?
Ā But why? What is it about humans that make them curious? In its purest, caveman style form, learning about the world around us enables us to survive (except for cats, apparently curiosity kills them). We learn basic skills such as how and what to eat or drink, how to move to hunt and hide, how to stay warm and safe. And beyond this, we then learn how to thrive.
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Now the world is rather different nowadays, and requires a completely different and far more complex range of skills (although Iām not sure which I personally deem to be more difficult - to chase down my dinne...
How do you resource opportunities for small world play? As an early years teacher I would ensure I had small world opportunities in every area of provision. For instance adding small world creatures and loose parts to my malleable area and observe how children make their own props for imaginative story telling. My maths area would also offer challenges around a small world problem in KS1 provision. āLike the pirates have found some coins and have to make a total of 20 for Captain Blackbeard by adding coins together.ā
Here are some of my top ingredients for resources and organisation.
-Offer small world and block play together.
-Add collections of loose parts to encourage creativity and imaginative story telling. See right brained mom for ideas.
-Foliage- real and artificial
-Add a light element; projectors, light box, rope lights and fairy lights.
-Take small world outside and use natural settings
-Mirrors
-Mark making equipment available
-peg people
-Offer different backgrounds like woven p...
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How has your week been? Did you find your new rhythm or at least start to think about the changes you are making in your daily life to get yourself into the new swing of things? I hope you enjoyed my take on daily rhythm which I shared with you last week. This week I want to talk to you about getting that rhythm into your childrenās lives and particularly how Iām engaging my son into our activities.
Some people find it harder to get boys to engage in work than girls but forget the typical stereotypes surrounding boys as they are truly just myths and the best way to engage your boy is to play to his interests. Talk to them, find out what excites them and what they actually want to learn about.
I have worked with lots of boys over my childminding career. I think I have looked after more boys than girls in actual fact. Each child has been completely unique. Their interests have differed and also their own personality attributes. Typically boys are headstrong and independent. They are...
This week our guest blogger Jamie is sharing with us the delights of Child Interest Planning. Follow Jamie atĀ https://www.instagram.com/jaybruce/
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Following a childās interestā¦perhaps the most recognisable term coined in the Early Years. Setting up continuous provision based on interest was one of the first things I learnt when I started working with three, four, and five year olds here in the UK. The children inform the environment, shape their own next-steps, and, in turn, bolster the learning of the children around them by sharing their growing breadth of ideas. To me, there are two categories of āfollowing interestā, which are actually quite different in practise. One might be more familiar to you, and the other you might see as more intuitive; a day-to-day occurrence that you have never put a name to.
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Daily set-up which takes into account the interests of an individual, is a brilliant way of showing a child that you value what they...
My outstanding member Sam Goldsworthy Childminding not only features in our Wanderlust Nature Study ProgrammeĀ but is also one of our regular blog writers.Ā
We hope you enjoy her blog post this week!
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This week we are writing about our favourite nature based learning ideas - as many of you are probably aware we absolutely love taking the children out and about to experience nature daily. We feel this has so many benefits such as building confidence, managing and taking their own risks, improves concentration and cognitive skills. It also provides many learning opportunities such as problem solving, outdoor maths, arts, literacy and many more.
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Ā We often visit the local woods. We go to the same woodlands each time as the children are comfortable with their surroundings and they have built a rapport with these woods. We talk about the different flowers and leaves that we can see growing or fallen from the trees. This changes with the seasons so there is always something new to spot...
Today we're joined by guest blog writer Nicola Hacking (follow at the curious case of the girl and the dog) sharing her love for nature and the impact on our wellbeing.Ā
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The importance, role and vision of outdoor access in the early years has increased in leaps and bounds over previous years. Weāre seeing a move away from traditional learning, with nurseries developing fabulous free-flow access, inspiring outdoor equipment and even ones based entirely outdoors in natural spaces. Children draw in the dirt with sticks, sing from the branches of trees and snooze lazily in hammocks, snuggled up in layers of cozy clothing. Practitioners hand out hot chocolates and giggle as they sneak an extra marshmallow for themselves and try not to develop too bad a t-shirt tan.
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But why the shift? Or is it something in our very souls thatās been trying to burst out?
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Scientific research tells us that time spent outdoors reaps a multitude of health benefits. These include improved blood pressur...
A wonderful guest post by my memberĀ Jennifer Wooldridge (@mamasden)
Are you settling into your new rhythm?
Change can be really hard and they say it actually takes up to 7 weeks before we adapt. Think about times you may have been on a new health drive, whether a diet or starting at the gym the first few weeks are always the hardest.
We all have a daily routine which we are used to but now have to create a new balance in our lives, a rhythm at home over the coming weeks and this will help establish a new normal, a new sense of balance in our lives. I know we have all been feeling anxious of late but we need to start reflecting on the change and creating a new calm in our family lives.
Letās take this time to recharge our batteries and to think about what we have taken for granted and the fast paced lifestyle we are used to. We have all had to stop and think and change our ways, whether willingly or for the greater good. But for lots of our children they have lost their routine an...
Join our Wanderlust Child Nature Study Programme here for £5 instead of £120
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Hi, Iām Jenny from Little Robin Education. My background is a bit mixed, I have a biology PhD, and then became a secondary school biology teacher. I now stay at home with my two boys, aged 1 and 3, and run my creative business Little Robin Education from my front room! I specialise in nature education for young people, and make and sell nature flashcards designed to inspire a love of the outdoors in children.
Iām here on the Hygge in the Early Years blog to give you six simple outdoor activity ideas to do with preschoolers. Some of these activities require access to outdoor space, which I know isnāt easy for everyone at this time. I will suggest an inside version for each activity in case youāre isolating.
My three year old loves painting at the moment, but sometimes itās a bit of a struggle to get him outside. Iām hoping itās a phase! He did really enjoy this activity though, a...
Today we're joined on our blog by our wonderful guest Sam Goldsworthy. Sam is an experienced childminder (go and give her a follow atĀ https://www.facebook.com/SamGoldsworthyChildminding/) with a passion for learning outdoors and today she shares her wisdom for supporting learning at home in the garden.Ā
The garden is such a rich learning space within our setting which we access daily.
We often spent time outdoors just lying on the grass together watching the clouds float by talking about the shapes that we can see in the clouds. We then shut our eyes and talk about what we can hear around us - usually this is birds cheeping, the wind blowing through the trees and maybe cars and helicopters too. This sometimes leads in to Yoga in the garden - flapping like a bird, standing tall like a tree, lying straight like a stick.
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We use natural treasures such as leaves, pine cones, flower petals etc that we find to make potions in our mud kitchen which encourages many mathematical opportunit...