Monday, 8 December 2014

Montessori Activities at Home

Many parents want to help with the instruction of our kids and what better way than to engage in Montessori activities at home? These kinds of activities are interesting, can include the entire family, and are a can't-miss strategy to assist with the development of our children.

With just a few simple materials, you can transform your home into an amazing learning arena.
Even if you're child doesn't go to a Montessori academy, you can still bring some of the wonderful benefits of a Montessori education into the life of your child. Natural supplies, imaginative actions, and allowing your child to explore the world independently are all it takes. As a parent, your role is to watch and gently guide, but parents are more than welcome to join in on all the fun to be had with these Montessori-inspired activities.

Here are five Montessori activities you can do at home: By using knobless colored cylinders, your child can make all kinds of fun designs and creations, like, for example, designing imaginative cityscapes. These cylinders are also incredibly fun to use to make small towers and other play structures. The adjustment of these cylinders will help with your child's physical dexterity. Youngsters really enjoy building and creating, and they will be developing their imagination right as they play and learn. The Montessori bells are a fantastic toy to use to help your child learn to love music.

Hunt around for a set of these unique and beautiful bells designed for small children.

The twenty-six bells have different tones, and you and your little one can spend tons of time actively playing around with them creating unique melodies as your child learns to recognize the different sounds.

Kids adore music of all kinds and the bells will enchant them. These bells can be blended with percussion instruments, and other instruments as well, to engage the little ones in generating tunes.
Traditional building blocks are another Montessori material that can provide hours of educational fun at home.
Children love to manipulate building blocks into farmhouses, skyscrapers and castles.

Building blocks engender ingenuity and engage children for prolonged stretches of time.

By working with blocks, youngsters learn about eye-hand coordination as well as about balance, shape, size and even weight.

Children all over the world love playing with building blocks and the whole household can join in and enjoy with them.

Magnetic wooden letters happen to be another way to bring the Montessori experience into any home.

By using these letters, children learn all about language.
For younger children, these letters are fantastic for introducing the alphabet. As they experiment with these letters, they develop an understanding of how the different letters appear and, with a little help from Mom and Dad (or brother and sister), how each letter sounds as well. For children who are starting to learn how to write, it's entertaining to have them start to create little poems or leave short messages for people in the family over the course of the day.

For really young babies who are just starting to crawl around, what is more enjoyable than jumping right down on the floor and playing right alongside them? Encourage their mobility with a rolling ball toy by rolling it gently away from them as they reach for the toy to keep the baby moving forward.

Baby will crawl, stretch out and also attempt to coordinate movements to get to the toy.

And the baby's contagious giggles will keep grownups entertained.
Obviously, there are tons of activities you can participate in with your kids in the home that do not involve toys obtained at a store.

Going outside immediately opens up tons of new Montessori-inspired possibilities.
Use your imagination! Create beautiful art projects with simple natural materials you gather together in your yard.
Learn math by counting pebbles or stacking rocks.
Or, even better, just go for a nature walk and talk with your kids about all the exquisite shapes, shades and patterns that you come across on your way.
As I said at the beginning of this article, simple materials, imaginative tasks, and letting your child discover the world on their own are all it takes for you to bring the Montessori approach into your own home. It is easy to do, and this wholesome--and healthy--educational philosophy will absolutely facilitate your kids' development into happy and positive human beings.

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