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Games to Play Dancing: Have a dance party with your toddler. Put on some upbeat music and dance around the house or outside. Help baby's coordination, balance, and increases creativity. Let your toddler use their fingers to strum the rubber bands and make different sounds.
It helps your toddler learn to use just one finger and strum a specific band. Helps with fine motor, listening, and visual skills. Add some pillows and their favorite toys to make it like their own house. Helps baby build play skills. Contact Paper: Tape some contact paper sticky side out to your wall or window. Give your toddler a few different objects like cotton balls that they can use to throw or place onto the contact paper and watch it stick.
Helps baby's sensory development and fine motor skills. Games to Play Peeling Tape: Put masking tape or stickers down on a table and have your toddler try to peel it off. Try to get them to only use the index finger and thumb to pick and peel the tape off the table. Help out by peeling up a small edge to start it off! Helps your toddler build fine motor and visual skills, and sense of touch. Then put in junk mail that you get and let them tear it open.
Helps baby build fine motor skills by using fingers to pinch and grab items. Games to Play Discovery Bottles: Get a small water bottle and fill it with different objects. Let your toddler shake it around and discover glitter, pebbles, and other objects as they turn it.
Make sure the bottle is securely sealed and filled with age appropriate items. Helps baby develop visual skills and arm strength. Food Prints: Food is not just for eating, you can paint with it too! Cut an apple in half and use it as a stamp. Your toddler can also use carrots to roll around in the paint.
Helps baby develop fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination. Games to Play Pom Pom Push: Cut holes into a lid on a box and have your toddler push pom poms or cotton balls through the holes. Different sized holes can create new challenges. Some they can drop, others they will have to push through. Helps to develop fine motor and visual skills, and sense of touch.
Let your toddler roll different objects down it to learn about how gravity works. Helps baby develop ability to use eyes to track objects and taking turns if with peers. Games to Play Search Out: Get brightly colored objects, like bouncy balls, and place them around the living room.
Let your toddler walk around and try to find them. Your toddler can count them out as they find them. Helps baby develop visual and language skills. Build Up, Knock Down: Your toddler may be used to toys that click into place as you build them up. This time, use regular wooden blocks to build a tall tower and let them knock it down.
Helps baby build visual and fine motor skills, and is a good way for practicing using two hands together. Drawing scribbles on the sidewalk or driveway is a chance for your toddler to get creative and have fun. Helps baby builds fine motor, visual, and sensory touch skills.
Melting Ice: Put water with drops of food coloring in an ice tray and freeze them. Let your toddler put the ice into a bin of room temperature water. The ice will melt and the color will spread out. You can let them draw with chalk first or just let them paint with water directly on the blank chalkboard.
You can also let your kids paint with water on paper. The paper will eventually rip or get a hole in it. If your kids are skilled enough, you can let them have a cup of water to re-wet their brushes. Or they can run to the sink and get their brush wet again that way. It depends on what level of potential mess you are comfortable with. Wash the car.
Do you have a ride on toy? Give your each of your kids a wet wash cloth and let them wash their car. We have a Cozy Coupe that my son drew on with washable crayons.
I gave him a wet wash cloth to wash off the crayon and he loved it. He washed it over and over again. Before you let your child draw on the toy, double check that your crayons will wash off easily. The quicker you wash them off, the easier it is. Paint with washable paint and cookie cutters. My kids could sit at the table together and paint for hours with just a paint brush and paint. Adding in something as simple as cookie cutters gives them another prompt for their imagination.
Switching up the type of paper you use is equally fun. Try painting on sheet music for example. Or use colored paper, magazines, or newspaper. Paint with watercolors and salt. Whenever we paint with watercolors, they always ask to add salt to their paintings. The salt absorbs some of the paint and leaves a really cool effect behind. Create art with stamps. Encourage your kids to create a collaborative piece of art with a stamp set. Give them a long piece of paper and let them add stamps to create a scene.
Finish with markers or crayons. Create art with stickers. A piece of paper and some stickers are all you need to create a simple piece of art. This one is great for developing fine motor skills, too. Set up a sensory bin. I like to choose a large under the bed storage bin. This allows all 3 of my kids room to play. Sensory bins can really be full of anything you want. Small parts are not great for kids who still like to put everything in their mouths.
Use sand in a sensory bin. I love the colored sand from Crayola. You can pick it up at Walmart once they have their summer stuff out. Bury objects in the sand and have a treasure hunt. Check out our Fossil Hunting Sensory Bin. Add construction vehicles to the sand. Check out our DIY kinetic sand recipe and play ideas. Add pom poms to a sensory bin.
This idea is way less messy than most sensory bins. You might end up with pom poms everywhere but they are much easier to pick up than sand or flour. This one is not for little ones who still put things in their mouths. I love our Find the Unicorn Rainbow Sensory Bin where we combined colorful pom poms with unicorns and dragons.
Pour oats, rice, corn meal, or barley into a sensory bin. Steel cut oatmeal feels a lot like playing with tiny rocks or coarse sand. Aiden and I played for a long while together with the oats. It was a very calming experiencing for me. Right now I have a small container of old corn meal waiting to be used. Play with water. He still loves the bathtub with a cup or two. A water table is great for water play outside.
Fill a large storage bin with some water. Some of the ones with hole will mold. Make it a themed bin for even more excitement. Make oobleck. Mix together some cornstarch and water for a squishy sensory experience. Check out these great oobleck recipes. Freeze the oobleck.
We used a gorgeous blue color and a bit of glitter for this frozen oobleck recipe. Experiment with baking soda and vinegar. Aiden says his favorite activity to do with his siblings is baking soda and vinegar.
Baking soda and vinegar explorations were his favorite thing to do before his siblings were even born. Now he has fun letting them join in. We have so many baking soda and vinegar related activities listed here on Inspiration Laboratories. I will share our favorite 3 below.
Start with a simple baking soda and vinegar exploration. Take a large storage bin and add baking soda to the bottom. We have many more animal game ideas and activities.
Play a number of songs and have the kids dance about. At the end of each song, hand out awards for the most beautiful, most funky, most creative and most energetic dances. Make sure everyone gets a prize. This is an entertaining game that will keep toddlers busy for quite a while.
To play the fishing game, you will need a dozen or more small prizes in wrapping paper with a metal washer attached to each one.
A magnet is also secured onto the end of the string, so it can pick up the prizes by attaching to the metal washers they contain. Each toddler then gets a turn using the fishing rod in an attempt to pull a prize from the pond. It consists of a small blow-up pond, 25 plastic fish, 2 fishing rods, and 2 fishing nets.
It is a fun toddler party game that will keep them busy for at least 10 to 15 minutes. Pass the parcel is a classic toddler party game that all children love. Prepare for this game by wrapping a prize in at least a dozen layers of newspaper or wrapping paper.
Then, have the children sit in a circle and pass the gift to one another as some music is playing. Whenever you pause the music, the child holding the present gets to unwrap one layer of wrapping paper. The child who unwraps the last layer gets to keep the prize. In this version of the game, children still sit in a circle as they pass a balloon around. When the music is paused, the toddler holding the balloon is allowed to go into the center of the circle and pick a prize out of a bag.
Playing this version of the game makes it easy to ensure that every child gets at least one prize. The easiest way to play this classic game is to buy a pre-made pin the tail on the donkey set , which contains a donkey poster, donkey tails, and blindfolds. Because it uses stickers instead of tacks, there is no risk of the toddlers injuring themselves. You just need to attach the poster to a wall, then show the toddlers how to play.
Although this activity is designed for slightly older children, toddlers can still enjoy it with some help from adults or older kids. The toddlers will happily spend minutes creating their unique party before proudly wearing it around the party.
By the time a child is two years old, they starting to work on their hand-eye coordination. You can make the most of this by setting up several carnival toss party games. This combi set contains a large The toddlers can attempt to throw the bean bags through the holes in the poster or toss rings onto the cones. This is a great choice if you are going to make your own toddler activities and just need cones, bags, and rings.
This bean bag toss game is a great choice for 2 nd birthday parties. It comes with 10 brightly decorated tins and 3 bean bags. The front of the tins features zany faces, while the backs have point numbers written on them.
You simply stack the tins and give each toddler three throws. If you wish, you can count the points on the tins that they manage to successfully knock over to see who wins. This is a super-creative 2nd birthday party activity that toddlers are guaranteed to enjoy. It is a 36 piece sticker set with sheets that contain different faces, eyebrows, mouths, eyes, and various objects.
Participants can choose which components to place on the faces of the Lion, Clownfish, Octopus, Narwhal, Unicorn, Dinosaur, Monkey, Elephant, and Shark included in the set. They can create some zany combinations and will be happily showing off their work to other people at the party once they finish. There are plenty of pirate-themed activities that are ideal for toddler parties. Start by dressing the toddlers up in some pirate-themed clothing, then playing:. Place a blue tarpaulin on the ground.
Next, lay some bricks on the tarpaulin and place lengths of timber across them. If they manage to cross the plank without falling they win a prize. Give them plenty of chances to get across and if they are very small, hold their hands to help them.
Tell the toddlers that their next task is to take down some pirates who happen to also be ducks. Set up some of these pirate duck toys on a box or seat. The toddlers then take turns throwing water-soaked sponges or bean bags at the pirate ducks in an effort to take them down. Divide the group into two and hand out some small water pistols.
You can spruce up the game by defining a base for each team and leaving some pirate ducks there. Parachute games are the perfect toddler party activity. They are exciting and will keep the toddlers active — using up their abundant energy!
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