We go outside, even in the winter

We are looking at A LOT OF snowy days coming up this winter!

And we cannot wait for all of our outdoor winter adventures.

We wanted to address some concerns about having kids outside during the colder, darker months. Please rest assured that we keep abreast of the weather constantly. We are always tuned into how the kids and adults are faring. We keep their safety and comfort in mind as well as all the safety and licensing regulations.

We will also not subject a child to outdoor play if they are not properly attired. We have worked to have a stock of jackets, mittens, hats, even boots so that a child who comes unprepared may still participate with their friends. That being said, visiting our Supply List and making sure that your child has everything they need for each season helps us and them each day!

There will be some days that are too wet or too cold! We will have little movie and popcorn parties and days where we do art while the weather outside is frightful. BUT barring exceptional highs and lows, most weather is perfectly fine for kids and adults of all ages, and we will be going outside as often as possible.

The Better Kid Care Program, the center of knowledge for all the best childcare curriculums and teacher programs, has an entire article on the importance of winter play for children. You can read it here.

The loss of consistent outdoor playtime is absolutely detrimental to the physical and emotional wellness of a child.

In this article from Tinkergarten, they talk about how children need several HOURS of play time a day to be healthy! Keeping them indoors may seem the best way to be safe, but really, we are hindering their growth.

Occupational therapists encourage parents to take children outside in all seasons. This helps brain development and to mitigate sensory issues that are on the rise in children.

Kids are meant to play. They are meant to get dirty and windswept. They are meant to eat snow, trip in their swishy snow-pants, to fall down and find they can get back up again.
According to Pediatric Occupational Therapist Angela Hanscom, not only are these things incredible for attention and sensory issues, they are a KEY ROLE in developing The Vestibular System. This is the system our bodies use to know where we are in space! It is even more important than it sounds. Without serious play, children are more frail, more clumsy, less able to pay attention, and much more likely to struggle with emotional regulation.

Our preschool teachers are especially focused on “Kindergarten-Readiness.” This involves working on letters and numbers and pre-writing skills, but it also involves physical health and social-emotional independence. Outdoor lessons and games help cement fine-motor and gross-motor work. Operating in varying weather helps develop their sensory resilience which is essential for increasing attention span inside and outside of the classroom.

For more on Angela Hanscom’s research and Timbernook Program, click here!
For more on outside play and holistic healthy development, check out this CoordiKids Article

Here are some totally normal, outside winter activities we do at Common Ground that actually promote Kindergarten Readiness.
1. Building an Igloo with Friends: Promotes core strength, cooperation, simple machines and tools usage, basic engineering, imaginative play, patience, sensory endurance
2. Snow Walking and Rolling down Hills: Inner Ear training, strength training, leg and inner core training, aerobic workout
3. Snow Writing: Using natural tools to promote fine-motor practice. You can also use markers to do color work.
4. Winter Walk: Aerobic Exercise, Seasonal Cycles and Lessons, basic biology flora/fauna studies

What do we always say? NO BAD WEATHER. ONLY BAD CLOTHES!
Is you child really set up for this winter? Here are items that we have on our student supply list that we highly recommend purchasing as soon as possible.

Please keep in mind that all the shopping links on our blog are Amazon affiliate links. If you shop with amazon through those links, you are also supporting Common Ground directly AND keeping your kiddos prepared for all seasons!

Check out our SUPPLY LIST for our recommendations for each season!

  • SNOW BOOTS — Snow comes in all different shapes and sizes, but it is always cold and always wet. An insulated, water resistant boot that goes high up a child’s leg will keep them warm and dry while they play. PLEASE NOTE: While rainbows will keep a child’s foot dry, they are not properly insulated and do not offer any protection against the cold. Snow boots are most appropriate in cold, wintry weather.

  • WATERPROOF GLOVES OR MITTENS  — Snow gloves protect against the cold, but they are also water resistant. Cotton gloves, while warm, will become wet very quickly and will do more harm than good when trying to keep your child’s hands warm. Please make sure they have snow gloves available.

  • SNOW PANTS  — Snow pants are key to making sure a child is warm and happy for a longer period of time. The water resistant fabric makes sure that the pants they wear to school stay as dry as possible so fewer clothing changes are required.

  • THERMAL UNDERWEAR — We recommend these over sweat suits because they keep a child warm without overheating them or keeping their sweat in. These are perfect for layering winter clothes and helping a child regulate their body temperature while they play rough outside.

  • SNOW HAT Kids need hats! It helps protect them against the wind, the snow, the rain, etc.

  • WINTER COAT 

  • RAIN COAT (WORN OVER WINTER COAT ON WET DAYS)

  • EXTRA LAYERS OF CLOTHING, LONG UNDERWEAR, DOUBLE SOCKS, ETC… 

We will keep you all posted on our winter lessons and activities! Stay safe!!

— LJ and the Common Ground Crew

Here are some other essential readings on the subject of being outside.

Safety Tips for Childcare Providers and Parents!

A Montessori Guide to Playing in Winter!

Athletes and Explorers discuss keeping your kids warm in winter!

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April 22nd is Earth Day - Things to do with your Kids

FRIDAY, APRIL 22ND IS EARTH DAY AND WE ARE SUPER EXCITED TO LEARN ALL WE CAN WITH YOUR KIDS!

What is Earth Day? I Earth Day Videos for Kids I Our Earth Day Post 2021

A lot of our classrooms have done Creative Curriculum Units, like Trees and Recycling, about protecting their planet. They have learned poems about The Litter Monster and read books on all the wonderful things trees do to keep our planet healthy and safe. Even in the Busy Bees’ Space Unit, they cover that Earth is our little blue dot in the vast expanse of the universe, and the only known one to hold life!

In celebration of Earth Day, rather than focusing everything on the one day, we have provided a month’s worth of activities, songs, and experiments to awaken curiosity and excitement for the subject from a bunch of different avenues!

  1. World Wildlife Fund Activities and Presentations

    1. Millions of Monarchs: A Journey Through The Monarch Butterfly’s Winter Home
      Court Whelan, Natural Habitat Adventures
      April 26, 2022
      1pm ET | 10am PT Register now and download the supplemental material pack for pre- and post- activities.
      Recommended for grade levels: 2-6

    2. 3 things you can do to help your local pollinators Article

    3. Plant a pollinator garden
      Interested in a hands-on project that supports pollinators? Use your green thumb and our Pollinator Garden Guide to create a garden of wildflowers at school, in your community, or at home. Learners can track the garden’s progress (and its visitors!) with the included wildflower science journal.
      As part of the One Square Foot campaign, Air Wick and WWF are giving out free native wildflower seeds suitable for your region. Visit the Air Wick page to get your free seeds and learn more.

    4. Discover the Northern Great Plains
      Teach about ecosystems and the impacts of human activity through the lens of one of the last remaining healthy temperate grasslands in the world using lessons from our Grasslands of the Northern Great Plains Content Pack.

    5. Just added! An activity book with fun printable puzzles and easy-to-read infographics on pollinators, wildflowers, and grasslands.

  2. Some Excellent Teachers Pay Teachers Activities: We know it seems a little counterintuitive to print a bunch of activities out on paper for your kids… but these are really fun and simple. You can do math activities, language art activities, art activities, anything that interests you!

    1. Letter Trace and Color Earth Day Page

    2. Color By Number, Color By Word, Dice and Mathtivities Earth Day Activities

    3. Headband, Writeables, and other Coloring Activities

  3. Science Experiments for Earth Day: We are so excited for these we may do some of them at school! But if you’re looking for a “non-screen” activity to do with your kids, these are excellent options.

    1. Left Brain Craft Brain: Global Warming Toast Activity

    2. Left Brain Craft Brain: Layers of the Earth Snack

    3. One Time Through: Water Pollution Experiment for Kids

  4. Fun Songs to Sing Together — Have an Earth Day Dance Party!!!

    1. Earth Day Recycling Song by the Kiboomers

    2. Recycling Song by Jack Hartmann

    3. Save the World by Jack Hartmann

    4. Water Cycle by GoNoodle

    5. Earth Day Would You Rather? by PE with Mr. G

  5. Excellent Books to Share Together

    1. The Tiny Seed by Eric Carle

    2. Planting a Rainbow by Lois Ehlert

    3. This Class can Save the Planet by Kristen Brittain

    4. What if Everybody Did That? By Ellen Javernick

    5. Up in the Garden, Down in the Dirt by Kate Messner

What kinds of songs, books, and activities do you have? Do you all do a family clean-up day, or daily activities to help the Earth out? We would love to hear from you! If we all share and learn together, we can do incredible things.

All The Earth is a Garden! Let’s grow together.

LJ and your CG Family

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