My grandchildren are still at the age that coming to grandma's house is something they want to do. Grandmas and grandpas know well that this is a limited moment. All too soon, the kids will say: “Aw, I want to play with my friends instead, and “Do I have to?”
Lucky enough to live near my grandchildren, I take each boy separately on his own with me to my house once a week. We don’t go anywhere. We stay home … on purpose.
Home is where we do the activities that I write about . What I encourage others to do, I do myself. So every week, the little boys and I teach and learn in the car, yard, kitchen, learning wherever we happen to be, using whatever we have with us, performing simple family home activities.
I believe in laying the base for academics but not by using materials that come packaged at the store. Reading, writing and math are organic in the world around us. This is the time to build the connections for children to the academics in the world, not just in the classroom.
Learning Through Family Home Activities
In the car, we read all the signs at the side of the car. "STOP" is a longtime favorite. We read signs together. We count them. We talk about the sign shape and color. No basic reader can compete.
We notice. We go on around-the-block walks, each of us carrying paper bags, to be filled with treasures. At first it’s anything that appeals, a leaf, a smooth stone, a sharp stick. Next, we do alphabet walks. Let’s find or identify something that starts with A all the way to Z.
This summer we planted a tomato plant and watched it grow, watering it, caring for it, measuring and picking the fruit of the vine, knowing that’s it our work that made this miracle happen.
We do carpentry, nailing boards together into designs, measuring them, making designs and writing all over them for posterity.
We send each other notes, room to room, getting the joy of receiving a response almost immediately. We dial relatives and friends on the telephone, with children reading the dial and making the telephone connection on their own.
We cut sandwiches into a variety of shapes and fold napkins into intricate fractions. In short, this house, this neighborhood, just like everyone else’s, is a mecca for learning.
Preschooler Activities Require Only Grandma
Last Friday was especially sweet. With the four-year-old, who has had some listening problems, we played Listen and Do.
It’s an old classic ever new. You give three or more directions. The child listens and then follows them: “Walk slowly to the kitchen. Pick up the kitchen towel. Bring it back, walking fast to the living room.”
Then we exchanged who gives directions. My grandson was delighted to tell me what to do and found that he had to correct some of Grandma’s mistakes.
We opened a big map. I am a great lover of maps, and now he is, too. Maps of the world and the United States hang at his house and in mine.
A map is one of the most remarkable teaching tools. With marker in his hand, we went from city to city, figuring out how far we traveled, what the map legend markings meant. He found the railroad that bordered the Mississippi.
This was a wonderful experience, not just because he was learning the intricacies of the map, but because I felt this sense of passing on to him a joy about maps that I have always felt.
It was an intergenerational moment. I hope that there will be many more of them. In any event, I have to savor and use these now. The message is this: Give the gift of your time. Don’t bother to go the store for one more toy. Save your money.
Bring yourself and your ideas. Pleasure and learning are right there in front of and around you. Create your magic moments. They don’t come packaged in a box.
Dorothy Rich is founder and president of the nonprofit Home and School Institute, MegaSkills Education Center in Washington. She may be contacted via her Web site, MegaSkills.org.