Ideas for self-directed activities and passive programs for kids at the library. Obstacle courses, scavenger hunts, displays, and more.
In January, I realized that I was working too much. Every spare moment I had was spent on the computer. I really like being a working mother. My work is my passion and I don’t for a second take it for granted. However, when it began to interfere with time spent with my family, I knew I needed to do
Amazing Race: Library Edition is a program that I’ve ran twice before. It always brings out a huge crowd – and for those of us who have a small budget – it’s a great program…
As you know, we are big fans of *free* around here. Most of our summer fun involves taking advantage cheap or free community programs at th...
Ideas for self-directed activities and passive programs for kids at the library. Obstacle courses, scavenger hunts, displays, and more.
You stumble across a new idea for a children’s program! Your screen glows with the promise of good things to come. To dive into the idea and learn more, keep reading. To ignore your instincts…
Find the best things to do in Buenos Aires in this post, also best hotels where I've stayed in and best things to eat when in Buenos Aires.
I finally (finally) got my school library's decorations up. Hey, and it's only October. Woo! Anyway, I wanted to share the ideas here, point out some cool resources, and even share a free printable travel poster. Travel poster? Travel poster. Here, you can see what I'm talking about. Check out this library... The pièce de résistance, of course, is this huge wall. I had each student in the upper grades write their favorite book title (with its call number--had to make this educational after all) on a piece of colored paper and then fold that into a paper airplane. They could make whatever kind of airplane they pleased. In a very controlled manner, I then let them throw their creations once. They were then picked up and I stapled them to the wall later. The letters were created with Air Americana Font, printed out and traced onto some old road maps and atlases, mounted onto poster board. Cut, laminate, hang, repeat. Simple, cheap--albeit time-consuming. Anway, follow the trail of planes all around the room... These cute suitcases were made by a PTA member. Clever and relatively simple! (Though I'm glad she went to the effort and not me). There's enough to decorate all the shelves. And then there, in the background, where the paper airplanes lead... Travel posters! And these are really some of my proudest decorations. I went to a lot of effort to find some good, vintage posters--for both real locations and fictional. For the real locations, I got the posters off of freevintageposters.com (it's all in the name, my friends). I picked out travel posters for Europe, New York, Austrailia, Africa, America (arches), as well as London, Japan, and Brazil (but I can't seem to locate my specific ones for these three anymore--still lots of other cool options though!). As for the fictional places, oh man, do I have some awesome Etsy shops to show you... Amanda from MiseEnDesigns made the Emerald City, Narnia, and Wonderland pictures that you see hanging: You can find the three-pack available for purchase here. All three of the prints are fantastic--high-quality pieces that have just the perfect literary twist on the classic vintage travel poster. Just what I needed. To help win over some of my more reluctant readers that seem to thrive on all things Star Wars, check out Allen's work on the PasspArt shop... It's the Endor national park! Ha! But I love that he followed the WPA's original national park design. Provides some awesome vintage flair to a very popular subject in my library. You can find the listing for purchase here. Speaking of popular, I couldn't really get away without something based on Harry Potter. So I was quite excited when I found Nathan's design on BokaPrint... It's the Knight Bus! "Emergency transport for the stranded witch or wizard" in all of its adorable vintage glory. You can find the listing for purchase here. These three shops have such high-quality designs and work--I was so pleased to work with them. They were all generous enough to donate these prints to my wee little library and the kids have loved them so much. For a few other options, I also found this Neverland travel poster and this Metropolis poster. Now, I don't claim to have anywhere near the amount of talent these guys have, but I did decide to try my hand at it (if you've followed along at all, you know I like Photoshop and making lots of free printable displays). Here's my design for Hundred Acre Wood... You can right-click on the image to save it to your computer or download the .jpg version off of Google Drive. Basically, I had a lot of fun decorating this library, though it was a lot of time and effort (yeah, this might be the display for next year, too). Hopefully, this inspires you to travel through some books and show some love to your library! Enjoy!
Tie the knots with this Kindergarten Fine Motor Activity! Use ribbon to practice tying and watch video to help with shoelaces!
FREE Children's Summer Reading Game Book Traveler Passport with destination stamps. Explore, discover and love books with this fun reading adventure
Here’s a fun STEM challenge, and the materials couldn’t be simpler! Challenge kids to build the longest possible paper chain with just one sheet of paper and tape. That’s it! This math activity will appeal to a wise range of ages. I’d recommend it for kids age 5 to 10. If they can safely cut […]
This was our first To Go Kit to kick off our 2020 Summer Reading Program. I first saw the idea as an image on Pinterest--there are lots, and all the ones I clicked were dead links (including the one I borrowed the image used in the above flyer). Here's what we were able to come up with....Each bag included 5 Kentucky Wonder Pole Beans (in a little bag labeled "Magic Beans," potting soil (enough to fill the cup about 3/4 full), a plastic cup, a wooden dowel, a castle cut out (done on yellow cards
Coffee Cars....[ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]