Rainbow Milk Toast

Ingredients
White bread
Sweetened Condensed Milk
New, clean paint brushes
Food coloring
6 Small blows

Directions
Pour a small amount of sweetened condensed milk in each bowl and add food coloring to make the colors of the rainbow. Using new paint brushes, invite your child to paint a rainbow or colorful design onto a piece of bread.  Toast in toaster oven.  Enjoy as a special snack!

Rainbow in a Ziploc Baggie – Color Mixing

Materials
Red tempera paint
Yellow tempera paint
Blue tempera paint
Gallon size Ziploc bag
Duct tape
Directions
Place a glob of red tempera paint, a glob of blue paint, and a glob of yellow tempera paint inside the Ziploc bag.  Zip the bag closed and reinforce with clear duct tape.  Invite your child to use his fingers to mix the three colors together.  Observe the new colors that are made as yellow mixes with blue, red mixes with yellow, and blue mixes with red.

Rainbow Bundt Cake

Ingredients
White cake mix
Food coloring or paste
Eggs
Oil

Directions
Make cake as directed. Divide the batter into six small bowls.  Add food coloring or paste to each bowl in the colors of a rainbow. In a greased and floured bundt pan, pour the vaious colors of batter in layers. Bake as instructed. Allow to cool slightly before removing from pan. Enjoy!

Fizzy Rainbows

Materials
Freeze colored water in plastic cups
Baking soda
Pipettes
Vinegar
Tray

Directions
Take frozen water cups out of the freezer. Place cups onto a tray. Invite your child to scoop approximately 1/4 cup of baking soda on top of the frozen water. Place the pipette into vinegar, squeeze the top, release so the vinegar gets sucked up into the pipette. Then squeeze the pipetter over the vinegar and observe what happens.

Contact Paper Rainbow

Materials
Clear contact paper
Permanent marker
Craft tissue paper cut into 1-inch squares (rainbow colors)

Directions
On the non-sticky side of the contact paper, draw arcs to resemble a rainbow. Carefully pull the backing off and tape the contact paper to the table surface, sticky side up. Place one piece of tissue in each section to represent the color to be used for each arc. Invite your child to add colors to the contact paper. This is a good project to keep out and invite your child to continue adding to the rainbow a little bit at a time over a few days. Once all the arcs are covered with tissue, hang the rainbow contact paper up on a window for the light to shine through.

Clothes Pins Numbers Game

Materials
Heavy number cards 1-10 (Sandpaper number cards work well)
10 clothes pins

Directions
Lay a few number cards and clothes pins out onto the table or carpet surface. Invite your toddler or preschooler to choose a numeral and pinch the number of clothes pins around the edges of the card to match the numeral.

Toddlers should focus on 1-5
Preschoolers 1-10

Sibling Friendship

sibling

Written by Mildred Cawlfield

As the Acorn two-year-olds were departing after a morning school experience, some carried remaining treats of fruit pieces in cups. Eric leaned over and peered into his twin brother’s cup. 

“Ah gone,” said Tom, holding his cup up for his brother to see. 

Spontaneously Eric reached into his own cup, took out some pieces, and put them into his brother’s. Both grinned as they walked out munching their treats. 

This natural brotherly affection can be the norm when we reject the belief that siblings must be rivals. Despite that widely accepted, self-fulfilling belief, brothers and sisters can be the best of friends.

Before the birth of our second child, I had been convinced of the inevitability of sibling jealousy, so I expected it and prepared for it. After the younger son came, I at first consciously withheld affection from him in the presence of the older son because of this expectation. And, of course, I saw the jealousy I was looking for. 

Fortunately, since love, peace, and harmony were valued in our home, the sense of rivalry was overcome and the boys became close friends. 

Several years later, with two more children, we had an opportunity to replay the opening scenes of the sibling drama. This time I saw that the affection I expressed for the little one in the presence of the older child became a model for him. Obviously, the baby was a new family member to be cherished and our older child fulfilled our expectations as a loving brother. 

Adjusting to a new family member is a learning experience for an older child, as well as for the parents. You can prepare the older child by talking about friends of his who have a baby brother or sister, and tell him, “Now it’s time for us to have a larger family.” You can help the child see that it will be a promotion, to be a big brother or sister – one which will include some special privileges, too, like being able to help push the stroller or stay up an extra half-hour. 

If there is too much talk about the baby months before its appearance, however, the wait can seem interminable to a two or three-year old, so save most of it for the month or two before baby’s arrival. 

Make any changes, such as moving the older child to a big bed, well in advance of the birth. Explain (in this case) that he is now big enough for a big bed, rather than that the crib is needed for the baby. 

After the baby comes, show the older child pictures of himself as a baby. Tell him how he used to wear diapers but now he can use the toilet and gets to wear big-boy pants. Tell him that he couldn’t talk to you then and tell you what he wanted, as he can now, and that he just cried when he needed something – that when he was a baby he had to stay wherever you put him, so you tried to find happy places for him to be, but now he can walk and run wherever he wants to go. Let him know that you took care of him just as you now care for the baby and that the baby will grow like he is and will later be able to play with him. 

Be sure to point out that baby’s admiration for his big brother or sister when the infant is watching. For instance, “See her watch you. She thinks it’s great the way you can run and walk and eat all by yourself.” 

An older child has an opportunity to learn selflessness and patience while he waits for baby’s needs to be met. He also should know that the baby himself will learn patience. At a time when nothing more needs to be done for the baby, you can say, so that big brother can hear, “Baby, you’ll have to be patient now. Johnny needs me.” 

Your older child can learn to be gentle with the baby. Talk to him about using his gentle hands; tell him that he is strong and mustn’t use all his strength when he hugs baby, just as Daddy doesn’t use all of his strength when he hugs. Gentleness is holding strength in reserve. 

When children are close in age, it’s best not to establish ownership of all toys or to try to have two of everything. Each child may have a few very special things of his own, like a favorite stuffed toy or something for which he has a unique interest or attachment. These should be put in a certain place out of the way. 

An older child may want to work, at times, at a table out of reach of a younger one, or may want to have a gate across his door while he builds with blocks and construction toys. Toys inappropriate for a younger one, such as crayons, paints, or those with small pieces, should be kept out of his reach and played with during his nap time or in a closed-off area. 

Most toys should be jointly owned and used on a first-come/first-play basis. This eliminates much needless ownership hassle. If a child is playing with a toy and the other wants it, the latecomer can learn to say, “May I play with it when you’re through, please?” Then he can play with something else while he awaits his turn. If these policies are established early, the children will learn to co-operate in the same way with other playmates. 

When there are disputes, it’s best for parents not to take on the role of judge and assess blame, though they can make it clear that the problem must be solved in a peaceful way. “We use words, not fists,” is one good rule. The children themselves can be made to sit and talk over their problem until they come up with a solution. At first you may need to help by asking each one to tell the other how he feels or by trying yourselves to verbalize their feelings for the children. 

For instance: “Heather feels that you don’t love her when you push her, so she cries” or, “Tony didn’t understand that you were playing with that truck, and had just parked it while you were looking for a man to put in it.” This kind of help not only shifts the responsibility for solving social problems to the children but gives them the means for finding solutions. If one child is clearly the aggressor, however, the parent might have him sit by himself for a few minutes to think about how he can use his loving hands or feet. 

I recently asked a mother of four children close in age what ideas had been most useful to her in encouraging sibling friendship. She said that it’s helpful for the children to work together toward a common goal, so she looks for goals such as cleaning up for outside time, planning a party, or deciding what to have for dinner. Each child takes a part in accomplishing the main goal and appreciates the contributions of the others. 

When the children have a spat, this mother has them sit and talk it over until they can come to her with their solution. She has found that ridicule and rivalry can be eliminated – when a child is feeling fear or inadequacy – by encouraging another to help him. For instance, one of her younger children was afraid of the dark and an older one, who had overcome that fear, was asked to talk to her and help her. This family has discovered that one never wants to put down a friend he’s helping. 

Children don’t really want to feel equal to each other in every way. But they do – each one – want to feel special and appreciated. As parents, you can do much, both to help your children appreciate each other’s uniqueness, and to set the stage for harmony. On top of everything else, working toward the goal of peace at home is bound to add needed peace to the world scene. *names have been changed.

Welcome

Welcome

Welcome to Principia Acorn Online! Principia’s Acorn Infant/Toddler program supports Christian Science families and their children up to the age of three by providing early social and learning experiences outside the home and family.

Number Jump Game

Number Jump Game

Materials

Numerals 1- 10 on carpet squares, large foam number puzzlerubber dots with numbers taped onto the dots

Directions

Make a number line using carpet squares, foam puzzle pieces, or colored rubber dots. Invite your child to jump on each dot, starting with 1 up to 10 and saying each numeral as he jumps.

Lesson extensions:

  • For preschoolers, mix up the numerals and extend to 20
  • Jump in reverse order, counting backwards as you jump
  • Place all even or all odd numerals down to help encourage counting by 2’s
  • Count by 5’s or 10″s

Coffee Filter Science and Art

Coffee Filter Science and Art

Materials

Coffee filters
Washable Markers
Spray water bottle
Tray

Directions

 Coffee Filter Science and ArtInvite your child to use markers in various colors to color all over the coffee filter. Not every space needs to be filled with color. Next, place the coffee filter onto the tray and invite your child to use the spray water bottle to cover the coffee filter with water. Once the coffee filter dries hang it on a window or mount on another piece of paper.