A question I get all the time: Where is your toddler while your older kids are working on school? The answer is always long… because it’s not easy having a toddler in tow while I am trying to teach 2nd and 8th grade! However, I have gotten better over the years and I have a few tricks I have learned for keeping a young child occupied while homeschooling. Hopefully some of these ideas can help your school days go more smoothly too!
Here are my kids. I have an older one who is at the local public high school but these ones are all taught by little old me.
The oldest here is my daughter, who is in 8th grade and on the fast track to all things high school (yikes!). Logan is next in line, who is in 2nd grade, but doing all 3rd or 4th grade work. And then there is Luke. The most professional 3 year old ever. He is the king of toddlers.
It’s not uncommon for people with huge families to always have a toddler in tow, but for my medium sized family, I thought there was a break somewhere. But I discovered that somebody has been 4 or under for the entire time I have been a mom. That is a LOT of peek-a-boo, people!
This handy learning tool is a great distraction for those toddlers who no longer put things in their mouths.
Cost: < $25
Space Needed: Large
Prep Time: largely varied, but usually a few minutes each ‘theme shift’
Toddler distraction factor: High (at least 15 minutes)
I bought a drip pan from the local auto parts store, bringing magnets with me to make sure it would work, and then put it up on my wall with four 50# Command Strips. Then I got out my handy-dandy glue gun and got to work. Anything that could be turned into a magnet, was turned into a magnet.
For the last six months, this has been a constant spot of toddler play. When I get the inspiration, I add new things, but they are all simple household items.
Toilet paper and paper towel tubes turned into a pom-pom run. I cut the tubes into varied lengths and hot glued magnets on the back of each one. Then I added a yogurt cup to catch them at the bottom of the run. This was the most successful idea so far. He spent hours there making his pom-poms fall through the tubes.
As the warmer weather hit I turned the pink pom-poms into cherry blossoms and sticks into tree branches for a Spring tableau. I also made a fluffy snowman out of a few pom-poms and googly eyes. This became Olaf from Frozen and we sang the “In Summer” song about 25 times a day. Another hit with the toddler!
We added a few dried acorns we found outside the local public library that has several large oak trees and even the older kids were moving them around. (Pictured is Logan, then 6)
When the school year started again I made apples out of buttons for A is for Apple Week. He counted the green ones and the red ones, he sorted them into colors, and he took them on and off the tree hundreds of times and added them into a little paper barrel I had taped onto the bottom of the magnet board.
Leaves from the Dollar Spot at Michael’s turned the entire magnet board into a beautiful autumn decoration and this is what it looks like this Oct.
It has been a spot of endless open ended play.
The spot we carved out in our house for the magnet board is right in the center of our house between the dining room and kitchen. This wall serves as our command center and we pass it all the time. It is the perfect spot to put a little toddler distraction!
I haven’t even mentioned the magnets you can buy ready made, these are just the ones that I created myself!
The possibilities are endless with this fun and versatile learning tool.. You may become obsessed (like me) with finding new ways to have fun with magnets!