At Home Activities

At Home Activity: Puppet Parade

Let’s throw a parade in our honor. We deserve it, don’t we? The homeschooling, the working from home, the socially distant Zoom birthday parties, and constant hand washing—we are all something to celebrate.

Trouble is, who do we celebrate with?

Today’s at home activity is all about making your own crowd. Gather some puppets, stuffies, and toys— and throw yourselves a parade.

At Home Activity: Marionette Play

By taking a familiar toy or stuffy (one with limbs that move easily) and turning it into a marionette, your little ones will have a whole new way to play. They’ll work on their hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills, plus their sense of self expression and creativity will come alive.

So grab a flexible toy and some string and let your littles be the puppeteers.

At Home Activity: Cereal Box Guitars

What do Raisin Bran and rock ‘n’ roll have in common?

Find out with today's at home activity, Cereal Box Guitars. Not only will your kid end up with a sweet new axe, they’ll learn the relationship between vibration and sound, and investigate what makes pitch.

At Home Activity: Tear It Up

Look at your little one’s hands. Yes—they're adorable (and maybe a little sticky), but did you also know that they’re working really, really hard?

That’s because our hands grow the most when we’re between ages 0 and 5 years old. And as a result, our little one’s hands do a lot of work to get stronger, more flexible, and more adept at skills we eventually need... like using scissors.

Today’s at home activity video is all about enhancing those skills.

At Home Activity: Secret Puzzle Game

Secret Puzzle Game is a simple, outside-the-box way of sitting with the words, feelings, and thoughts we’re experiencing during this wild time. Think of a word or image, keep it secret, draw it on the back of a cereal box that you’ll cut up to make your own puzzle. Then, hide the pieces around the room and hunt for the rest of your family’s pieces.

At Home Activity: Alphabet Scavenger Hunt

Today’s at home activity lets your children show off their literacy skills by finding items beginning with every letter of the alphabet. So explain the rules, maybe provide an example, and let them explore your space to find each object.

And while they do, take a minute to sip some coffee, look out the window, or even just stare at the wall for a little bit.

At Home Activity: Sink or Float

Sink... or float?

And no, we’re not talking about how we feel right now—we're talking about today’s at home activity for your kids, which happens to be all about trial and error.

It’s a good way to encourage kids to experiment, test, adjust, and test again.

At Home Activity: Body Tracing

At around 3 pm every afternoon, we find ourselves just wanting to lie down for a bit.

Today’s at home activity not only requires you and your little ones to lie down—it turns sprawling out on the floor into a fun art exercise designed to sharpen children’s gross and fine motor skills, as well as their observational abilities and creativity!

At Home Activity: Scrub a Dub

Today's Chicago Children’s Museum parent PSA: not every at home art project requires drawing or crafting.

If you’re worried about running low on art supplies, or simply just not feeling up for more traditional arts and crafts activities, Scrub a Dub has you covered! Simply find a spot that’s safe for splashing (think kitchens, bathrooms, or even outside), fill up a couple of buckets or bowls with water and dish soap, and let the foam sculpting begin.

At Home Activity: Tabletop Bubbleologist

What’s a bubbleologist, you ask?

Simply put, a bubbleologist is an expert in all things bubbles—and kids are natural bubbleologists.

Today’s at home activity takes bubbles to a whole new level. Not only do the activities below allow your little ones to play with bubbles (which is obviously a blast), they’re designed to build important skills like trial and error and cause and effect. Plus, by following the directions below, kids explore geometry and shape-building, physical properties, and their own creativity.

At Home Activity: Window Garden

Does your little one have a tiny green thumb?

Today’s at home activity is the perfect way to find out.

You may not know this (many of us certainly didn’t), but remember those dried beans hiding in your cabinet or pantry? You can actually plant one of those beans and watch it sprout into a plant!

At Home Activity: Chalk Painting

We’re taking #chalkthewalk to a whole new level.

This at home art activity for kids comes from Chicago Children’s Museum Lead Arts Educator Liz Rosenberg (@lizziemaerose on Instagram). Follow along as Liz brings our Art Studio to you, and share your pics of what you create with us!

At Home Activity: 2-Square to the Rescue

In the midst of a global pandemic, one must find a glimmer of happiness wherever it may emerge. For me, it comes in the form of four specific words from my 9-year-old daughter, often uttered with colossal enthusiasm:

“LET’S PLAY 2-SQUARE!”

At Home Activity: DIY Constellations

During all this social distancing, our worlds have gotten much smaller—our morning coffee, dinner dates, family outings, staff meetings, workouts, and children’s educations all take place in the same spot: our homes.

And as much as our lives have changed, so have our children’s lives, especially if they’re school-aged.

But what if we told you that, in the height of the Coronavirus quarantine, you can make your world seem as big as outer space?

At Home Activity: Animal Tracks

Since the days of just sending our little ones outside to play with the neighbors are at a halt for now, today’s at home activity focuses on something you can do with your littles outside: search for animal tracks!

This guided activity lets you and your little ones tap into your Discovery Channel sensibilities. Exploring the mud (or dare we even mention it this late in the year, snow!) is a great way to pique your children’s curiosities about animals, nature, and biology. Plus, you might learn a few things along the way.

At Home Activity: Breathing in Memory

… the scent of smell, also known as the olfactory sense, is powerful. In fact, it’s the scent most attributed to memory formation—which is why a smell may trigger an intense, vivid memory, sometimes out of the blue.

Smell is also deeply connected to emotion—our brains form strong connections between particular scents and powerful emotions, which is why smelling something can feel so suddenly intense.

What does this have to do with your kids, or parenting, or play? Well, we’re bringing you an at home activity that is all about how you can explore this powerful (and often overlooked) sense with your kids in the comfort of your own home (while reinforcing and building literacy skills).

At Home Activity: Estimation Games

This time of uncertainty might be the perfect time to explore one of math’s most kid-friendly concepts: estimation.

Practicing estimation skills with your kids is a great way to infuse math learning and play. With activities like the one below, children will begin to understand spatial reasoning in terms of height, weight, and length, and they’ll also start sharpening their educated guessing skills.

At Home Activity: The Element of Surprise

Today we’re sharing an activity that is all about how you and your littles can take the most familiar objects around you and turn them into something brand new. And since we’re all about quality play at Chicago Children’s Museum (that’s also a blast)—today’s activity also allows your kids to flex their imagination and literacy skills at the same time.