How to Bring More Music Into Your Children's Lives

Chicago Children’s Museum is a huge believer in the power of music for little ones. If you're a parent or caregiver looking to bring more music into your child’s life, here’s a roundup of Chicago Children’s Museum approved activities, resources, and more.

At Home Activity: Nature Prints

Running out of ways to play outside? Today’s activity gives you and your kiddos another reason to be outdoors—and has the added bonus of encouraging them to deeply inspect the grooves and veins of leaves, petals, and other parts of nature.

At Home Activity: Upcycled Bird Feeders

Is anyone else going through groceries like never before? Staying at home means more meals at home, and more meals at home means more empty containers.

That’s where today’s at-home activity comes in. It shows how you and your littles can take an empty milk carton, egg carton, or even a clean takeout container and create a bird feeder. From there, your little ones can be in charge of refilling the feeder and keeping track of which birds visit it.

Chromatography: Uncovering the Hidden Colors in Markers

A clear juice glass holds a paper towel with purple marker ink; a clear jar holds a paper towel with blue marker ink; a clear vase holds a paper towel with orange marker ink.

Did you know that inside every water-based marker lies a whole world of painting possibility?  

Today’s at home activity explores those possibilities through the use of chromatography, otherwise known as “color writing.” 

When you stick a water-based marker into a cup of water, the different pigments (or colors) inside the marker will actually separate based on their density (or weight). Some pigments will sink, some will float, and some will land somewhere in-between.  

By using water and a paper towel, your kiddos can explore this fascinating phenomenon, all while creating a beautiful piece of art.  

Goals

  • Recognize that a single color of ink is made up of other colors 

Children will: 

  • Use water and paper towels to map the hidden colors in water-based markers. 

  • Note how two markers of the same color may consist of different hidden colors.  

What you’ll need: 

  • water-based markers of as many colors and brands as you can find 

  • paper towels. 

  • Clear containers, for instance plastic or glass jars or drinking glasses 

  •  tape (masking works best) 

  • Some scrap paper in a light color.   

How to: 

 Choose the colored markers you’d like to investigate.  Cut a paper towel into narrow rectangles for each color.  The rectangles should be at least one inch taller than the container you plan to use. 

• With one marker, draw one thick horizontal line with each of the colors one inch from the bottom of the paper towel rectangle. 

Stand each rectangle up in the container so this line is close to the bottom.  Fold the blank extra inch at top over the rim of to the outside container.  Secure it with tape or a binder clip. 

•Carefully pour one half inch of water into the jar, so it’s just below the line.  Make sure it’s enough to wet the bottom edge of the rectangle.  Keep the rest of the rectangle dry.  

•Watch!  The water at the bottom of the container will quickly climb up the paper towel, taking color pigments with it.  

•When the water reaches the top of the paper towel, pull out the wet paper towel and lay it on a light-colored paper or washable surface.  (The wet rectangles may leave some color on the surface underneath). 

• Repeat this process with several more markers. Which color markers have blends of different pigments? What colors do you see? 

•Compare the results of two or three markers of the same color, but from different sets or different brands. What do you notice? 

 

At Home Activity: Stamp Art with Found Objects

Today’s at home arts activity for kiddos brings a whole new meaning to the phrase, “Put your stamp on it!”

By looking around the house, yard, or other places for mess-friendly, interesting objects, your kiddos can create their very own stamp. It’s an easy way to create a DIY art project, explore different shapes and textures, and learn more about how to make a pattern.

At Home Activity: Make a Pattern

What comes next?

We’d all love to know the answer to that question right about now. Luckily, today’s at-home activity is one way you and your little ones can explore predictability by making patterns. Because even if we don’t know what’s next for us right now, we can still rely on certain patterns and order in the world around us.

At Home Activity: Crystal Painting

At Home Activity: Crystal Painting

Epsom salts are great for grownup bath time—but did you know that they also make for an easy, low maintenance art activity for your kiddos?

Today’s at home art activity for children takes everyday materials you have at home and turns them into a sparkly painting experience.

At Home Activity: Whoop-de-doo Roller Coaster Sculpture

At Home Activity: Whoop-de-doo Roller Coaster Sculpture

In a lot of ways, the roller coaster feels like a spot-on metaphor for the parenting and caregiving process—especially during COVID-19.

Today’s at home activity lets you and your little ones dig even deeper into what makes a roller coaster the fun, thrilling, terrifying ride that it is. Talk about what makes rides scary, then build your own with everyday, easy-to-find materials.

Black lives matter.

Chicago Children’s Museum stands in opposition to racism, injustice, and inequality.

We have been and will continue to be public and vocal about our beliefs and our actions. This is a powerful moment for all of us to talk with our children about race, racial injustice, and economic inequity. To do so will be planting the seeds to eradicate all racism—systemic and institutional.

Below are ways you can make this happen in your home and with your children.

At Home Activity: Bump-It-Up Paint

With today’s at home activity, you can combine a few easy-to-find ingredients to make your own textured paint. Your little ones will satisfy their inner chemist by creating their own paints, then use those paints to create three-dimensional works of art.

It’s an easy, fun, win-win art activity for your whole family.

At Home Activity: Whirl Its AKA Thaumatropes

Today’s at home activity involves a $10 word: thaumatrope.

What’s a thaumatrope, you ask?

It’s an optical toy with a picture on each side that, when spun fast enough, appear to blend into one because of persistence of vision.

What Sparks Interest in Children?

Chicago Children's Museum is the perfect place to watch interest spark in our littles. We design all of our spaces to encourage and facilitate interest in powerful, child-led ways.

We asked Liz Rosenberg, Lead Arts Educator at Chicago Children’s Museum, for some tips on how we can practice igniting our little ones’ sparks at home.

At Home Activity: Cardboard Beads

Staying at home gives us a lot of opportunity to reimagine what might otherwise be, well, boring.

Take cardboard, for example.

We’re exploring the different ways you and your kids can use the cardboard lying around your houses for fun, valuable play time, like today’s art activity, Cardboard Beads.

At Home Activity: Build a Ramp

The uses for empty cardboard boxes seem endless—but they can also be opportunities for trial and error, exploring spatial reasoning, and sharpening measurement skills.

Today’s at home activity encourages your little ones to be their best scientific self by using all three of those skills, and more.

At Home Activity: Shadow Play

At Chicago Children’s Museum, one of our favorite things about play is that you really don’t need much to make it happen.

Today’s at home activity shows how a sheet, a lamp, and a flashlight can make for hours of fun—plus fine and gross motor development.

At Home Activity: Cardboard Tubes

Toilet paper isn’t as hot a commodity as it was a few weeks ago, but we’ve got one more reason to think twice about this otherwise boring item: the empty cardboard rolls.

Today’s at home activity focuses on another way to upcycle those rolls into a STEM focused, spatial reasoning exercise for your little ones.

So save whatever cardboard rolls you’ve got and let your kids discover their inner architect.