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Appropriate
for ages:
Two and Up
Time needed:
10 minutes and up
WHAT YOU'LL NEED:
1.
Set up a child-friendly collage tray.
-
I
suggest purchasing a plastic tray divided into a few sections
with a circle in the middle.
- If you don't have a chance
to buy a tray, you can take a regular tray and place three
or four non-breakable bowls on it in a circle, with a space
in the middle. (If you have disposable plates and bowls,
you can glue the bowls onto the tray.) Put a small glue
container in the middle.
2.
Choose your materials.
You do not need to buy anything
special. You can use:
- Colored construction paper
cut into different size pieces.
- Leftover wrapping paper.
- Bits of yarn.
- Small rocks collected from
outside.
- Sandpaper
- Tissue paper that comes wrapped
around presents.
- Multi-colored beans.
- Pieces of an old sponge.
- Old pieces from games you
no longer use and will otherwise throw away.
- Pieces of ribbon
These are some suggestions. Use
your imagination. Choose three items for your 2-3 year old
and 4 items for your 4-5 year old. Try to choose items with
different textures. If two of the items are different colors
of construction paper then for the third choose pieces of
a sponge or sandpaper.
WHAT
TO DO:
There is no end to the number
of interesting collages you can make with your child.
- Place the materials in the
bowls and put a small container of glue in the middle. Pick
a piece of paper for your child to glue the materials to.
Plain construction paper is fine.
- Let your child glue the materials
to the paper.
For a very young child,
you can put the glue on the paper first and then have them
put the pieces onto the parts with glue. Older children
can put the glue on themselves. A very young child requires
supervision. Try to encourage them to vary the items they
choose to glue. Once they get the idea you can leave your
child at this activity and have them call you when they
are finished.
- Let the collage dry and hang
it up. Let your child know you are proud of his "work."
This is an activity that can
be repeated over and over again. As long as the materials
in the collage dishes change regularly, most children never
get tired of this activity. Keep an eye out for new items
that might be interesting for your child to glue. If you get
a delivery packaged in Styrofoam balls, put them in the collage
tray and tell your child "Do you want to see something
special that I put in the collage tray?"
RELATED
ACTIVITIES:
Here are some ways of making
a collage that are more challenging for your older pre-school
child.
- Help her to make shapes,
letters or numbers out of glue and paste the collage pieces
into these shapes.
- Children love to write their
names in glue. Write out your child's name in glue or help
him to do it on her own. A kindergarten child can often
do this without a parent helping. Have them glue the collage
pieces in the shape of their names.
- A different collage method
that older (4-5) pre-school children sometimes enjoy is
to have them "plan" the collage before they make
it. Have your child design the collage with only the materials
and no glue on the paper. Suggest that she think if that's
the design they want and only then bring out the glue.
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