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Valentine’s Day Cards.....Make Them or Buy Them....Awesome Ideas.
We are SO excited to welcome our guest bloggers -- the amazing therapists (twins, one is a Speech-Language Pathologist and the other is an Occupational Therapist) at Fine Motor Boot Camp! If you haven't seen their website, it's worth the visit....their ideas will shorten your prep time and make your treatment session better --I guarantee it!
Although schools are moving away
from celebrating holidays, we still find creating “Valentine’s Day Cards” as a meaningful
way to teach young children thoughtfulness, empathy, social and of course fine
motor and language skills. As an OT and
SLP, our goal is to make activities achievable and successful for ALL children
(and parents), no matter their ability level. Every child is an artist and as adults, we need to remind ourselves
that, “It’s the process, not the product” when it comes to each child’s
creation. Look beyond what you “think it should look like” and embrace what a
child creates! We don’t want Valentine’s
Day cards to become another stress as to “what my kid can’t do” but, rather
what they CAN do. Every child is capable
of independence, it’s our job to adapt. Now, as moms, we are also realists and know that schedules are busy,
life gets crazy and just when you think you have it all together….some one goes
and poops in the tub (true story). So,
here are some helpful hints to make Valentine’s Day meaningful, engaging and
successful.
Here we go:
1. DO NOT START VALENTINE’S DAY
CARDS THE NIGHT BEFORE!!
(Sorry for yelling, but it’s for your own good, lol). As a parent, did you send out holiday cards
this year? I send out an average of over 130 a year. As a “neuro-typical” adults, we cannot sign, stuff, seal, stamp and address
all these cards in one sitting. Now,
imagine you are a 7 year old child and you have language/ fine motor/ sensory/
visual/ attention/ behavioral/ etc. issues? Think about how hard it would be to complete all of these steps for your
25 classmates. We like to start cards
about 3 weeks before. We find that kids are excited to start, then either
satiate, fatigue or just get bored of the activity and lose interest after
completing only a few cards. Leave the cards and materials out and conquer a
few every few days. If you wait until the night before, everyone becomes
frustrated and mom/ dad, you have added another task to complete before you can
go to bed.
2. Think about going beyond the store bought pack of cards and make creating
cards a fun and engaging fine motor, language and cognitive activity.
Children
LOVE to create. When you give the child only the store bought pack of cards,
they feel tasked with writing their name 25 times and you lose the opportunity
to build fine motor and language through play and use of other media/
materials. (We will mention some additional materials to use below).
3. If you love your child’s teacher, DO NOT fill out the “To” section of
the card. This makes “card distribution” extremely time consuming and chaotic.
Your child’s teacher has 20 students, each student has 19 cards to give out. If
you do the math, that teacher is distributing almost 400 CARDS!!! So, leave the “To” section blank and just have your
child sign the card.
Need help with cutting skills? Read our previous blog post and get a free cutting help download!
Materials:
The “Card” -
Ideas instead of store bought cards:
Scrapbook Paper: This paper
comes in so many beautiful colors, textures and designs. Your little one will love picking out different paper
at your local craft store (don’t forget
your coupons). Build language by talking about the designs, colors, textures, patterns and objects you see
on the scrapbook paper. Practice scissor
skills by cutting the paper into shapes, strips to make cards. Construction paper
is also a great choice and usually readily available in homes/ schools.
The “Embellishments”
– what you can use to decorate those cards:
Catalogs and Circulars: Who didn’t
love getting the Sears Holiday Catalog as a kid?
Times may have changed, but children still love to look in catalogs and circulars to find candy and toys.
Oriental Trading sends catalogs with amazing holiday
“visuals” as do the local drug stores in their weekly circulars. Have your child identify Valentine’s Day items, cut those
pictures out and glue! If your little one
isn’t ready for cutting, have them circle or highlight the items and have the adult cut them out. Build language by
sorting the pictures into categories (candy/toys/
cards) and talk about items the “do” and “don’t” belong.
Wrapping Paper: Do you have extra wrapping paper from the holidays
or last birthday party? Cut out those
decorations or characters to use as embellishments on your cards.
Confetti: Have your
child make their own confetti using hole punches, snipped gift ribbon, snipped pieces of paper.
Practice that pincer grasp by having your child
pick up and glue these tiny pieces on
the cards. Practice counting 1:1 correspondence
with these pieces or grouping them by colors. Oh, and snipping, narrow strips of ribbon/ paper is an
easier early scissor skill. When a child only has
to “snip” once to get the desired result, he will feel successful.
Doilies: Awesome and cheap for so many activities....only $1 for ten!
Doilies: Awesome and cheap for so many activities....only $1 for ten!
Dollar Spot: We are total suckers for the “Dollar Spot” at Target
and other big chain stores. These
sections are typically seasonal and have beautiful embellishments for $1.
Stickers: Stickers are cheap, easily found and motivating. Stickers
provide a great opportunity to
build pincer grasp and finger isolation. If your little one has a hard time peeling the stickers off, take the
“backing” off of the sticker sheet. This makes
it easier to peel the sticker off. Still to hard? The adult can take the
sticker off the sheet and the
child can place it on the card. “Puffy” stickers are a little easier for children to do independently.
Rubber Stamps: Seasonal/ holiday rubber stamps can be found for a
dollar and are perfect for decorating cards.
Craft/ Scrapbooking Scissors: Okay, these are not actual
“embellishments” but craft scissors,
found at craft stores for $1, cut out pictures in beautiful designs (curves, zig-zags, etc) and are extremely motivating
for little ones to try.
Pre-Made
Cards:
Don’t feel like a “slacker” mom for buying the pre-made cards. These
pre-made cards are so exciting for children to pick out and are just plain
easier. If you opt for pre-made, here are some ideas:
·
Tear the cards apart. Your child can cut out
favorite pictures, glue onto paper
·
Put stickers/ stamps on them to embellish
·
Have your child put the cards in envelopes to
work on bilateral hand coordination.
The
“Signature”:
Even if your little one is an avid writer, signing his or her name 20-25
times loses its luster. Here are some ideas to adapt your child’s signature:
·
Have child trace name
·
Print out or write the name on mailing labels/
stickers (the Dollar Tree has 100+ labels for a dollar)
·
Child scribbles (then adult writes name)
·
Use letter stamps to sequence name
·
Sticker with just first initial
·
Print your child’s actual picture on label
and put on card
·
Photocopy your child’s signature (if they
fatigue easily), then have him snip it out and glue on the card
·
Have your little one just write/ stamp the initial
letter of his/ her name
Have you seen this? It's the entire Fine Motor Boot Camp program! WOW......this will make treatment sessions AMAZING! |
Language
Stimulators - “Things to Talk About”:
We love to use the saying, “Talk isn’t cheap….. IT’S FREE!” Talking to
your little one is the best thing you can do for your child. Here are some
language building ideas to use when you are making those Valentine’s Day cards:
·
Don’t “interrogate” your child. Asking too
many questions while creating/ playing with your child takes the fun out of the
activity. Children are always listening and learning. Try these basic language stimulation
strategies:
Extension and
Expansion Talk: Expand on what the child says. Use this opportunity to “lengthen” what
the child could say. Example:
Child: “Paper.”
Adult: “Look at all the paper choices we have. We can pick red,
pink purple or blue. I see you like this
paper with the sparkles. Let’s cut that one.”
Self-Talk: Talk about
what you are doing.
Adult: “I just picked up the scissors
and put them in my hands. Now I’m going
to open and close my hand to snip the red paper. I am going to cut
the paper in half.”
the paper in half.”
Parallel Talk: Talk about
what the child is doing.
Adult: “Wow, I see you just used your
finger to peel of that sticker. The sticker is smooth on one side and
very sticky on the other. Great job putting the
sticky part down on the paper.”
Social Skills
and Perspective Taking:
............and now for the FREE download of Love Letters Alphabet Find and Color. This download is free for a limited time until 2/28/17. We hope you enjoy! Click the picture to be re-directed to our website where the downloadable file lives :)
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