One of the most challenging aspects of home schooling multiple ages is balancing the different needs of each child. This is especially true when there are preschoolers in the home. Keeping toddlers occupied long enough to do lessons with bigger kids becomes a daily challenge.
As much as possible, I try to do intensive teaching of the older ones (in subjects such as math or science) while my youngest ones are asleep—either early in the morning before babies get up or during the afternoon when they are napping.
Once everybody is awake, my older children entertain the younger ones in half-hour shifts while I work one-on-one with another child, but there was a time when I simply didn’t have enough kids to make that work. Back then, I kept a running list of activities my little ones could do with minimal supervision, and referenced it as needed.
I’ve recently had to press many of those ideas back into service, as I currently have a two-year old who wakes up at the crack of dawn and might otherwise disrupt the calculus and algebra lessons that are going on at that time of morning.
None of these things are particularly novel, but referring to the list keeps me from having to “think on the spot”, adds variety to their days, and keeps things running more smoothly.
Naturally, I confine the kids to the fenced backyard for “outdoor activities” and either school where I can watch them through a window or else spread a blanket in the grass and teach their siblings outdoors under the trees.
Feel free to peruse the list below for ideas that may appeal to the preschoolers at your house!
Indoor Activities:
Looking at books
- Alone
Board books are a great addition to any child’s library and can normally withstand fairly aggressive page-turning. For a list of our favorites, check out this post: 50 Picture Books Every Child Should Read - With older sibling reading aloud
- Following along with book on tape
You can purchase tapes, record them at home, or check a few out from library.
- Alone
Drawing/ Coloring
- Pencil and paper
- Crayons and coloring books
- Watercolors and paper
- Paint-w-water books
- Shaving cream on the tabletop
This is a great way for kinesthetic learners to practice writing their letters—if they make a mistake, they can smooth it away and try again (the activity works well on formica tops, tile, or stone… I probably wouldn’t try it on wood). - Washable markers
- Grease pencil and tracing book
- Colored pencils
Cutting and/or pasting
Use blunt scissors or paper edgers and a glue stick. You can find inexpensive workbooks specifically designed to teach these fine motor skills, or keep a stash of some of the following supplies to dole out when you’re ready for your little ones to practice.
- Construction paper shapes
Small uniform squares and triangles can be used to make mosaic pictures. - Recycled greeting cards
- Sunday coupons
Older preschoolers can be taught to cut on dotted lines, then you can sort the coupons later. - Sunday comics
- Old magazines, catalogs, and advertisements
Let your little ones use the pictures inside to make collages or paper dolls.
- Construction paper shapes
Puzzles
- Wooden or cardboard frame puzzles
- Tanagrams
- Pegs and pegboards
- Puzzle-toys (like Tupperware ball or Rubic’s cube)
- Puzzle games (like Little Red Riding Hood or Rush Hour, JR.)
Playing dress-up
Playing with puppets
This activity is even more fun when you let the kids make their own from socks or lunch bags.
Modeling compound
- Play dough
Make at home by mixing 1 cup flour, 1 cup water, 1 Tbsp oil, ½ cup salt, 1 tsp cream of tarter, and 1 small pkg. unsweetened Kool-Aid (for color and fragrance) or a few drops of food coloring. Cook over medium heat until it pulls away from side of pan. Knead until cool. Store unrefrigerated in ziplock bags. - Edible dough
Combine 1 ¼ cup peanut butter, 1 ¼ cup powdered sugar, and 1 cup dry milk; mix thoroughly. - Modeling Beeswax
- Wikki Stix
- Crayola Magic
This lightweight product isn’t messy at all and can be decorated with paints or colored markers after it hardens, but it isn’t recommended for children under 3. - Thinking Putty
- Play dough
Building
- Lego or Duplo blocks
- Wooden building blocks
- Pattern blocks (use at a table to create pictures or designs)
- Unifix cubes
- Brio train set
- Empty cereal boxes, egg cartons, juice cans, milk jugs, etc.
Provide a roll of duct tape, as well, and let their imaginations go wild! - Marbleworks
Discovery Toys puts out this set. It can be noisy once the kids begin running the marbles through, so try letting them build it first, then drop the marbles in when Mom is watching. (Marbles can be a choking hazard, so we never let our little ones play with them unsupervised). - Toothpicks and miniature marshmallows
Sorting
- Buttons (into egg carton)
- Dirty laundry (lights and darks)
- Clean socks (finding pairs)
- Coins (from change bank)
- Silverware (emptying dishwasher)
- Dried beans (pick out the stones)
Craft projects
- Putting stickers on paper
- Folding paper airplanes or newsprint hats
- Stringing beads, buttons, macaroni on yarn, thread or laces
- Weaving yarn
If you do not already own a child-friendly, Simpplicity-type loom, you can make your own by cutting notches along opposite ends of a rectangular piece of cardboard. - Making paper-clip chains
These are especially pretty when made out of brightly colored vinyl-coated clips. - Making paper chains
Use a mini-stapler to link the chain together—it will be far easier to work with and much less messy than paste. - Making “books”
You can use recycled printer paper to do this (our kids only like to draw on one side, so we usually have a large supply of half-used paper). Just fold the the pieces in half with the messy sides facing inward, separate, stack individual folded pieces together, then staple along the open edge opposite the fold. - Lacing cards
You can purchase these or make them by punching holes along the edges of recycled greeting cards. Roll tape around one end of string for easier lacing. - Making mobiles
Let your little ones design their own using clothes hangers, masking tape, yarn and construction paper shapes, small stuffed animals, or other collectibles. - Making crayon rubbings over coins or gathered leaves
- Creating alphabet book or frieze (make one letter a day)
Doing pint-sized chores
- Dusting furniture or mini-blinds with feather duster
- Cleaning fingerprints off cabinets and door-knobs with spray bottle full of water or a child-safe cleaner
- Sweeping floors
- Cleaning scuff marks off linoleum with baking soda or toothpaste
- Washing dust off baseboards with a damp cloth
- Sharpening pencils
- Mending stuffed toys or nightshirts with blunt-tipped needle
- Cleaning and organizing junky drawers
- Holding math flash-cards for older sibling’s drill work
Working in the kitchen
- Scrubbing and/or peeling potatoes, carrots, etc.
- Putting biscuits on pan for baking
- Washing, drying and tearing lettuce or other greens for a salad
- Laying bread slices on cookie sheet and topping with cheese slices for melted cheese toast
- Washing and plucking grapes from stem for fruit salad
- Rinsing non-breakable cups and plates to put in dishwasher
Listening to CDs
(this often helps keep little ones in one place)
- “Your Story Hour”
- Focus on the Family’s “Adventures in Odyssey”
- Steve Green’s “Hide ’em in your Heart” CDs
- Classical music
My girls enjoy dancing in time to “The Nutcracker Suite”, and my little boys love to gallop and sword-fight to selections like “William Tell Overture.”
Outdoor Activities:
Yard work
- Water Flowers
- Pull weeds
- Rake leaves
Creative Play
- Sandbox
- Sidewalk chalk
- Paint with water on sidewalk using large brushes
- Gather sticks, stones, moss and build “fairy huts”
Outdoor games
- Swing/slide
- Hopscotch
- Play ball
- Climb trees
- Practice balance on landscaping timbers
Blow soap Bubbles
Mix the solution up yourself using 1/2 cup of dishwashing soap, 5 cups of water, and 2 tablespoons of glycerine (find it at your local drugstore). You can use this to refill the smaller bubble containers and re-use those little plastic wands, or pour the mixture into a shallow pan and use cookie cutters, recycled rings from six-pack sodas, or larger loops made from pipe cleaners as bubble blowers.
Eat a snack
(outdoors is a great place for eating popcorn)
Look for bugs, toads, lizards, etc.
Play in the water sprinkler
(no kiddie pools without constant adult supervision)
Put up a tent
Let your kids “go camping” in their own backyard. If you don’t own a tent, make on by throwing a blanket over a clothesline or a rope strung between two trees.
I am sitting here in tears, as this has been VERY ENCOURAGING to my heart! As a mother of 5 little ones, and still new to the whole homeschooling aspect of our life, trying to juggle it all with joy and a cheerful spirit and still be an effective teacher of academics AND building character in my kids, has been so tricky! And I have been doing most of what you listed, and I have doubted myself as to whether or not that was the BEST way or not. So, as I read your kind words, I just broke out crying, and felt so uplifted in my heart, knowing that someone far more experienced than myself, is suggesting most of what I am already doing! BLESSED ME GREATLY! THANKYOU! And some ideas were new to me, and so I will be TRYING them this next year of schooling our blessings! 🙂
Bless your heart, Jessica. You are in a busy, busy season of life with five young children. I remember those days (and the attendant exhaustion!) well. Rest when you can, and savor this time with your little ones as much as possible. They grow up SO FAST, but your faithfulness to teach and train them — and to remain a cheerful, happy mama in the process — will reap a bountiful harvest of blessings in the end!
young mother of 3 toddlers … thank you so much …constant reminders and continuous support is necessary for all families growth…knowledge and experience are greatly appreciated.
Love this Jennifer – many thanks from a Grandma who is looking for some creative ideas of activities to do with my littles.
This is so great! I dont homeschool but I take college classes and hate putting my 3 year old in front of the tv to get my homework done but I admit I’ve done it. This list will help me not do it again!!!
Loving this!!! We have 3 preschoolers…. Thank you! 🙂
Thanks very much for this! I am graduated now and living at home with multiple little children, and many school-aged children. My mom and I often have a hard time coming up with things for the little ones to do during school time. Especially loved the idea with the flash cards!
So happy to have found your page!! Truly look forward to reading so many different topics and I thank you for posting so much info!! 🙂
Thanks for the homeschool toddler/prek info:-). It was funny how many activities were the same for us:). Even down to the VCR Richard Scarry videos! Good reminder and good list– never had put it down that distinctly. I have 4 children and live nearby- saw you on TACHE. 14 down to 2:-).
Thanks Again,
Sherry
Thank you for this. I am homeschooling my 5 and 7 year old daughters, and I try to keep my 3 year old son busy but sometimes he isn’t very happy about it. This gives me a little more insight.
Michelle