Activity kit for children age 0 Months to 5 years
Transform your little one's playtime with our amazing Activity Kit for children aged
0 months to 5 years!
Activities For 0-3 Month
Through these activities, your babies will begin to explore the world of art, stimulating their senses and fostering their natural curiosity.
Activities For 4 - 12 Month
From 4 to 12 months, babies go through various stages of physical, cognitive, and emotional development.
Activities For 1 - 3 Years
will guide you through practical strategies and useful tips to create a stimulus-rich environment where children can develop their imagination and skills. Join us on this journey and discover how every moment can be an opportunity to learn and create.
Resources for parents
Creating routines for love and learning (2010), by Zero To Three, shares how daily routines between home and the program support self-control, security, social skills, transitions, parental happiness and learning.
Rituals and routines: supporting babies, young children and their familiesThis brief publication of the National Association for Early Childhood Education explains the importance of including rituals to help children accept a routine that can be stressful, such as separating from their parents.
Behavioral or conduct problems
Children occasionally show themselves angry or defiant around adults or respond aggressively when they are upset. When these behaviors persist over time, or are severe, they can become a behavioral disorder. Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are more likely than other children to be diagnosed with a behavioral disorder, such as opposition defiant disorder or disocial behavior disorder. https://www.cdc.gov/adhd/es/about/otras-preocupaciones-y-condiciones-medicas-relacionadas-con-el-trastorno-por-deficit-de-atencion.html
Sleep Schedules
We know that tired children can't concentrate, they are irritable and they are not well. Research also links sleep loss with obesity. For young children, the crucial factor in reducing the risk of obesity was to sleep more than 10 hours at night. The naps during the day didn't help.
As an early learning provider, you must provide a rest period for all young children (five years or less) if they are in your care for more than six hours OR if they show the need to rest.
- Babies and young children under 29 months of age must follow individual sleep schedules.
- Young children need about 2 hours of nap during the day.
Even if a child cannot fall asleep while in their care, they should be given the option to participate in quiet activities.