Parents,
During this unexpected time away from Paris Ridge, engaging your child in art activities is a great way to enhance their creativity, strengthen problem-solving skills, and build a stronger connection with you! Please feel free to explore the links below with your students. Some links are online while others are hands-on activities! Stay healthy Panthers!
Artful Parent • Babble Dabble Do • Cassie Stephens
Crayola • EduWeb • Happiness is Homemade: Quick Easy Crafts
Happiness is Homemade: Elementary Lessons for Kids • Met Kids
NGA: Kids • PBS Kids • Pixton • Printable iSpy games
Raising Wonder • Scholastic • Soul Sparklettes • Table Life Blog
An easy at-home art activity is setting up a "creation station" for your kiddos. Pull out wrapping paper, ribbon, magazines, newspapers, yarn, fabric (cut up old Goodwill donations!), markers, crayons, scissors, etc, and let kids just build and explore! Creating hats and puppets are always a fun activity with my elementary kiddos on free-choice days. Give them a challenge: What is the highest tower they could build with paper? Could they make something using multiple materials but in only one color? Lego challenges are also a great engaging activity for kids!
During this unexpected time away from Paris Ridge, engaging your child in art activities is a great way to enhance their creativity, strengthen problem-solving skills, and build a stronger connection with you! Please feel free to explore the links below with your students. Some links are online while others are hands-on activities! Stay healthy Panthers!
Artful Parent • Babble Dabble Do • Cassie Stephens
Crayola • EduWeb • Happiness is Homemade: Quick Easy Crafts
Happiness is Homemade: Elementary Lessons for Kids • Met Kids
NGA: Kids • PBS Kids • Pixton • Printable iSpy games
Raising Wonder • Scholastic • Soul Sparklettes • Table Life Blog
An easy at-home art activity is setting up a "creation station" for your kiddos. Pull out wrapping paper, ribbon, magazines, newspapers, yarn, fabric (cut up old Goodwill donations!), markers, crayons, scissors, etc, and let kids just build and explore! Creating hats and puppets are always a fun activity with my elementary kiddos on free-choice days. Give them a challenge: What is the highest tower they could build with paper? Could they make something using multiple materials but in only one color? Lego challenges are also a great engaging activity for kids!