Occupying the toddler while working with the kindergartener.

How do you occupy a toddler while doing schoolwork with an older child?  It’s easy if the older child can read or work independently, but a five-year-old needs help focusing — and that’s two children at once.

Basement_and_birthday_016  I liked this scene from yesterday —so much that I took a picture.

Oscar is studying math.  Milo, buckled into a high chair, is stacking blocks.  (It’s the Montessori "pink tower" in a non-pink version, from here, for those of you who are interested in manipulatives.)

Typically, I put Milo in the high chair when I start Oscar’s schoolwork, and hand him some materials to work with.  This keeps him busy enough that I can help Oscar.  When Milo starts to throw the blocks, or whatever, I take them away and give him something else — construction paper and scissors, or a pad and pencil, or a puzzle. 

I don’t use the confining high chair at meals — Milo usually sits in a regular chair.  But he doesn’t mind this one, and it keeps him where I can see him.  (Otherwise, I’m bound to find a dozen eggs broken on the kitchen floor ten minutes after Oscar and I start work.)   He likes doing "schoolwork" next to his big brother. 


Comments

2 responses to “Occupying the toddler while working with the kindergartener.”

  1. Is it silly of me to read a post about education, look at the picture, and immediately think, “Ooh, cool French doors!”?

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  2. LOL. No, I don’t think so. Aren’t they cool? One of the things I love about this old house we live in. (Only for about 2 more months though.)
    I wanted French doors separating the living room from the schoolroom in our new house, but my husband, for some unfathomable reason (ok, he thought that kids would swing on them), would not go for it. So… pocket doors. Functional, practical, and… just not as pretty, darn it!

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