Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Save your Summertime Sanity with Stations!

My kids started driving me crazy the day after school got out. There was the constant squabbling, playfighting, and watching each other play the wii for hours on end ( I loathe that, but it's just so peaceful while they do it, that it's hard to crack down and turn it off). Some people go cold turkey and turn off all screens during the summer, but I think it should still be a fun time of year (especially since we really limit TV and video games during the school year). I just needed to figure out some sort of system.

My friend Amy and I escaped for lunch a few weeks ago. She told me about the system she uses in her house and a giant light bulb went off over my head. I took her idea and ran with it, expanding on it to fit our family's needs.



This is how it works:

--Our house is divided into six stations (Art, Reading, Computer, Puzzles, Academics, and TV).



--Each station is in a different part of the house (or in separate parts of the same room) so there is very little annoying and teasing of siblings going on.



--Stations last for 45 minutes each (sometimes if we have other plans for the day we'll only do stations for 20-30 minutes a piece). Then the kids rotate to the next station. Each child goes to all of the six stations every day, Monday through Friday. We usually begin in the late morning after everyone has done their chores.



--Everyone gets a chance to choose which station they would like to start with. Yes, they will all have a chance at every station, but you know how much siblings like to compete with each other. Currently we are picking popsicle sticks labelled with the kids' names. I draw one and that child picks where they'd like to begin.



Here are the details:

Art (at the kitchen table):
Everyone has a sketch book, so there are minimal amounts of loose paper floating around. All coloring and watercolor go on sketchbook pages. We also have Shrinky Dinks, pipe cleaners, Sculpey clay (for the older kids), Play-Doh (for the younger ones), and brand new sets of watercolors, crayons and markers. I stocked up on the fabulous coloring books that Dover Publishing carries. We also have an assortment of drawing "how-to" books and creativity-building exercises.


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Puzzles (on a card table set up in the Mudroom): I bought ten new puzzles of all different skill levels. I also got one of those roll-up puzzle savers so the older kids can work on the same puzzle day after day. We also have Sudoko, crossword, and word-search books of different skill levels. My friend Amy and I will be swapping puzzles after a while to keep things fresh.


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Academics (on the coffee table in the family room):
There is a real variety here since Jasper barely knows his letters and India is taking AP classes. Probably our favorite item is the Flashmaster. It's a fantastic gizmo that quizzes kids on their addition, subtraction, multiplication and division facts. They can be timed or not timed, and the computer remembers which problems they got wrong. It's been wonderful since my younger kids have never been required to learn their math facts very well. You can get Flashmaster on Amazon for $50.


We also have a Geography Globe from Oregon Scientific, the Phonics Firefly (perfect for helping the younger kids learn their letters and sounds), and some educational Leap Pad sets.


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In this category we also have workbooks (the great kind sold at Costco that are full of worksheets), handwriting practice sheets and spelling word quizzes. I try to get items that the kids can do on their own so I don't have to sit there all day. The older kids are working on assignments they were given at school to complete over the summer.



Reading
(in the Living Room which is where our bookcases are):
This is read-alone time. Every few days I rotate the supply of kids' books so they always have something new to look at. Library books stay in here too. The older kids usually have a novel they're reading.



Computer
(playroom):
The kids can play whatever they want without someone claiming that "she took my turn!"; I don't really care what it is, whether it's Webkinz or something educational (Finn has been doing a teach-yourself-German program). This is their entire computer time for the day. This would probably include Nintendo DS time, if you have those at your house.



TV (in the playroom where our only TV is):
This includes video games and DVDs. Whatever takes place on a TV, this is the time to do it. The best part of this system is that you don't have children sitting around watching their siblings play games(one of my major pet peeves). Occasionally we'll watch a movie as a family in the evening, but for the most part this is their entire allotment of video games and shows.



You could tailor the stations to suit your family better. If you all play instruments, you could do music time, for example. Or you could do an outdoor station. With our blazing summer temps, though, the kids stay indoors most of the day but we spend evenings playing outside or swimming. This system would work with a smaller family, too. For the last week India and York have been visiting their grandparents in Oregon and we've been rotating four kids around the six stations. It's been fine.



We have been doing Stations for a couple of weeks now and it has been phenomenal! The kids never complain about being bored and they bug each other so much less. My house is actually quiet during the day! It's a miracle!

8 comments:

  1. Nice. I'm going to try it. And I give you extra points for the alliterative title.

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  2. Jennie, this is so imaginative and COOL!! If you wrote it up for the Ensign they would certainly publish it! (next summer). HOW FUN!

    Could you add musical instruments to Academic so a few kids could keep up on those?

    No wonder Finn asked me about lost wax casting. But you could add various jewelry making to art, if anyone cared.

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  3. What an amazing idea, I'm totally going to try this!

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  4. Thankis for the idea. I love it! We're coming up with our own stations right now. :)

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  5. I love this idea! Thank you (and Amy) for sharing!

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  6. Oh Jennie, I am so impressed and grieving for the family I thought I would have who would do something like this. Unfortunately, our stations would be more like,

    creating excuses

    antagonizing your sibling

    wrestling with the dogs

    moving things around a room and claiming you straightened up!

    Don't get me wrong, I am genuinely impressed!
    and possibly inspired, I'm the mom of only teens and young adults who gave up on all this stuff, I will try again!

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  7. You should check out healthyindulgences.blogspot.com

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