grandpa richard's kids website
Home Page
My Blog
Books
Newsletter
Other Resources
Site Map
About Me

Walking with your Children

Childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes have increased by epidemic proportions. What can a parent do to help? As a starter, get your children walking more. Get them away from the tube and video games, put on the runners, and walk.

To make it more interesting and educational for young children, try one of these 3 activities.

ABC Walk



As you are walking, look for items that start with each letter of the alphabet. A variation would be to pick a Letter-of-the-Day and find all items that start with that letter. Another variation could be the Critter ABC Walk which requires that each item you use has to be an animal or insect. You could include common plants as well.

Colour Walk



Pick a hue for the day and find everything that has that colour. Alternatively, play the traditional I Spy game. For those unfamiliar with I Spy, one person locates an item and states, for example, "I spy with my little eye something that is red". Then the other participants must look around and guess which red item is the one that was chosen. Since you are walking as well, then you have to guess it before you get out of range.

123 Walk



Our first activity involved learning to use our ABCs. We can also learn to count while walking. The simplest variation of this one is to count sections of sidewalk, or count the number of birds you see, or the number of trucks that pass by, or any myriad of other objects. You could also mix the 123 walk and the colour walk by counting just red cars, etc. Another variation would be to set a special walking style, like "take 2 big steps and the 3 tiny steps". Then count as you go, 1-2, 1-2-3. This also works their walking fine motor skills.

Conclusion



There are many other ideas that you can come up with. Just get your imaginations going. In fact, based on this article about imagination, you need to encourage your pre-schooler to use their own imagination to create a new activity while you walk!

 

DISCLAIMER: The information on this website and in the accompanying blog is not presented by a professional psychologist or parenting expert and is for informational purposes only. The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional advice.

Privacy Policy

GrandpaRichardsKids.com; where you can learn about one grandparent's experiences and thoughts about children.

unless otherwise noted, all design and content © Richard W. Killey, 2006, 2007  -  to contact Grandpa Richard please click here

grandpa richard's kids website