
When you help children find new
ways to play with things that might have been thrown away, you're helping them
know you care about the environment and about their ideas. And, it's not being
new or expensive that makes toys valuable, it's the imagination and feelings
that children put into them. Here are ideas of things to re-use
as playthings. You might offer them and ask your child, "What could you do
with this?"
At the Office:
- Paper that has been printed on one
side only -- for drawing paper
- Punched-out holes that collect in
the paper punch -- for "confetti" as a fun addition for collages and art
projects
- Used envelopes -- for pretend
"office" or "post office" play
- Old calendars -- for "office"
play, practice cutting squares or number games
Around the House:
- Large cardboard boxes -- for play
houses, toy cars or trucks; even young children enjoy playing in a box that has
a window or a doorway cut out.
- Clean milk cartons -- for blocks,
toy trucks, or wagons
- Shoe boxes -- for pretend "shoe
store" play, containers for art supplies, doll beds, or garages for toy cars
- Buttons -- for collages, eyes for
puppets, or other art projects. (Be careful about using buttons with very
young children.)
- Unused checkbook ledger sheets
and deposit slips -- for "bank" play
- Old clothes like jackets, vests,
ties, slips, nightgowns, hats, purses, briefcases, or jewelry -- for dress-up
play, painting aprons or cleaning rags
- Old sheets and towels -- for
stuffing material, rag balls for throwing, capes for dress-up or blankets for
dolls or stuffed animals
- Used wrapping paper and ribbons --
for collages, paper chains other artwork, or dress-up play
- Old magazines or catalogs -- for
making collages, practicing cutting out pictures, making a display of favorite
pictures, or grouping in categories (animals, food, etc.)
In the Kitchen:
- Bottoms of celery stalks or
carrots -- for printing designs
- Egg shells crushed and dyed with
food coloring -- for art projects
- Apple seeds, peach pits, pear
seeds -- for collages and comparisons of likeness and differences
- Pineapple tops -- for planting in
soil
- Carrot tops -- for planting in a
dish of water
- Paper grocery bags -- for puppets
or other art projects (when cut open and laid flat)
- Boxes from cereal, macaroni, etc
-- for three-dimensional collages, making a model neighborhood, or playing
"store"
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