Here’s #5! Click here for the list of themes. Speaking of kitchens, I have a cabinet filled with our “quarantine” treats! We’re allowed to have one of each thing per person per day. Treats include capri sun pouches, pop tarts, assorted single serving chips, powdered lemonade mix, etc. Having school closed counts as a quarantine condition, LOL.
Activities
Plastic Milk experiment looks high impact with two ingredients, a microwave and a strainer. Fun with cookie cutters! Here’s another experiment question: Will this work with milk made with milk powder?
You could try any of these Cookie Experiments, OR you can just bake cookies with different sweeteners to test their differences. Sugar, honey, Splenda, corn syrup are all on the table!
Find out how tall you can build a tower made of marshmallows
Here’s the fourth theme in this series. I know this guide was originally written at a normal time where we could freely go out and get supplies or books from the library. You might not have all the supplies listed in these posts. I hope, however, this series of themed activities can still help you with inspiration to help you get through your days of Social Distancing with your family. My kids haven’t gotten nutty yet, but I myself am on my way there. Having a list of options is always helpful for me when it’s not easy think creatively, so maybe this will be helpful for some of you too!
Field Trips
If you can get to a place where you won’t run into people closely, take a nature walk!
If you have a yard, go out and collect plants or sticks to make a centerpiece for your table.
Potato Maze Experiment, which requires some advanced planning to get a potato to start sprouting before building the potato obstacle course. Note: Make sure there are not light leaks in the box except for the exit point.
Here’s my 3rd installment of themed books, activities and snacks to help you organize your Social Distancing days. How are you holding up? It’s just the beginning for me and I’m pretty nervous about this increased social isolation. I hope you and your family are well.
I had this Museum Nerd fantasy that all the museums would stay open, that most people would avoid going, and so I could have the museum all to myself! #WishfulThinking But, anyway, here are some fine arts ideas for you and your family!!
Curriculum Connection
If you’ve never matched up your history curriculum with objects in a museum, maybe take some of your time at home to search the collections of the MFA or other institutions to find objects that bring to life the time periods and cultures you study. The MFA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC and others have truly encyclopedic collections of the arts that you can search and view online.
Field Trips
The deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park has closed their museum but their sculpture park is free and open to the public. Take a beautiful walk, but maintain social distancing!
“Mo Willems invites YOU into his studio every day for his LUNCH DOODLE. Learners worldwide can draw, doodle and explore new ways of writing by visiting Mo’s studio virtually once a day for the next few weeks. Grab some paper and pencils, pens, or crayons and join Mo to explore ways of writing and making together.
“New episodes will be posted each weekday at 1:00 p.m. ET and then remain online to be streamed afterwards. Check back each weekday for new LUNCH DOODLES!”
One of my favorite art historians of all time is Sister Wendy Beckett. She has the most amazing, humanist analysis of fine art. She loves and understands humanity and expresses it exquisitely in her series on Fine Arts. Check out this segment from Sister Wendy’s PBS series on Rothko and Warhol – and then click around to see the other segments available for free on YouTube.
And if you want to know more about Sister Wendy, watch this interview with Bill Moyers, It’s broken into 6 parts.
Visit Castle Island. The weather isn’t very good, and most people aren’t going out, so why not take advantage and get you and your kids some exercise and outdoor time! If it isn’t busy it’s very easy to stay really far from other people.
Castle Island is accessible by MBTA Busses # 7, 9 and 11 and has free parking. Take a walk around Pleasure Bay, look for sea glass on the many beaches, collect sea shells and stones. Fly a kite. Play on the playground but bring hand sanitizer. Ride bikes.
Other area beaches accessible by transit: Orient Heights, Revere Beach.
Virtual Field Trips
Monterey Bay Aquarium‘s live animal cams: aviary, coral reef, jelly, kelp forest, Monterey Bay, open ocean, moon jelly, penguin, sea otter and shark.