Good Quality Day Care Supplies

March 22nd, 2010

If you are a day care provider then you have to equip your day care center with good quality day care supplies. Parents are meticulous, nowadays, when it comes to day care supplies that they see. It is important that the equipment and tools present in your day care should help promote the growth and development of their children.
Most day care supplies help children adjust and adapt to the world around them. The use of miniature tables, chairs and potties can help the children adjust and make an easy transition to the bigger things. Even the use of play kitchens can help you make the children understand the potential hazards in a real kitchen while the use of small wash stands can help you educate them about the importance of hand washing to prevent them from getting sick.
You should also invest in day care supplies that help stimulate the young minds of the children. Such daycare supplies would include puzzles, shape sorting blocks, mazes and other educational toys. These can help the children early on to recognize problems, formulate ideas and try to provide solutions to puzzles and mazes. They also learn to develop their classifying and sorting skills.
You should also make sure you have day care supplies that help children develop physically and learn coordination and balance skills. Such day care supplies would include balls, bikes, monkey bars, rocking toys, swinging equipments and so on. Whenever there are physical activities involved, children should always be supervised and be provided with safety gears and mats.

Group Activity Makes Kids Smarter

July 13th, 2009

Physical fitness and mental fitness go hand in hand. An ideal daycare center should have a good playground and other outdoor equipment, but in addition to this, should also have a good set up for indoor activity. It is never a good idea to have a seating arrangement as that of a school for older kids. Attention span of preschool children is very low. If you make all kids sit next to each other facing you, most of them will barely pay attention to what you are trying to teach them. The ideal arrangement is having small tables around the room with not more than five children at each table. This way, your focus is on fewer kids instead of the whole class at one time. Children also benefit with this arrangement because they have a clearer picture of what is happening, will learn from the group and will try to cope up with what the other kids do. A healthy competition is also encouraged. Do not have different activities at different tables. See to it that all kids are involved in the same activity. Also, be careful with what art and craft you teach them and see that every move is monitored to avoid children eating paints, cutting themselves, hurting other children etc. Keep shuffling the children into different groups at least once a week as this will build up a good relationship between the children and they will grow as a batch.