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5 Fun Things To Do With Your Kids This Summer

5 Fun Things To Do With Your Kids This Summer

By Pam Myers

There is no better time than summer to encourage your child or teen to try a new activity. Summer is filled with lots of outdoor activities like going to the beach and swimming in the pool (and, let’s face it, sleeping till noon if you’re a teenager). However, all that wears thin very quickly. Take this opportunity to introduce new hobbies to your teen or child.

1. Take Up Music Lessons

Summertime is a great time to learn how to play a new instrument. There is much more time to practice during the summer than there is during the school year, and if your child or teen is like most, they are sleeping plenty and are well-rested.

It’s wonderful to introduce music lessons when your child is more relaxed and has the time to actually enjoy it. It won’t feel like it’s something on their to-do list as much as it will feel like a hobby. Great instruments to start your child on are piano, guitar, flute, drums, violin, and saxophone, as well as many other types of stringed, wind, electronic, and percussion instruments.

2. Try a New Sport

If your child has been playing the same sport such as football or soccer during the school year, now is a great time to start summer-related sports. There are a myriad of sporty summer activities for your children to try. Some of the most widely available are surfing, swimming, golf, volleyball, badminton, basketball, Frisbee golf, boogie boarding, tennis, skateboarding, rollerblading, and biking.

The possibilities for summer sports are numerous and your child can find something age-appropriate, fun, and enjoyable that brings them together with other children or teens their age.

3. Summer Sports Camps

If your child is not sure which sport he or she is interested in, signing them up for a summer sampler sports camp works wonders. Your child or teen can try out different sports and find one that will carry over into the school year and perhaps beyond.

4. Get Creative

Summer is a great time for getting messy. Teens and children can paint outdoors, work with clay or sand, or spend time doing any type of arts and crafts project that they’re interested in. Being creative outdoors saves your dining room table from paint and glue accidents while exposing your kids to nature.

Drawing outdoors is another wonderfully creative outlet for children of any age, no matter their skill or talent level. Classes held strictly outdoors are another great way to get creative against the backdrop of nature.

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5. Build Something

Before summer camps were popular, kids of all ages from around the neighborhood gathered to build stuff from old throwaways and junk. Today’s garbage is a bit more sophisticated. Sometimes families throw out perfectly good materials such as lumber. Salvage that lumber, find some paint and a few wheels from an old wheelbarrow, and teach your kids how to build a basic go kart. Other classic projects to delve into are forts, tree houses, and birdhouses.

 

About Pam Myers, BSEd

Pam Myers received a BsEd in Education and her teaching credential from USC and was a 6th grade teacher for 13 years for the Ocean View School District in Huntington Beach, CA. She and Dr Bob met at USC and were married in 1971. Pam is the proud mother of two grown children, Lauren, who is a Special Education teacher in the La Habra School District and a son, Greg, who is a TV and Film editor. She retired from the public schools to raise her family and has continued to work with children and families through various activities including serving as a PTA president, working with OC Philharmonic Association to bring music education to children and is serving in the youth ministry at her church. Pam and Bob worked as a team on his radio shows and she provided management support in his private practice. Painting and live theater are her passions as well as the protection of children and animals.

 

Culled from childdevelopmentinfo.com

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