Posts tagged ‘empowering kids’

Chipper Tips: Ramp Up for Back to School


iPhone Screenshot 1

It’s just about time when the kids are going back to school at last! According to the National Association of School Psychologists, getting a new school year off to a good start can influence children’s attitude, confidence, and performance both socially and academically. The transition from August to September can be difficult for both children and parents after a long summer of broken routines and various trips. Even children who are eager to return to class must adjust to the greater levels of activity, structure, and, for some, pressures associated with school life.

iPhone Screenshot 2

The degree of adjustment depends on the child, but parents and family can help their children manage the increased pace of life by starting early, being realistic, and staying Chipper! Re-establish your regular bedtime and eating schedules early so it won’t be as hard to set once school actually starts. Have your children do some scholastic activities to prepare them mentally to start stuffing their little brains! Restart their memorization skills with Chipper’s fun Matching Game App.

Your child will benefit most from one or two activities that are fun, reinforce social development, and teach new skills! Chipper’s coloring pages App are easy, no-mess activities for your kids to play while on-the-go, shopping for back-to-school. For those of you with preschoolers, Chipper’s Pillow Backpack is the perfect item for your little one’s to hold a few necessities while having something to rest their little heads on during nap time! Sing-a-long songs with all of Chipper’s friends are a fun way for them to shape up their reading skills and dance moves. Check out Chipper’s brand new Amazon Webstore to see all our great school items, including reusable totes, fun backpacks with matching lunch bags, and much more! Get Chipper with your kids this school year!

August 8, 2012 at 1:55 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Tips: Learning, Educating, and Entertaining with Apps


Some parents and educators lament that technology is taking away from their kid’s natural and organic childhoods. Yes, hours upon hours of watching TV or playing video games  is not a good thing for young, developing minds but various studies have shown that  interactive games or apps and sing along DVDs and music are excellent educational tools. One study, organized by the Education Development Center, Center for Children and Technology in 2001 for the Labor, HHS, and Education Appropriations Subcommittee (United States Senate), found that using educational technology improved test scores and early literary skills.

Chipper entertains while playfully educating children about nature and the great outdoors. Click here to download award winning movies, books, music, games, and more easily for everyday fun on-the-go!

Not only are apps a great way to excite kids to learn and immerse themselves in various subjects, apps can be specially designed to different kinds of children with different learning needs. Whether they are dyslexic, autistic, or need more help with their math, there are apps that were specifically innovated to benefits various individuals! More and more, educators and parents are turning to iPads and apps to help inform and prepare our future generations. What better way to prepare your kids or students for the newest technology in the workplace, than by giving it to them as a part of their education? Apps are inexpensive, easy to use, and your kids/students will love you!

On the go fun that is educational and entertaining. Camping, hiking, or outdoor fun Chipper playfully teaches good character and a love for the environment. Click here to download now!

Chipper’s iPhone app was created to excite kids of all ages and needs to get outdoors and teach them about our diverse environment. Help your child develop their analytical skills and have some fun on your next road trip or flight! Apps are great for on-the-go entertainment and are also a wonderful tool to avoid the summer learning slump. Check out this article about Chipper’s app to learn more and see a user review!

Please enter COUPON CODE “40ipads” and 50% of your purchase will go to purchasing iPads for Children with Special Needs through the non-profit Growing Up For Good, and in support of A4CWSN, Apps for Children with Special Needs. Shop now through August 15, 2012. Each purchase includes a special Chipper For Parks badge. Download Chipper’s iPhone app for on-the-go fun! Like Chipper’s Facebook Page for special deals and free downloads!

No mess, no fuss with Chipper’s coloring pages that are playful and easy-to-follow. Select, swipe on the color, and save or start all over again. Click here to download now!

Here is a list of other Apps designed for kids with special needs: http://www.mainecite.org/attachments/article/146/24470331-iPhone-iPad-and-iPod-touch-Apps-for-Special-Education.pdf
 Here is a list of sites devoted to giving teachers and educators the best ways to use the iPad and Apps in the classroom: http://www.techlearning.com/default.aspx?tabid=67&entryid=513

July 19, 2012 at 2:50 pm Leave a comment

Are You Chipper for Parks?


Are you Chipper For Parks? If so, join us in raising awareness and necessary funds to support programs – from local playgrounds

Chipper’s interactive work book!

to our national park systems. Due to continued government cutbacks funds are being diverted and parks and playgrounds are being closed. Chipper and friends are on a mission to connect and celebrate with families and communities across the country.

Help kids earn their badge by stepping onto a new path! A path that connects and provides everyone with an opportunity to play, explore, and learn about our parks and environment.
By purchasing the Chipper For Parks badge you are helping raise funds which will directly support:

  1. Educational programs for schools and communities, underserved children and all families
  2. Conservation and revitalization programs – from clearing trails to planting flowers and trees, to the repair and maintenance
  3. Sustainability programs – keep the parks open!

Chipper for Parks Badge! Connect • Celebrate • Conserve

Chipper For Parks Badge: $5
Includes Chipper Kit filled with play-based ideas to help educate and connect in your schools and communities.
Click Here to purchase one today and start supporting our parks!

The Chipper For Parks badge is a colorful, embroidered, iron on patch made in the USA. Wear your badge proudly and encourage other kids to join Chipper’s path to the great outdoors.

Proceeds will directly benefit educational and community programs, trail maintenance and keeping our parks open.  You can leave a park name and we will contribute directly in your name. Up to $2.50 of each purchase will directly support programs.

Your Chipper For Parks badge also includes a kit of ideas and activities you can launch in your classroom or community. Come together to help our park systems.

Stay connected and learn how we are all making a difference through our daily updates and blogs. If you would like to become a true Chipper Ambassador, let us know at your time of purchase and we will get you ready to go into the great outdoors – leading a new generation of children and families onto a path to happiness and health.

Let’s Go Chipper!


July 13, 2012 at 1:30 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Tips: Little Helping Hands


“Giving is the secret of abundance.”Sivananda

All of us want our children to grow up to be responsible and generous. Giving them the opportunities to help out around the house with chores or simple tasks, such as cooking dinner or folding laundry, plants these seeds of independence and reliability. Making opportunities for your kids to play and interact with their peers and siblings help them learn to communicate and hone their interpersonal skills for years to come, important skills for whatever they do in life.

Helping Hands is a fun book for your little ones to learn more ways to help out! Click here to purchase.

Let’s Go Chipper is an Eco-educational series of apps, books, and community programs that encourage your little one’s to get outside and play, learning about the environment and growing in nature! Our newest book, “Helping Hands,” is a great way to inspire your little one’s to help out their family, friends, and community! A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this book support programs that benefit the positive physical and emotional well being of underserved children. To learn more, please visit www.letsgochipper.com. Bellow are 5 ways to encourage habits of kindness and service in your children on a daily basis.

Chipper for Parks Badge! Click here to purchase and start helping our parks!

1. Make service to others a family affair

You hear it time and again: Parents are the most influential role models and the best teachers for children. Children watch what adults do. Preaching to them to volunteer/feed others/help out at the local food pantry will likely fall on deaf ears if they don’t see the moms and dads doing it, too. Get involved in a local community service project at your local park! There are tons of opportunities and if you share your park service story with us on our Facebook page here, we will send you a FREE Chipper for Parks badge! Or purchase your own badge here and we will donate a portion of the proceeds in YOUR name to a park of YOUR choice!

2. Talk about it

Emphasize that not everyone has hot meals to eat and lots of clothes to wear. Children don’t typically recognize this, and it’s up to parents to teach them. Let them know about the project, and how they can offer a helping hand to those in need. Have them go through their clothes that no longer fit them and take a little trip together to drop off old clothes and toys at your nearest Good Will.

3. Involve children in a regular or semi-regular basis

When participating in community volunteer work, find something that can be done at least a few times each year. This doesn’t mean you have to fill backpacks with school supplies at the local community center or serve meals at the local food pantry every week. A consistent volunteer activity will stick in a child’s mind if they participate once a month, or even once every few months.

Compassionate Kids, an organization that encourages volunteerism by children, has this advice when considering how often to participate:

“It’s important to consider the basic logistics of any volunteer opportunity. If the opportunity is close by, a commitment to help out on a weekly basis may be fine. If it’s farther away, you may need to commit to helping on a monthly basis instead.”

4. Make sure your child can be actively involved in the service or project

Don’t expect to take children — especially young ones — to an activity where they have to sit and watch. They won’t want to keep going, and it entirely misses the point of including them in the first place. Compassionate Kids also advises parents to consider both their abilities and their children’s abilities when deciding on the kinds of community projects to participate in. Don’t overwhelm you or your kids–helping out should be a fun learning experience.

This mom has two little helpers! How do your kids help you out around the house?

5. Use everyday opportunities to teach kindness

Teach children that some of the best ways to volunteer and help others is to simply do it as opportunities are available. In other words, kindness to others doesn’t have to be a structured event or community-planned charity work. The whole family can get involved in:

  • Giving water to and offering help to a family whose car is broken-down on the road.
  • Donating money, clothing, or toys to a family in need of assistance.
  • Preparing and taking meals to those who have recently lost loved ones, had babies, or have family members in the hospital.

If showing kindness to others is a part of their upbringing, it’s easier for children to make it a consistent habit in adulthood. Make it the norm, not the exception, for you and your family. Get Chipper and get helping today!

Here are more community service ideas for children and resources for parents:

July 12, 2012 at 1:30 pm Leave a comment

Chipper for Parks: Family Camping this Summer


There’s nothing like spending time with the family around the camp fire under the open sky. Camping gives us all a retreat from the crazy, busy pace of our daily lives and gives us time to reflect and connect with your children. A little fresh air does wonders to a depressed teenager or a grumpy 4 year old. Take a nature walk and collect some rocks and leaves or just laze by a stream and watch the butterflies flutter by. There is no limit to the fun you can find when exploring our parks open spaces.

Join Chipper in supporting our Park Systems this summer by visiting and camping at our State and National Parks. Get out there and have your own adventure at one of our 279 State Parks. Click HERE to find parks with available sites and reserve your spot to start enjoying the great outdoors! Our noble Park Ranger’s can use all the support they can get with budget cuts and closures happening left and right. Donate in your name to any park of your choice when your purchase our Chipper for Parks Badge. Nothing inspires and benefits you and your children quite like nature and parks are the safest, easiest place to reconnect with our beautiful planet. Where will you go for your next camping adventure?

July 5, 2012 at 3:00 pm 1 comment

Chipper Tips: 5 Reasons to Have a Kid’s Garden


Late spring and early summer means it’s gardening season! While gardener parents are probably already allowing their children to help out with the tasks, many don’t consider giving their child his own personal garden area to maintain. However, if your child is old enough and the space is available, Chipper suggests setting up a personal garden for your little one. Below are five reasons why giving your child a garden is beneficial.

1. Encourages responsibility without extreme losses:

Every parent wants to raise a responsible child with the skills to care for another living being. However, it isn’t always easy to assess your child’s capabilities if she has never been given such a task before. Instead of using small animals like goldfish or gerbils as “starter pets,” let your child manage a garden first. Plants require just enough care to teach important lessons about meeting the needs of another creature; but if something goes wrong, and they die, it’s not as devastating.

2. Teaches planning and organizational skills:

Maintaining a garden isn’t as easy as putting plants in the ground at random. A knowledgeable gardener considers the conditions wherein the chosen plants will thrive. Your child will have to plan his garden while thinking about which plants grow best in direct sunlight versus partial shade, how far apart each plant should be from the others, whether or not certain plants affect the health of others, and other concerns. Although he doesn’t have to get everything perfect the first time, introducing such ideas early on will encourage him to improve his garden every year. Making labels for each plant is another great activity they can do!

3. Gives your child a sense of independence this Independence Day:

Now is the best time to encourage independence with 4th of July tomorrow! Most kids love the feeling of control they get when working on something of their own–like a garden. They gets to pick out the plants, decide when to water and weed the beds, and after all the flowers have bloomed and the veggies have grown, they decide what to do with them. This means that, instead of asking us to buy gifts for your kids to give to friends and family, they have something to give them that is more meaningful since they grew it through her own hard work with her own two hands. Or, if your chooses, they may simply keep everything to herself for a tasty dinner or snack. That kind of freedom is something children don’t enjoy too often!

4. Emphasizes the importance of plants in everyday life:

Many people and their kids these days don’t know where their food comes from!Sustainable, local food sources are becoming more popular, according to this New York Time article. You’ll know for sure that your child knows what farming entails if you let him try his hand at gardening. Not only will he know that carrots grow underground and tomatoes bush up, but he’ll have a deep understanding of the life cycle plants and how a seed, if given enough love and care, can grow into something that can nourish his body. This cycle and understanding is not only educational, it is a deeper knowledge of life that will benefit your child for the rest of their life.

Put a little sunshine into your child’s day by inviting them into the garden to help plant the summer flowers, fruits, and veggies. Perfect for little hands, the tote is complete with shovel, little trowel, spritzer, and the Blossom Bright watering can allows for just enough water to feel like an expert gardener.

5. It’s a chance to get messy and have fun:

Gardening is a chance for digging in dirt, playing with worms, picking ripe veggies, and cooling down with the hose. If that doesn’t sound like an exciting day for a child, then Chipper isn’t a squirrel! Getting outdoors is vital to children’s health and

development and caring for a garden will get them out that door more often! If you are lacking space in your backyard, check out this short video on easy indoor gardens here. Need some kids sized gardening gear? Check out this Junior Gardening Set from Let’s Go Chipper!

July 3, 2012 at 2:15 pm 3 comments

Chipper for Parks: Why Parks are so Important for Kids


Many parks have Junior Ranger programs for kids! Click this image to learn more!

Parks are great places for children to make important connections–with their parents, their peers, and the environment. They are also a great place to improve and maintain kid’s physical fitness with play based activities. Just by playing, they are moving and that’s good exercise! And playing outside, in the dirt and sun, has been shown by countless studies to improve and benefit every aspect of a child’s growth and development. Sadly, many parks around the country are closing down due to economic strain and lack of attendance. That’s why the folks here at Let’s Go Chipper are championing parks and open spaces all over the world to encourage visitation and inspire children everywhere to be the environmental stewards of the future! Here is a list of six reason’s why parks are so important for children’s well being!

Exploring and finding little critters can occupy your child for hours and expand their mind in wonderful ways!

Parks are safe places for kids to go. Whether it is reality or just the perception of reality, many parents are fearful of letting their kids play unsupervised outdoors except in very controlled circumstances. Stranger-danger, fear of poisonous plants, fear of stinging and clinging insects—all of these are reasons why nature for some is a place to be feared not embraced. Parks are one of the few places that are generally very safe for kids to go. They are specially designated places for the public to enjoy nature, free from most hazards, and watched over by staff and the public. Park visitors promptly report unsafe conditions or hazards. Many eyes on the park make for a safer place for kids to play.

Parks are one of the best places for discovery and play. Think back on your own childhood. The life of your imagination was a fertile place. Playing king-of-the-hill on a pile of dirt, building a fort or a clubhouse in the woods, flipping rocks over in a stream, exploring in uncharted territory—all were hugely enriching experiences. Natural parks are places for kids to discover the eggs of a frog in the water collected in a tire track and to see squirrels (Like Chipper!) running through the tops of trees, jumping from tree to tree. Kids will load up their pockets with objects collected on a hike to later marvel at how interesting the things found in nature really are. Parks are places for kids to discover nature and exercise their imagination!

Parks are places for families to connect – Parks connect kids and adults with nature and to each other. Perhaps more than ever, families need places to connect with each other. Parks are all-purpose places for kids to connect with nature and with families to connect with peers. They are one of the few places that families can go where there are no barriers to communication—no amplified loudspeakers, no big screen TVs, nothing other than the sounds and sights of nature. Parks enable connections between families, between generations, and to nature!

Parks are close-to-home nature places. As open space is rapidly disappearing from our communities, designated public open space and places for nature are becoming all the more important for all ages. The power of local parks, even small neighborhood spaces, to connect kids with nature is not to be underestimated. Joe Elton, Virginia state park director, recently reiterated a long-standing observation about parks: “You visit your local parks daily, your state parks a few times a year, and your national parks perhaps but once in a lifetime.” Kids can find nature in almost every park, and there are parks and public lands close to where almost everyone lives. If there are not, become an advocate for them. They should be everyone’s backyard!

Parks provide a sense of adventure for kids. Parks have the unique ability to provide kids with a sense of adventure. Every hike in the woods brings new things to see, and around every turn there is something new to discover. Kids gain a sense of accomplishment from challenges met outdoors, which leads to greater self-confidence and self-worth. Parks are a great place for kids to take risks, within acceptable limits, and to discover that the fears they have about the unknown are conquerable. Every successful adventure in the park that kids have contributes to their maturity and to their developing a sense of stewardship for wildlife, natural resources, and open spaces.

Parks are a place to remember. Some of our earliest and most special memories were formed in parks—lifetime experiences that we remember the rest of our lives with great satisfaction. Parks were special places where we forged friendships, had adventures, and learned new things about life and ourselves. Parks still provide these kinds of experiences to kids, and they produce powerful positive memories, affecting kids in ways we cannot always easily perceive. These park experiences influence kids’ ethics, their career choices, and even how they will be as parents.

Parks connect kids to nature in all the right ways. Discover where your close-to-home local parks are and get to know the park personnel who supervise them. Enable your kids to play there—they will be grateful to you for the rest of their lives. One simple way to support a parks is to purchase your very own Chipper for Parks Badge. We will donate a portion of the cost to any park of your choice, in your name. Support your local parks and noble Park Rangers–Get Chipper and Get Outdoors!!!

June 29, 2012 at 5:54 pm 2 comments

Chipper Tips: Running Summer Errands with the Kids


Parent’s these days are always on the go and are used to taking their little one’s along for the ride. Whether it’s a trip to the grocery store, picking up the dry cleaning, going to soccer practice, or running to the bank, parents can take advantage of these moments to interact and connect with their kids while keeping them stimulated in creative ways! Children need to get out and about, especially during their summer break, and avoid the summer slump by exercising their mind and body. Here are a few ways to have fun with your kids while running errands this summer: 

Talk while you drive. Instead of driving quietly you can teach your toddlers many fun concepts while in the car. Just make sure to keep you main focus on the road! Here are a few ideas to keep your child occupied and interacting with you when the errands threaten to bore you both:

  • Stop and go. As the car comes to a stop playfully say the word “stop” while briefly catching your child’s eye in the rear-view mirror. When you begin to go again, give out a cheerful “go”.
  • Learning colors. The best way to teach red and green is using the stoplights. “Red means stop” and “Green means go” are perfect teaching tools. Ask your child to tell you to go when the light turns green and to say “Whhhoooaaaa!” when it turns yellow.
  • Left and right. As you make turns, ask your child to raise her corresponding right or left hand. Teach her the difference, then ask her to tell you which way you turn every time. Teaching older kids how to make the arm signals is a great way to make signaling automatic, whether on a bike or when they become drivers themselves.
  • Sing-a-long. Car rides are the perfect time to sing some favorite songs with your child. BINGO, Itsy Bitsy Spider, and Old MacDonald are always fun, not to mention Chipper’s favorite sing-along-songs for in the car on this CD.

Grocery store trips can be a great learning opportunity for your child!

Shopping cart fun. Dragging a grumpy toddler through the store is never fun for anyone. Here are some great ideas that will make your shopping trips enjoyable for both of you:

  • Pick some fruit. A great distraction for your child is to enjoy a banana or other non-messy fruit as you shop. Make the produce section your first stop and let your child have the fun of reaching from the cart and picking out her own fruit. This is also a perfect time to teach colors – “Pick a yellow banana, not a green one.” Teach older kids how to pick the best fruits and vegetables through smell, sight, and sound. This will make their own shopping trips more successful when they have to shop for themselves.
  • Avoid the junk isles. If you stroll down the cookies isle, expect your child to not take no for an answer when he begins begging. Avoid these isles, or save them for the very last so you can make a quick exit from the store. Look for healthy alternatives that may seem sweet to avoid tantrums, such as chocolate granola bites by Naked or dried fruit snacks.
  • Label games. Point out baby’s favorite and familiar foods as you move along, even those you aren’t buying that day. If your child is old enough, start teaching them to look at the size (ounces, pounds, etc.) of different brands and compare them to the prices to be thrifty and even to look at the nutrition facts to avoid certain products and ingredients. It’s never to early to train you child to be a smart, healthy shopper!
  • Counting games. Count out loud together as you put items into the cart. “One apple, two apples . . .” and so on. If you use a list to shop (which makes things MUCH easier), have your child cross off each item and then count how many things remain on the list. If you’re going on a big shopping trip, this can occupy them for a while!
  • Unloading. If your child is losing patience towards the end, and you’re losing your cool, engage your child in placing the groceries onto the checkout stand. Hand each item to your child, say its name out loud, and have your child place it onto the conveyor belt. This is sure to buy you a few more minutes of happy time. If your child is a little to precocious for that, have them unload most of the cart and organize things by food groups. This will teach them to be organized and also simplify putting your groceries away.

Let them lead the way once in a while!

Strolling together. Running errands will often find you pushing a cranky toddler before you or dragging a moody child behind you. Here are some ways you can make stroller time or walking time more fun for both of you:

  • Music. Attach a musical toy to the front of the stroller. Sing along with your child as you walk along. Or check out one of these extremely handy i-pod to-go holders! They are great for any trip and can be connected to anything with the carabiner clip.
  • Let your child drive. Attach a steering wheel toy to the front of the stroller. Follow your child’s lead as they “turn” left or right. If your kids aren’t in a stroller anymore, let them lead the path to where you are going for a while so they feel like they have some power and aren’t being forced all over.
  • Cruise control. Let your child control the speed. Have him tell you “faster, slower, stop”, etc. Allow older kids to set the pace for a bit or play the traffic game where they can run ahead when you say “green light,” slow down when you say “yellow light,” and stop at “red light.”
  • Drive through lunch. Be sure to stop and grab a healthy snack. Fruit smoothies are perfect during the warm summer days and also a great incentive to behave. Having a little snack pack in the car for emergencies, will pretzels or trail mix, is a great way to avoid crankiness caused by hunger.

Running errands doesn’t have to be a nuisance for you and the kids. Enjoy this time you have together and take advantage of their free summer to really connect. There are so many fun things to do, all you need is a little creativity! What may seem like a tedious task to you can look like a fabulous adventure to your little explorer. Hook into that little-kid frame of mind, and you’ll be on your way to a successful jaunt for everyone. Just stay Chipper and get out there!

June 16, 2012 at 4:31 pm Leave a comment

Chipper for Parks: Volunteer at Crissy Feilds!


Are you Chipper for Parks? Do you want to give back to the community and nature? Come join Chipper and friends every Saturday until March 16th, 2013 at the Presidio Shoreline to help keep Crissy Fields stay clean of trash and invasive weeds. Volunteering is a way to help support your community and to teach your kids how to help out. It’s also a beautiful way to spend a summer day and connect with the family!

Marsh Center

Volunteers are also needed to help keep these public areas maintained as popular destinations for both local and worldwide visitors to use and enjoy. Projects include winter beach clean-ups, weeding, vegetation pruning, sand removal, and trail maintenance. Project locations are at Crissy Field and along the coastal regions of the Presidio, including East Beach, Crissy Airfield, Crissy Promenade, Baker Beach, and China Beach. Walk in volunteers are welcome or register here. Groups of 5 or more volunteers must register in advance and a special project can be arranged just for you!

  • Volunteers ages 10 and up are welcome. With young volunteers, adult chaperones are required.
  • No experience necessary. Training and tools will be provided. Ability to do manual physical labor, lift and move objects, repeatedly kneel and bend at the waist, and learn to use a variety of hand tools. Fulfills community service requirements.
  • Bring the appropriate waiver forms (go to link at bottom).
  • Please wear clothes that can get dirty, long pants, close-toed shoes, layers for changing weather, and rain gear if necessary. Also, bring a personal water bottle and sunscreen.

Can’t make it out on Saturdays? Give back in another way by purchasing a Chipper for Parks badge. A portion of what you pay goes to a park of your choice in your name! Also, check out our book “Let’s Stroll with Crissy Fields” to learn more about the beautiful diversity in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Meet Elroy, the Great Egret and take his tour learning about the history of Crissy Field, plants and animals, and the tides and marshes!

Schedule
Meeting Location varies. We will meet on site for the workday.
Call (415) 447-9376 to hear the updated schedule.

Location: Crissy Field

Time: 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Fee Information: Free

Contact Name: Laura Elze

Contact Email: Laura_Elze@nps.gov

Contact Phone Number: (415) 447-9743

For additional info, click here.

June 15, 2012 at 5:17 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Crafts: Hand Print FLAG DAY craft!


Today, June 14th , is Flag Day! This week of June 14 is designated as “National Flag Week” and celebrates the United States adoption of our country’s strips and stars in 1777 as well as the formation of the United States Army in 1775. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation that officially established June 14 as Flag Day and in August 1949, National Flag Day was established by an Act of Congress. Today, we celebrate this patriotic day by raising our American flag, throwing parades, and creating red, white and blue crafts! Have your kids create their very own personalized flag to celebrate! It’s a simple but unique craft and a fun way to start off the summer break.

You will need:

-red, white and blue paint
-blue construction paper
-paint brushes
-Popsicle stick
-small star stickers
-glue stick
-scissors/paper cutter
-hole punch
-thin ribbon in red, white, or blue
What to do:
1) Paint the palm of your child’s hand blue and the fingers (not the thumb) red and white alternately (as shown in the photo).

2) Place your child’s hand, palm and fingers down, onto the construction paper and let dry.
3) Using scissors or a paper cutter, cut the construction paper to fit the handprint.
4) Have your child help you apply mini star stickers to the palm area. You can also just draw stars with crayons or markers.
5) Using a glue stick, have them apply glue to the top half of the popsicle stick (leaving room for little hands to grab the flag (as seen in the photo below).

6) Punch a hole in the upper left corner of the flag, and string whatever combo of the thin ribbon you wish. Tie the ribbon off and you are ready to celebrate!

Celebrate our vast, amazing country this week and fly your flag high! Check for parades and events at your local parks and community centers and don’t forget to be Chipper! :)

June 14, 2012 at 1:41 pm Leave a comment

Older Posts


Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 6,731 other followers

About Chipper

Let's Go Chipper

Let's Go Chipper

Nature-inspired, play-based learning!

Into the Great Outdoors with Chipper the Squirrel! Camping, hiking, and outdoor fun - Chipper playfully teaches young children good character and a love for the environment in this award winning children's series!

With Let's Go Chipper iPhone and iPad App, Chipper entertains while playfully educating children about nature and the great outdoors. Download our Award Winning App for easy fun on-the-go. Download now!

Follow Chipper’s Pinterest

Follow Me on Pinterest

Chipper on Twitter

  • Chipper Recycle Craft: Paper Plate Frog nblo.gs/LnEqT 3 hours ago
  • Chipper Tip: Have a hip-hop-happy Frog Jump Day! Celebrate by playing leap frog outside today! ow.ly/i/28NKy 7 hours ago
  • Happy Armed Forces Day! Appreciate our soldiers who protect us abroad and at home with community service, volunteer work, donations, or... 1 day ago

Community Blogs

MANTA


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 6,731 other followers

%d bloggers like this: