10 Ways to Get Your Child Ready for Kindergarten

10 Ways to Get Your Child Ready for Kindergarten

 

1. Be chatty

Whether at the grocery store, the park, or on a walk, those back-and-forth conversations are so important. Build your child’s word bank.

2. Get noisy with a book

It’s the easiest way to get your child ready for school. Reading out loud teaches basics like how to hold a book, when to turn the page, left to right reading, and wondering what will happen next. Let your child create her own book and let her get noisy!

3. Don’t help

Celebrate your child’s independence. Make a chart or poster to celebrate their firsts: unbuttoning a button, zipping a zipper, packing a lunchbox, opening a juice box or knowing her phone number. Look what I can do all by myself!

4. 3 P’s

Play, pretend and practice. Play kindergarten at home. Let your child practice making choices. Prepare her for what to expect. Pretend to get on the bus or say hello to the crossing guard. Pick out clothes and play dress-up. Practice picking out food in the lunch line or prepare a sack lunch. Presto! The 3 P’s in action.

5. Stretch

When your child plays, you can weave in learning by introducing new words and concepts to help stretch her thinking.

  • Did you know that someone who fixes cars is called a mechanic?
  • Want to pretend to be mechanics?
  • Let’s see if we can draw a car.
  • How many cars do you have? How many cars are green?
  • What other words rhyme with car?
  • What letter sound does car start with?

6. Focus on the big and the small

Create a child friendly family game night using large and small muscles. Hop, skip, run, jump, kick and catch. Invite your child to draw and cut straight, wiggly and zig-zag lines. Add listening skills and following directions by making a game like Simon Says or Red Light, Green Light.

7. Make a connection

Play eye spy on a neighborhood walk. Go to the zoo, shop at a farmer’s market or play in the dirt. You are building vocabulary, and giving your child rich experiences to share.

  • I know what a bear looks like.
  • I have tasted a tomato, too.
  • Worms make tunnels in the earth!

Given the opportunity to take risks and explore gives your child the ability to relate events and experiences that they have had outside the classroom to what they are learning in school!

8. Don’t forget about sleep

Parents aren’t the only ones who need sleep. 5-year-olds need about 11-12 hours of sleep per day. About a month before kindergarten starts, get your bodies in sync. Bedtime and wake-up time should sync with school schedules so everyone wakes up on the right side of the bed.

9. Make a date

Make a playdate with other kids or go to the library or park. Kids need practice to learn to take turns, share, listen clean-up and cooperate with other kids. Learning to wait and finding out that no one can always be first or have their own way takes practice. Meeting kids at a park or playground helps transition kids who will be sharing space with twenty other kids instead of just with a brother or a sister!

10. Talk about feelings

It’s okay to cry and miss a parent. It’s okay to feel angry or sad. Strong feelings are normal. Be supportive and celebrate your child’s successes. Model and expect good manners within the family to discourage whining and tantrums. Children who are able to state their wants and needs in a clear and polite manner tend to transition more easily to school. Set aside a time, each evening, to share your child’s day. Don’t expect perfection. If your child was perfect, she wouldn’t have to go to school!

The Women’s Fund Supports STEAM Education

The Kansas Children’s Discovery Center has received a $7,942 grant from The Women's Fund. The grant supports STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and math) outreach education from KCDC. The grant will facilitate the purchase of portable STEAM tools for KCDC educators to bring to area schools, community centers and events. Outreach STEAM education furthers KCDC's goal of providing rich, diverse museum experiences for all children, including those with barriers to visiting KCDC.

In part, the Women's Fund grant will purchase a more portable Imagination Playground set. Imagination Playground blocks include bricks and cylinders, accented with chutes, channels and parts that suggest motion or connectivity. They inspire children to design their own inventions, environments and activities for child-directed free play.

Funds will also purchase Rigamajig building kits, a collection of durable wooden planks, wheels, pulleys, nuts, bolts, and rope that allows children to engineer simple machines. The kits promote playful cooperative learning and the development of problem-solving skills. 

The grant is a part of the Women's Fund 2018 initiative to support STEAM education across the community.  The Women's Fund website explains the organization is donor-advised fund of the Topeka Community Foundation designed to create a new pool of resources from women interested in becoming philanthropists through the power of collective giving. Its mission is to promote women’s leadership in philanthropy, increase charitable contributions and strengthen their value through collective giving, and encourage a new generation of philanthropists. 

Grants were awarded at the annual Women's Fund Luncheon held on April 25 in Topeka. KCDC staff and board members attended the event with Imagination Playground blocks (pictured).

 

Soaring into Space Birthday Week! | May 25 to June 1, 2018

Friday, May 25 | Hovercraft

Take a ride on the KCDC Hovercraft on Friday, May 25 at 10:30 AM, 1 PM and 3 PM. Learn about gravity, force and fun! 

Saturday, May 26 | Gravity Lab

Take a crash course in gravity on Saturday, May 26 from 11 AM to 3 PM. Explore this invisible force using art, engineering and science experiments. Discover how gravity helps create art with splat painting, make a prototype of a gravity-powered rollercoaster, and practice finding the center of gravity through balancing experiments!

Four children jump on soda bottle to launch stomp rockets while other children watch in the background

Sunday, May 27 | Stomp Rockets

Take off with rocket building on Sunday, May 27 from 1 PM to 3 PM! This fun activity is great chance to launch young scientists into engineering. They'll learn to solve a problem using the engineering process: ask, imagine, plan, create and improve. It's a blast!

Monday, May 28 | Moon and Motion

Explore astronomy fun on Monday, May 28 at 10:30 AM, 1:00 PM and 3:00 PM. Launch into sensory fun with moon sand at 10:30 AM, create and test a balloon rocket at 1:00 PM and explore objects in motion to learn how astronomers detect unseen planets at 3:00 PM.

Tuesday, May 29 | Craters and Robots

Put KCDC in your orbit for moon-themed fun on Wednesday, May 29 at 1:00 PM and 3:00 PM. Explore moon craters using flour at 1:00 PM. See what it's like to explore Mars with Dash robots at 3:00 PM. Kids use an app and coding skills to program Dash and navigate it around an obstacle course. It's serious fun!

Wednesday, May 30 | Clouds and Moon Rocks

Have an astronomically fun time on Wednesday, May 30 at 1:00 PM and 3:00 PM. Investigate clouds at 1:00 PM and make your own moon rocks at 3:00 PM.

Thursday, May 31 | Orbiting Objects and Magnetic Fields

Join us out-of-this world fun on Thursday, May 31 at 10:30 AM, 1:00 PM and 3:00 PM. Explore orbiting objects to learn how astronomers study planets at 10:30 AM, play with space slime at 1:00 PM and explore magnetic fields at 3:00 PM.

Friday, June 1 | Happy Birthday KCDC!

Celebrate KCDC's 7th birthday with a collection of amazing space activities on Friday, June 1! Make moon sand at 11:00 AM, make marshmallow shooters at 11:30, study orbiting objects like an astronomer at noon, join us for a birthday surprise at 1:00 PM, build stomp rockets at 2:00 PM and navigate robots through a moon challenge course at 3:00 PM. Learn about gravity, force and fun!

Soaring into Space Birthday Week Q & A

What is astronomy?

Astronomy is the study of space beyond the Earth. It's is one of the oldest branches of science. Astronomers use telescopes and computers to study far-away objects like stars and planets, but anyone can enjoy astronomy just by standing outside and looking at the sky!

Learn more

What keeps the moon orbiting around the Earth in space?

Gravity! Gravity is an invisible force that attracts smaller objects towards larger objects and holds them in place.

Learn more

How big is our sun?

Really, really big: 432,169 miles across, to be exact. One million Earths could fit inside the sun – and the sun is considered an average-size star!

Learn more

How old is KCDC turning on June 1?

June 1, 2018 will be KCDC's 7th birthday! We celebrate our birthday for a whole week every year. Why a week instead of one day? Because birthdays are awesome!

How many people have visited KCDC since your last birthday?

More than 80,000 people have visited in the past year! We have a lot of friends, and they're all invited to our birthday party.

That would be a lot of birthday cake!

Sure would! If all 80,000 people who visited in the last year were to show up expecting a slice of birthday cake (let's say, a 3-inch, square piece), we'd need a square cake 71 feet wide! We'd only have enough edge pieces for 1,132 of them, though, so anyone who wants lots of frosting would have to show up early.

Serious Fun Mud Run | Sunday, June 3, 2018

Mud Run Start Times

10:00 AM Kid's Run

Please arrive by 9:30 for day-of registration.

11:00 AM Kid's Run

Please arrive by 10:30 for day-of registration.

12:00 PM Family Run

Please arrive by 11:30 for day-of registration.

The Mud Run is...

A 1/4 mile marvelously messy obstacle course where kids (4+) and adults navigate pits, tunnels, waterfalls and other muddy challenges in an untimed race to the finish line! This year's Mud Run will be Sunday, June 3.

Why Mud?

KCDC believes in the importance of sensory play for people of all ages to build connections in the brain that facilitate learning. The mud run lets participants get into the kind of play kids don't get often enough: the opportunity to touch, grab and roll around in mud!

Mud Run registration...

Mud Run registrations are $27 ($25 for KCDC members). Registrations before May 15 include a Mud Run t-shirt and swag bag. All proceeds from this event support KCDC in our mission to create rich, diverse museum experiences for every child.

Mud Run FAQs

I’ve never run a mud run, what can I expect?

Expect to get muddy! The obstacles include a sprinkler waterfall, climbing, tunnels/pits to crawl through, mud pies on your head and of course—mud pits! While we encourage you to try each obstacle, if it is more fun for you to skip it, we won’t tell. Our course is tough, but we’re all about the fun!

How old do runners have to be? Can I run with my child?

The Mud Run is for runners 4 years old and up. One adult is required to run (mud-free) alongside children ages 4-6 at no additional charge. If adults would like to participate and get messy right along with their children, they can register for the family mud run!

When will it start? When is packet pickup?

There are several different times to run the course. Kids may run at 10 AM or 11 AM, families run at noon. You will choose a start time when you register. There is no need to pick up anything prior to the event this year. Pick up your race packet upon arrival for your scheduled race on race day at the registration table. Registration opens 15 minutes before your scheduled race time.

What if it rains?

Great, more mud! However, if there is lightning, thunder or high winds we may cancel. In the event of cancellation for any reason, there will be no refund of the registration fee.

What should I wear?

Whatever you would like! We recommend lace up sneakers, clothes or a costume that can get extremely messy and muddy and pulled-back hair.

Will you have a way for us to rinse off?

We will have hoses manned by staff to help rinse off muddy runners, but only if you want to! The Discovery Center will be closed and no guests will be allowed inside. We recommend you bring a towel to dry off, a change of shoes and socks and a plastic bag to hold the dirty muddy things.

Will photos be taken?

Yes, lots! So put your race number on the front of your shirt or costume. All images of runners become the sole property of KCDC. KCDC has the right to use images for promotion.

Are there prizes?

Every participant who registers before May 15 gets a swag bag, t-shirt and unforgettable experience. The course is not timed and there are no awards or prizes for winners.

Can I volunteer?

Sure! We appreciate the help and will need many people. Volunteers must contact us prior to the event. Contact the Discovery Center at volunteers@kansasdiscovery.org or 785.783.8300.

Discovery Kindergarten

Discovery Kindergarten is a free, fun resource for all incoming kindergarten students, attending any school.

 

Camp Kindergarten helps kids get ready for school! This year Camp Kindergarten will be offered June 21, 28 and July 12, 19 from 4-6PM at the Discovery Center.  An additional session is available at Hillcrest Community Center on July 21st from 4-6 PM. Children and their caregiver(s) will join in a simulated kindergarten classroom with teachers and learn how to prepare for the first day at school! Caregivers will get tips on developing skills at home.

Register for a Camp Kindergarten session here: Camp K Registration

 

Camp Kindergarten - Recorded Session

Discovery Kindergarten es un recurso gratuito y divertido para todos los estudiantes entrantes de kindergarten que asisten a cualquier escuela.

 

¡El Campamento Kindergarten ayuda a que los niños estén listos para la escuela! Este año el Campamento Kindergarten será ofrecido en línea por medio de Zoom y telefono. Los niños, y adultos a su cargo, participarán en un salón de clases virtual con maestros que les enseñarán como estar preparados para el primer día de clases. También recibirán consejos de como ayudar a desarrollar las abilidades escolares de los niños en casa.

La inscripción ya está cerrada, pero hay disponible una versión grabada de Campamento Kindergarten.

 

El Campamento Kindergarten - Sesión Grabada

The Discovery Center thanks the following community partners for their support of Discovery Kindergarten. Students from all area districts are welcome.

Music Builds Awesome Brains + Join us on Music Monday!

Encouraging a child's love of music can lead to a lifetime of joyful songs. It's serious fun!

Music Builds Awesome Brains + Join us on Music Monday!

Parents often enjoy sharing music with children. We hum treasured lullabies from the first moments we hold our babies. As children grow, they bring us into dance parties and silly songs of their own making, creating instruments from any household object they can get their little hands on. We now know that in addition to being fun, music helps children develop math, language and reading skills, all while encouraging physical activity. Participating with peers and parents when making music helps children develop social skills.

Research has confirmed what parents and educators see everyday: music helps kids learn. A five-year study from the The Brain and Creativity Institute (BCI) at the University of Southern California found that early music experiences, specifically learning to play an instrument, accelerate brain development in young children. The children who received music instruction showed strengths in language development, speech perception and reading skills. They were able to identify differences and similarities in melodies, showing increased maturity in the part of the brain that processes sound.

Tapping into the brain benefits of music doesn't have to mean dropping cash on an instrument and lessons. At home, a great way to play with music is to collect everyday objects from around the house to make instruments: pots and pans, plastic bottles and food containers, boxes, blocks, sticks—anything that is safe for your child to play with and can make an interesting sound. Rub the objects together, tap them with spoons, sing, dance and be silly. Introduce your favorite songs alongside your child's old favorites. Change words to songs your child knows (Twinkle, Twinkle Little Kangaroo!) to get your child laughing. Seeing you having fun with music is a great way to encourage your child to enjoy songs.

Outside the home, seek out new musical experiences to enjoy together. In recognition of the valuable role of music in the lives of young children, the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) is celebrating Music Monday on April 16, 2018 during their annual Week of the Young Child. Locally, the Kansas Children's Discovery Center and community partners are hosting a free outdoor concert that evening. Please join us!

Encouraging a child's love of music can lead to a lifetime of joyful songs. It's serious fun!

Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Funds Sensational Sensory Play

Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Funds Sensational Sensory Play

The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation awarded the Kansas Children's Discovery Center a $5,000 charitable contribution to support our Sensational Sensory Play initiative this morning. The Sensational Sensory Play initiative is designed to encourage families to explore sensory-based activities that promote STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math) concepts. The initiative is a collection of educational sensory programs targeted for different family interests and age ranges: The Serious Fun Mud Run, Art Table, and Wee Wednesday.

We know sensory play is essential to brain development, allowing children to build nerve connections in the brain’s pathways while utilizing all of their senses to learn. While participating in sensory play, children’s natural desire to explore is stimulated. They use scientific processes while playing, exploring, creating and investigating.

The Nation gave a total of $76,900 to local nonprofit organizations as a part of their quarterly sponsorship. The Nation website explains: 

"The Nation continually strives to build relationships with neighboring communities in which we live and do business. We strive to be responsible citizens. One way we achieve this goal is by sponsoring community events and organizations."

KCDC thanks Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation for their generous support. 

Mother’s Day Thank You | Sunday, May 13, 2018

Week of the Young Child: Free Outdoor Concert | Monday, April 16, 2018

Celebrate Week of the Young Child with a free outdoor concert for all ages at the Kansas Children's Discovery Center, hosted by the Kansas Association for the Education of Young Children on Monday, April 16, 2018 from 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM.

Join us for live music kids and adults will want to dance to, including the Topeka High School Drumline and Preteen Spirit from the Live Music Institute.

Musicians perform outdoors in Kansas Children's Discovery Center's 4.5 acre Nature Explore Outdoor Classroom. Bring a blanket and enjoy a night of music exploration for the whole family.

Westar Energy Supports Family STEAM Nights

Westar Energy Supports Family STEAM Nights

On April 3, Westar Energy presented a check for $14,804 to The Kansas Children's Discovery Center to support making the museum accessible for local families.

Family STEAM Nights invite children from the Topeka Rescue Mission, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Topeka, Manhattan and Lawrence, and Boys and Girls Club of Topeka to come to the museum with their caregivers or mentors at no cost to their families. Participants enjoy educational play in KCDC’s nine permanent exhibits and 4.5 acre certified Nature Explore Outdoor Classroom. Special programs designed by KCDC educators help children explore science, technology, engineering, art and math (STEAM) goals. Participants also share a meal together during their time at KCDC. Family STEAM Nights brought a total of 233 participants to KCDC in April.

Westar Energy has provided grant funding to the Kansas Children’s Discovery Center to make eight of these nights possible over the course of the next year, in addition to sponsorship of KCDC’s Enchanted Evening Gala, a fundraiser to support all KCDC programs. The grant enables the Kansas Children’s Discovery Center to pursue its goal of being accessible to everyone and gives children the opportunity to participate in high quality STEAM learning opportunities with family or a mentor at the Kansas Children’s Discovery Center.

Westar Energy Foundation has been a long-time supporter of KCDC Cares programs. Since its inception in 1990, the Westar Energy Foundation has awarded more than $20 million to civic and charitable organizations dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for Kansans.