Are you looking for something to do with your toddler this summer? There are tons of locations in Pittsburgh for Mom/Dad and Me Classes. There are also tons of options such as music and gymnastics for you and your little one. Keep reading and check out KidsBurgh for more information.
If kids sometimes get "separation anxiety," parents can suffer from the
opposite. Call it "eager inseparability": the feeling that you want to
do everything with your kid. Today, parents and kids -- not to mention
other caregivers, grandparents and dads -- can team with their toddler
or teen for just about any activity. Some of the best have been around
for a long time; others would seem to be impossible on their face.
Here's how, and where, to pull them off.
At Gymkhana Gymnastics in
Point Breeze's Factory complex, combining fun and physical activity
starts as early as possible. There's the Toddler Gym, for kids four to
16 months, which includes a "silly pool" with no water but bunches of
objects for kids to explore, and the Mini Gym, for 17- to 30-month-olds
-- all in a separate space with appropriately sized slides, steps, a
tree house and other gym equipment.
My Grownup and Me classes, for those two and a half to three and a half
years old, are for those "who simply aren't ready to separate from the
parents or their parents aren't ready to separate from the child, or the
child has special needs," says Liza Barbour, Gymkhana's administrator.
All the programs offer exercises leading toward gymnastics skills as
well as activities building fine and gross motor skills, from
manipulating textures and colors on boards to climbing, crawling up and
down equipment, log rolling or somersaulting, as well as songs to build a
child's rhythm, movement and stretching habits and that all-important
routine.
"That's a stepping stone into our gymnastics program," says Barbour.
"It's a nice transition because they have their adult there for
guidance, but they are starting to use the cycle of equipment."
Parent and kid programs at the Carnegie Libraries of Pittsburgh have
long served as the school-before-school, the school-after-school and
even school-when-there-is-no-school -- but don't tell your kids.
"Our programs are purposeful and designed toward the development stage
of the children," says Mary Beth Parks, coordinator of children's
services. "They help children with school readiness [and] are
intentionally designed to enhance literacy skills, in a fun,
interactive, engaging manner. We hope to create life-long learning."
A literate life begins for the youngest kids with Baby and Me's 20- to
30-minute programs of hearing (and moving to) nursery rhymes and
stories. Terrific Tales for Toddlers, for kids 18-36 months plus their
grownups, are next. Then it's time for the Family PlayShop, which offers
one-on-one sessions for kids, their guardians and siblings up to age 4
(although they can be as young as 6 months). Across four to five weeks,
for one hour per week, a librarian and a community-resource professional
can answer questions about your own child's needs and offer
developmentally appropriate materials, toys and activities.
There are other pre-K programs for kids 3-5 years old and their
caregivers, all designed to build language and listening skills,
curiosity, imagination and self-image. KinderPrep gets kids learning
topics covered under the Pennsylvania Learning Standards -- called the
Common Core -- while Family Study Buddies prepares kids for good
homework habits. The Imagination Builders: Building Program turns
building blocks into tools for developing motor, math and communication
skills.
Just next door at the Carnegie Museums of Art and Natural History,
three- and four-year-olds can go on the museums' PreSchool Play Dates
with their folks. They include art making and games right inside museum
galleries.
These 90-minute programs have a different theme each time, in a
different gallery each week. The summer session of Play Date starts in
June.
"It's a great way to introduce your child to what it means to be in a
museum," says Marilyn M. Russell, curator of education for the Carnegie
Museum of Art. The classes tell kids what they need to notice -- colors
and shapes -- and helps them make up stories about what they see.
For parents who want to do more heavy lifting -- well, light lifting anyway -- there are Mommy and Me yoga classes in several places. At Shining Light
in Lawrenceville, kids from six weeks to three years old join their
moms for classes. They can just drop in or buy more classes at a
discount.
Participants experience "a little bit of yoga for babies, a little bit
of yoga for moms, a lot of good social activities for both," says owner
Deena Blumenfeld. The average of 45 minutes of physical activity each
hour helps "to put moms' bodies back together after childbirth. It's
geared toward beginners, so you do not have to have any yoga courses.
It's an open class, a fun class, a class that works on flexibility --
not just on flexibility in our bodies but on our emotional make-up."
Moms have their babies in their laps or arms during some positions.
Other exercises involve moving the legs of babies to songs. Repetition
is really important for children, so they learn what to expect, says
Blumenfeld. "We try to keep the pace steady so that everyone gets
something out of it. About the third or fourth week of class, the babies
are, 'Ah, I know what is coming next.'
"If the baby doesn't seem to be having fun," she adds, "or sleeps the
whole way through class, that's okay -- maybe they'll get to yoga next
week."
The first class costs $10, and future classes cost $15 each. Moms and
kids don't have to come to consecutive classes. Some pre-natal yoga
students even come back to finish their classes as moms.
At two of Schoolhouse Yoga's
four locations, Squirrel Hill and the North Hills, the Mommy and Me
Yoga classes have similar prices and deals. Owner Leta Koontz says her
classes are open to moms with infants to five year olds.
"The mothers may actually hold the baby and use the baby as a weight,"
says Koontz. Kids often enjoy being placed on a body part that has to
move as part of a yoga exercise, she adds; the older kids like assisting
mom with a pose or a stretch: "The kids love crawling on their moms and
'helping' them.".
"If you're looking for a really relaxing, quiet yoga class, you should
probably get a babysitter," she concludes. "But if you want to have fun
with your kids and meet other moms -- they really love the class."
0comments:
Post a Comment