These are a super healthy snack idea and great for a hot day when kids need to cool down with something fresh and revitalising. You will find this healthy and fun recipe here. For younger kids, making a sandwich can be a really fun thing to do. Let them choose their filling but a good option could be peanut butter with strawberries for a healthy and delicious twist on an age-old favourite, or perhaps some slices of apple or mashed banana.
Try to use brown or wholemeal bread where possible. Click here to see all of the different ways you can make a healthy peanut butter and jam sandwich. This is a special treat — best enjoyed in a secret hiding spot or a newly built den!
Why not use it as a reward for a week of good behaviour or for tidying rooms regularly? Make sure your kids have lots of fruit and vegetables during their meals and expect them to have a little extra energy after this particular snack! Image: Steem It. It is important to let children learn about how their food grows and how to eat healthily and sustainably.
Growing your own produce is a great way to expose children to different foods and flavours. Here is a quick and easy guide you can follow. So the kids have been cooking up a storm and are well fed with healthy and nutritious snacks. What now? Time to get creative? There are so many things you can do with children and they love arts and crafts — whatever age they are. It helps to encourage them to think creatively, to express their emotions and feelings and to come up with great ideas.
This is a really good activity for engaging older children and for helping them with fine motor skills. Why not let your kids watch a video like this explaining how to make the bracelets first then see if they can follow the instructions step by step? From folding the aeroplane, to decorating it in whatever style they wish, to having races with friends flying them down the stairs.
Try watching a video first to kick things off or by following these step-by-step instructions. Kids often get worried about going to sleep and nightmares can be pretty scary. Whether your child is a deep sleeper or always wide awake, making dream catchers will help you all head towards a peaceful night of rest. There are a number of different ways to make dream catchers so check out some of the options here.
Image: Crafts By Amanda. This simple activity only requires cardboard and wool, with a bit of adult help to pull it all together. Check out this article about the different methods of making pom poms. For an extra challenge, get your child to make several pom poms and turn them into a garland that they can hang in their rooms! Image: Modern Parents Messy Kids. Why not get your kids inspired with some brown paper, a whole load of coloured pens and pencils, and stickers galore?
Image: Art Ranked. Paint can be a very creative way for children to express themselves with different colours and shapes. Although a potentially messy activity, correct preparation can make it much easier and a fun activity for all! Here are 20 easy painting ideas for toddlers. Dried pasta is an ideal tool to use in keeping your kids creatively entertained during the holidays.
Get a child friendly glue and let them stick dried pasta pieces onto a piece of card to create a gorgeous pasta portrait. You can get all sorts of different shaped pasta — from bows and swirls to tubes and lines. Click here for more pasta art inspiration , including how to make the pasta mandalas featured above!
Image: Stepping Stone SA. Playdough is a fun activity for young kids who are discovering their senses. Playdough can be moulded into all different shapes and sizes and are especially good for toddlers and younger children as they discover touch.
For children who want more of a challenge, you can get them to turn their playdough into an animal or an object they would find around the house. Here is our easy guide to making playdough. From collecting them and finding their favourite one, to painting them and creating little characters from them.
This is yet another budget friendly and easy way to keep kids entertained and help them to create a memory from their holidays. Image: Bright Star Kids. You can either set a theme — like fairy houses or bedrooms, or simply see what they create inside it.
Some kids will create a detailed under water aquarium whilst others might make a home for toy cars. Image: First Palette. Next time you go out for a walk or visit your local park, collect some leaves from the nearby trees for leaf printing at home! Paint one side of the leaf with a light coat of acrylic paint and press it onto a piece of paper to print the leaf.
Repeat as many times as your child wants with different colours and different leafs. Fill up the page with leaf prints or use one or two leaves to create a shape and then get your child to complete the picture by drawing a scene around it once the paint has dried. Games are a great way of passing time during the holidays. Whether your kids like making up their own games with their own sets of rules, or you generally stick to the tried and tested favourites, make sure you make time to play during the holidays.
Combining games with physical movement and exercise is the perfect way to tire kids out and ensure they fall asleep happy and healthy. Try and keep your kids active, always scheduling in regular rest breaks and keeping them hydrated as you go. Remember this one from when you were a child?
Kids and adults both love to play charades. It can have you all in fits of laughter as you try to act out things whilst everyone else guesses. Image: Playgroup NSW. Turn up the volume on some of your kids favourite songs and get them dancing enthusiastically around the room.
This is a great one for coordination, counting and general fun. You can create the hopscotch outline using either masking tape or electrical tape — or by any other creative means you can think of. Get your children counting each step and carefully landing within the lines to develop good motor skills. Click here for a quick refresher on how to DIY your own indoor hopscotch. This is another excellent way to burn energy.
Get your kids to help build and set up the obstacle course, creating it exactly how they want it. Then get the moving. You can easily use furniture that you have already — ducking under chairs and climbing over coffee tables — or you can purchase some simple items too such as cones or rope ladders.
Families Magazine have created a great guide to setting up a backyard obstacle course that will keep the kids entertained for hours! Make a list of things that they have to do such as; touch your toes, or jump up and down. Read out the instructions one by one alternating between starting with Simon Says or not. However a fun alternative is to get a tray with a number of different objects on it such as an orange or a set of keys.
Ask the kids to remember all the items on the tray — give them five minutes to do so. Then cover the tray and ask the kids to write down every item they remember.
This is a brilliant way to get children working on their focus and to exercise their minds during the holidays! If you would like to extend this game further, why not involve the children in creating their own memory cards by either drawing or pasting special characters? Click here to see a great DIY memory game you can replicate at home! Bowling is a fantastic way for your children to practice their hand-eye coordination as well as their aiming abilities.
Using regular household items such as used plastic water bottles, you can involve the children in making their own bowling set by filling the bottles with coloured water or sand to use as targets!
Image: Crock Pots and Flip Flops. There are lots of putt putt courses around, but on a rainy day, you might prefer to stay indoors and make one yourself! Use a long cardboard cylinder from the middle of a wrapping paper roll and attach one end to a strong piece of cardboard to make a putt putt club.
From there it is time for your child to get creative! Get them to use their toys and household objects to create different courses around the house or in the backyard. Before school care is a walk-in session, with no booking required.
Please complete step one before before attending. The accounts do not carry over, but you merge them later. If you already have a child at Prince Alfred College OSHC, enrol using the same email address and the accounts will automatically be linked.
Enrol here. Step two: Complete a booking form for the days required in OSHC Click on the link below to make a permanent booking for after school care. A seperate booking form should be completed for each child. To make a casual booking, please email OSHC pac. Enrol now. Monday to Friday, 8am to 6pm during the school holidays.
Closed on public holidays and for two weeks over Christmas. These Crunchy Apple Boats are super easy to make and they are sure to bring a smile to the face of any apple fan. Every kid loves science!
Science activities help children to be resourceful. They learn how to set goals, plan and solve problems. We think that science is ideal to generate curiosity in young minds. Our Science at Home Guide brings you through a complete kids holiday program and this Floating Ink experiment requires just three ingredients:. Staying fit is extremely important to promote a positive mood, burn off some energy and to have some active fun.
Vacation care program ideas will generally include some form of physical activity and our Fitness at Home Guide is suitable for all fitness levels. Make 5—10 separate lines of tape, each about a foot apart, on your floor or carpet.
Kids holiday activities are plentiful with our downloadable guides and Rocketeers program. Be sure to check out the full schedule of activities that will combat boredom these school holidays.
In the spirit of reconciliation, Camp Australia acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their Elders, past, present and emerging and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.
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