42 min

THRIVING Families During Uncertainty Parenting Our Future

    • Parenting

How do you thrive during a pandemic?  The Spring and Summer of 2020 has been unlike any other, and we don’t want to go into Fall the same way.  What if I told you there are things you can do to set your family up to THRIVE? 
My guest Meghan Fitzgerald has the answer!!  She is the Co-Founder of Tinkergarten and has spent her professional career educating children.  Meghan has seen how many families are struggling through the pandemic and she has put together a FREE Family Play Book to help families THRIVE even while we are still in the midst of the uncertain world we’re living in.
In this episode, we talk about what kids really need, how much time they actually need from us, and how to set your day up for success with quality time anchors.  We also talk about playing safely while social distancing and right now, in this moment in time, OK is good enough!  (YES!!) 
If you have never heard of Tinkergarten…run, don’t walk to your computer, and check them out!  What they have to offer is a GAME CHANGER FOR FAMILIES! 
 
About Meghan Fitzgerald
After 18 years as an educator, curriculum developer and school leader, Meghan has her dream gig—an entrepreneur/educator/mom who helps families everywhere, including hers, learn outside. Prior to Tinkergarten, Meghan worked as an Elementary School Principal, a Math/Science Specialist & and a teacher in public and private schools in NY, MA and CA. She earned a BA with majors in English and Psychology at Amherst College, an MS in Educational Leadership at Bank Street College, and was trained as a Forest School leader at Bridgwater College, UK. When she is with her kids, Meghan is that unapologetic mom who plays along with them in mud, dances in the pouring rain, and builds a darn good snow igloo with her bare hands.
 
Facebook and instagram: @tinkergarten.com
Pinterest @tinkergarten
www.tinkergarten.com
 
From the podcast:
 Go to  www.tinkergarten.com  for the FREE Parent Play Book and sign up for their mailing list.
 
Here are some tips on how to foster independent play with your kids:
 
Start out simple.  Use basic elements like an empty cardboard box, a sheet or blanket, or a bowl full of water give kids many, many more directions to go with their play than ready-made toys do, allowing kids to invent imaginative ways to use the materials and iterate as they go. 
 
 
 
Invite rather than direct. Kids play longer when they feel like they are the ones directing the action. To make them feel “in the lead”, prompt them with “Would you like to build a fort?” Or, you can just start doing something and that example will be enough to get kids to dive in. Once they are really into it, you can step away, and they’ll be much more likely to stay engaged for having entered in on their own terms. 
 
 
 
Set up an inviting environment. Create a play space that will invite or suggest a starting point for play. Check out Part 1 of Tinkergarten’s Independent Play Training Series: Setting up your play station.
 
 
 
Release new materials or “ingredients” slowly and only a few at a time. The fewer the toys, the more creative and focused kids become. Lots of different options can easily overwhelm kids, and they lose interest and focus. So, rather than bombard kids with too many choices right off the bat, hold onto new materials and release them one or two at a time, just when kids seem like they might need a boost in their play. 
 
 
 
Pick a...

How do you thrive during a pandemic?  The Spring and Summer of 2020 has been unlike any other, and we don’t want to go into Fall the same way.  What if I told you there are things you can do to set your family up to THRIVE? 
My guest Meghan Fitzgerald has the answer!!  She is the Co-Founder of Tinkergarten and has spent her professional career educating children.  Meghan has seen how many families are struggling through the pandemic and she has put together a FREE Family Play Book to help families THRIVE even while we are still in the midst of the uncertain world we’re living in.
In this episode, we talk about what kids really need, how much time they actually need from us, and how to set your day up for success with quality time anchors.  We also talk about playing safely while social distancing and right now, in this moment in time, OK is good enough!  (YES!!) 
If you have never heard of Tinkergarten…run, don’t walk to your computer, and check them out!  What they have to offer is a GAME CHANGER FOR FAMILIES! 
 
About Meghan Fitzgerald
After 18 years as an educator, curriculum developer and school leader, Meghan has her dream gig—an entrepreneur/educator/mom who helps families everywhere, including hers, learn outside. Prior to Tinkergarten, Meghan worked as an Elementary School Principal, a Math/Science Specialist & and a teacher in public and private schools in NY, MA and CA. She earned a BA with majors in English and Psychology at Amherst College, an MS in Educational Leadership at Bank Street College, and was trained as a Forest School leader at Bridgwater College, UK. When she is with her kids, Meghan is that unapologetic mom who plays along with them in mud, dances in the pouring rain, and builds a darn good snow igloo with her bare hands.
 
Facebook and instagram: @tinkergarten.com
Pinterest @tinkergarten
www.tinkergarten.com
 
From the podcast:
 Go to  www.tinkergarten.com  for the FREE Parent Play Book and sign up for their mailing list.
 
Here are some tips on how to foster independent play with your kids:
 
Start out simple.  Use basic elements like an empty cardboard box, a sheet or blanket, or a bowl full of water give kids many, many more directions to go with their play than ready-made toys do, allowing kids to invent imaginative ways to use the materials and iterate as they go. 
 
 
 
Invite rather than direct. Kids play longer when they feel like they are the ones directing the action. To make them feel “in the lead”, prompt them with “Would you like to build a fort?” Or, you can just start doing something and that example will be enough to get kids to dive in. Once they are really into it, you can step away, and they’ll be much more likely to stay engaged for having entered in on their own terms. 
 
 
 
Set up an inviting environment. Create a play space that will invite or suggest a starting point for play. Check out Part 1 of Tinkergarten’s Independent Play Training Series: Setting up your play station.
 
 
 
Release new materials or “ingredients” slowly and only a few at a time. The fewer the toys, the more creative and focused kids become. Lots of different options can easily overwhelm kids, and they lose interest and focus. So, rather than bombard kids with too many choices right off the bat, hold onto new materials and release them one or two at a time, just when kids seem like they might need a boost in their play. 
 
 
 
Pick a...

42 min