A day spent indoors doesn’t have to be a wasted one. There are plenty of ways your children can engage their imaginations, unleash their creativity, and get their energy out while remaining indoors. From boredom-busting crafts to art projects, consider this a perfect menu of options for time indoors. Most of these are easy on the wallet, too, and can be set up with items you already have around the house.
Get creative with boxes
If there’s a pile of cardboard waiting to be broken down for the recycling, pull it out and turn it into a storefront, a puppet theatre, a rocket ship—whatever the imagination desires! Kids will get a kick out of decorating the boxes with markers and any other art supplies around the house, and then it can serve as a backdrop for pretend play.
Draw out a comic book
Format some blank pages with comic book panels, and let them fill it in with their own fantastical ideas. They can come up with and design their own original characters, or make new stories with some of their favourites.
Learn a new hobby
Studies show that cosy hobbies can be beneficial for mental health—at the very least, it couldn’t hurt to try one. Learning to sew, knit, crochet, or cross-stitch keeps hands busy, quiets the mind, and sometimes offer a way in to a new social circle.
Preserve memories with a scrapbook
With phones attached to our cameras, we all take a million photos—and leave them in our camera roll. Get those family memories off of screens and somewhere they can be shared in person by making a scrapbook. Kids can help decorate the pages with stickers, fancy paper, photo borders, and whatever else they can think of.
Tell riddles
This is one sure to get their brains working overtime! When they try to work out riddle, they’ll be sharpening their logic, critical thinking, and deductive reasoning skills (and they’ll feel very smart when they find the answer).
Go on a hunt
Hide a prize in the house and write a series of clues that lead to it. Or, make a list of household items to find and see who can find them all first. You can come up with a theme for the hunt, like the colours of the rainbow, to make it more interesting (and easier for kids to figure out).
Make a movie
You don’t need a special video camera to make home movies anymore—everyone has the equipment on their phones. Whether they’re looking to make a documentary about family life, a fiction film with a cast of friends and family, or a stop-motion animated movie, they can try their hand at filming on their phone and using simple editing software to stitch it together into a short movie.
Create a craft museum
Pull out the paints, crayons, markers, pipe cleaners, googly eyes, and any other DIY materials you have around the house. At the end, hang them on the wall like they are in a museum and invite “visitors” (family members) to come see the show.
Do a learning activity
Taking on a fun, hands-on learning activity for kids is entertaining and educational at the same time. They can also help your child practice concepts in reading, math, social studies and more.
Have a paper airplane competition
Paper airplanes: They’re not just for bored kids in class anymore. Kids can experiment with how different ways of folding airplanes affect their flight patterns. Then, they can put what they’ve learned to the test by cutting holes in cardboard to make targets to fly through.
Ask questions
When you’re all home inside together, it might be time to try having those big conversations we’re often too busy to have. It’s hard to get those rolling, but it often helps to start by asking questions. What are your hopes for the future? What do you want to know about your family history? What’s your best talent, or something you wish you were better at? If you want to get the ball rolling, you can even start with sillier queries, like what superpower they would choose.
Host an open mic night
It doesn’t matter if you have an official karaoke machine or not. All that matters is you can hit the high notes when it counts. So, what’s your go-to, belt-it-out-to-the-rafters song?
Put on a play
Time for them to step into the spotlight! Kids can act out their favourite scenes from movies, TV shows, or musicals—or, if they’re feeling truly ambitious, they can try writing a play or musical of their own. Depending on how creative they’re feeling, they can also pull together costumes or make scenery.
Make a friendship bracelet
You might not have made a friendship bracelet since your summer camp days, but the craft is back and hotter than ever. Break out those embroidery threads and teach your kids the art of making stripes, chevrons, and spiral staircases.
Start an indoor garden
You don’t even need empty planters to get the garden growing—an old egg carton will do the trick at first. To make it more of a STEM activity, give kids journals so they can take notes on what they’ve planted and keep track of their garden’s progress. They can even draw the heights of their seedlings as they grow. Bonus: Plant basil seeds or other herbs, and you’ll have delicious ingredients for a cooking project.
Host a comedy show
Practicing a comedy set together can help with public speaking, as well as timing, clear speech, and self-confidence. Have kids create a set of their five favorite jokes and let them put on a show.
Bake and decorate
Indoor days are the perfect time to try and get creative in the kitchen. Whip up some kind of make-your-own dessert bar by putting out toppings (frosting, sprinkles, M&Ms, etc.) that kids can add to either a cupcake or ice cream sundae.
Break out the board games
It’s the oldest idea in the book, but if you really want some screen-free family time, old-fashioned board games still do the trick. Get your competitive spirit up and get ready to play.
Make a sensory bin
Fill a bin with rice and other treasures, plus a few toys, and you have yourself an instant hit with the little ones. Kids can scoop and pour the rice or dig through to find the prizes you’ve hidden (in this example, they had fake bugs, a magnifying glass, and tweezers to “collect” them). Just be warned that you’ll probably have to vacuum after.
Top your own pizza
Get everyone involved in dinner-making by setting out personal pizza dough for each member of the family. Everyone gets to add their own toppings! Bonus: You won’t have kids turning up their noses and saying, “yuck” about the meal you’ve made.
Design an indoor obstacle course
This activity is great for young ones working on their gross motor coordination or older ones who might need to get some energy out. Set up an obstacle course in as many rooms of the house as you dare. Cardboard boxes can transform into tunnels to crawl through. You can tie strings around furniture and pretend that they’re laser beams that kids have to step over or crawl under. (Pool noodles also work.) And you can use indoor stepping stones, pillows or cushions and invoke The Floor Is Lava rules. See who in the family has the fastest time getting through the obstacles, and then see if anyone can break the record.
Play pretend
Pretend play, especially, helps kids with the development of self-control, self-regulation and social-emotional skills. So, set up an imaginary store, put out a pretend tea party, attend a fake school, transform into superheroes, act out your favourite fairy tales or enter into a new world of their own making. They’ll be better off for it.
Bring the outdoors in
Whether it’s forts made of blankets and pillows or play tents, you can approximate the camping experience without having to deal with mosquitoes or mud. Don’t forget to make s’mores!
Leave out a jigsaw puzzle
Jigsaw puzzles are great because everyone can do them on their own schedules—just leave one out on the table, and the family can float by and try to fit in a few new pieces whenever they have a few minutes to spare. Plus, studies show that puzzles improve collaboration and cooperation skills.
Build the best-ever blanket fort
Then spend the day inside it reading, snoozing or having snacks. If you really want to take your structures to the next level, Crazy Forts is a set of rods and connectors that let you build higher, more intricate works of architecture. You can either use them for buildings of your own imagination, or use their guides to domes, castles and rockets. You just have to put your own sheets over the rods. It even glows in the dark!
Have a dance party
Hey, they need to move their little bodies even if they can’t go to the playground. Choose a playlist together, blast the music, and let them shake the sillies out.
Clean out a closet
Or a storage room, or a toy chest, or anywhere else that clutter has been accumulating. They may balk at first, but on an indoor day, you’ll have a captive audience—and then they just might get into it. Put out three boxes: one for items to keep, one for items to toss, and one for items to donate. In the end, they might feel good knowing that some of the stuff they don’t use anymore will get a second life in a new home.
Attempt a tricky brain teaser
Otherwise known as indoor activities that make kids go, “Hmmm.” Put your heads together and try to untangle some of the most head-scratching problems that have made their way around the internet.
Make a time capsule
Grab a box and have kids fill it with photos, drawings, memories, treasures, and musings—then find a place to stash it so it can be opened again in a year. (Remember to set a calendar alert that includes the details of where you placed it.) Kids can write about their favourite books, TV shows, and games and see if the answers match a year later. Or, they can write about their wishes, hopes, and goals and see if any of it came true. If you don’t want to gather a whole box full of mementos, you can just have the kids write letters to themselves to be opened again a year later.
Source: Good Housekeeping
Image Credit: ShutterStock
