Showing posts with label ymca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ymca. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Which Y Program is Best for Your Baby – and Why


Winter may be over, but your baby can’t tell spring fever from cabin fever if he or she can’t go outside. They’ll scream, they’ll stomp, they’ll do anything but tell you that they’re not hungry or they don’t want to see the “Dance” episode of Yo Gabba Gabba! for the hundredth time  – they’re just bored. They want slides, ball pits, moon bounces, other kids, and honestly you’d rather give them those things than worry that they’re watching too much television.

So while summer is the best time for playgrounds and parks, parents may want to check out some other options to get their tots through rainy days.  The YMCAs in Phoenixville and Spring Valley offer quite a few programs for kids too young for preschool that will let them have fun before a very long nap time.

The second spring session begins on April 28, so there isn’t much room left on the class lists. Still, if you’re interested in getting your child involved, here are a few programs you may want to watch for in the early summer:

Pee Wee Playground

Think of this as an indoor playground with a supervisor. The kids have a full array of obstacles at their disposal, including a ball pit (at Spring Valley), slides, balls, tunnels, and cushions. The only thing they don’t have is a structure – no songs or circle time. It is a free-for-all where kids (and their attention) wander freely.

Speaking of free, that’s exactly what this class is for full members of the YMCA. It also fills up incredibly fast, so if you want your child here you’ll have to get to the membership desk within minutes of the registration start time.               

Gym Tots

The best thing about this class is that, if your child sticks with gymnastics, he or she will be able to say, “I’ve been doing this since I was a toddler.”

Gym Tots has a little more structure than the Pee Wee Playground, in that each session begins and ends with songs sung in a circle. In between, it’s all free time. The toys tend to be more gymnastically oriented – in other words, more trampolines, ramps, and balance beams – but again the kids have free reign to do what they want to or don’t want to. All the parents have to do is keep up (which is a workout itself) and offer a helping hand when the child attempts the big steps or narrow rails.

My Parent and Me Gym

And now we get to the most structured of the toddler classes. After some free time, the kids start class by singing and dancing in a circle, play games with a parachute, and get a wide assortment of instruments for a musical interlude before ending with “Ring Around the Rosie.”

 Ideally this will teach the kids to follow a routine, cooperate, and even share, but how well they actually do that varies by age and crankiness level. It’s not uncommon for parents to have to sit out an activity or two to calm a crier, so don’t be embarrassed if it happens to you.

Sign Language for Infants/Toddlers

If you’ve heard the stories about how teaching a toddler sign can do anything from boost IQs to improve temper tantrums, you may want to check this class out. I learned from experience that it’s best taken with an infant or child that won’t crawl/run around so much that you’re spending more time chasing than signing.  Even though it’s helpful to learn the sign for “come here,” it doesn’t work when your child is too busy looking through another parent’s backpack to notice you.

For best results, you should get some books or DVDs on sign language to refresh what you learned in class at home. It also helps to dedicate some time when the child can’t look away – such as when he/she is in a high chair or ready for bedtime - to practice the signs. The class will teach you how to sign out such classic books as “Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?” and “Goodnight Moon” so you can add a kinetic element to your storytelling.

Shrimp/Kipper Swim Classes

Getting your child accustomed to water early in life can keep them from being “chicken of the sea” as adults. This very friendly class has parents help their children through the fundamentals of kicking, grabbing water, lying on their backs, and playing with toys. They won’t be Michael Phelps at the end of the session, but even he had to start somewhere.

Parents who are a little hydrophobic can rest assured that their children don’t need to be submerged any more than necessary to blow bubbles – and they don’t even have to do that. Since your little ones will always be in your arms, waterwings or other floatation devices aren’t necessary, but swim diapers definitely are.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Top Five Kid Friendly Activities in the Area

First, let me sincerely apologize for letting my readers down in the updating department.  Working full-time and baby creates very little free time to blog about all the fun things we only get to do on the weekends.  My husband, who is my daddy around town during the day, keeps me updated on all the cool stuff for kids that I'm missing out on.

Here's the TOP FIVE KID FRIENDLY ACTIVITIES we have given the "thumbs up" to in kid friendly events:

1. PHX Library's "First Steps to Reading" (formerly "Baby Story Time") program.  (I've included a link to the PHX Library Kid's Calendar to the right and posted some, but not all, of the events they have going on right now).  It's the same fun with books, music, and parachutes that I reported on before.

2.  The Freedom Valley YMCAs Currently he's taking the baby to free "Peewee Playground" on Tuesday afternoons and "Parent and Me Gym" at on Thursdays at the Spring Valley Y.  He takes her to "Baby Sign Language" on Wednesdays and Swim Classes on Saturday at the PHX Y.  (Yes, our baby is very active).  Click here to find a YMCA kids' program you like.  On a side note the Spring Valley Y has a SHALLOW INDOOR POOL for kids.

3. Elmwood Park Zoo- Who knew that Norristown had a zoo???  Not me, until a Groupon showed me fun practically in my backyard.  While this place certainly deserves it's own blog post...who knows when I'll get to that.  They have a variety of cool animals, educational programs for all ages, have an extensive playground, host birthday parties, and you can even camp out there if you are brave!

4. Franklin Commons  - It's rainy, you're hungry, and you need an indoor place to set your child loose to alleviate boredom.  Franklin Commons is your sanctuary.  For those who haven't been there, it's a "mixed-use educational, corporate and recreational facility" located on the north-side of PHX and houses two daycares, Renaissance Academy, a very nice bistro with a very nice indoor play yard (complete with toys) for your little one to explore.  This is the place to meet for a playdate when no one wants to host at their own house.

5. Please Touch Museum- I know it's in Philly, but it's seriously close enough and cool enough to risk 76 traffic and have some fun. Plus, I guarantee your kid will sleep like a rock afterwards.  See all about it in my previous post!

So, now that I've updated the blog, I can put my guilt to rest.  As always, please leave comments of fun places we can review for future blog posts!

Friday, July 8, 2011

YMCA Little Swimmers

I've been a bit busier this summer than anticipated, however, I have found time to get baby girl into the PHX YMCA's swim lessons.  Our particular class is very low key (only 2-3 kids) and the instructor is very good with children.  I was nervous (and still am) about the baby drowning, but I guess the lessons are as much for the parents to learn how to be less neurotic in the water with their kids, as it is for the kids to get used to being in a big pool. 

Classes are about a half hour and involve a number of nursery rhymes adapted to be about swimming.  They learn about kicking their feet, paddling their arms, and blowing bubbles in the water.  We play hokey pokey, motor boats, ring around the rosy, and London bridges.  At the end of the lesson, the instructor brings out a basket full of toys for the kids to play with. 

The only warning:  family changing rooms don't have changing tables for babies.  You'll have to use the little girls or the little boys locker rooms. 

If you aren't up for paying for a lesson, the outdoor Baker pool offers a wonderful toddler pool that ranges from a few inches of water to two feet.  There are also tons of pool toys floating for the little ones to enjoy.  I like being able to let the little one run around the grass outside and despite how gross it may be, I can discretely change her on the lawn without having to mess around in the changing rooms.

Well the baby wants to type her own blog post, so I gotta run!  Enjoy your swim lesson!