MSU Extension in Roosevelt County
Helping Children Learn to Care About Their Environment
We all know that it can be difficult, although not impossible, to teach an old dog
                                       new ways. It is much easier to start out with healthy eating habits and an active
                                       lifestyle than it is to transform a confirmed couch potato into a picture of fitness.
                                       Healthy habits begin very early in life. Parents, grandparents, and other caregivers
                                       have many opportunities to help young children get a head start by learning to make
                                       healthy choices for themselves and healthy choices for the planet too.
“In our own family and our child care facility, we incorporate personal and environmental
                                       health into the rhythm of every day,” says Sonnie Atwood, mother of two and co-owner
                                       of Organic Sprouts Home Day Care in Missoula. “ We use children’s natural curiosity
                                       and innate creativity to build a foundation for a lifetime of healthy choices. The
                                       vocabulary of smart environmental choices, like reuse, recycle, and compost, can become
                                       everyday words for young children.”
Ms. Atwood shared her creative approach to reusing items (previously considered trash)
                                       with child care providers in a Making Something Out of Nothing workshop, offered this winter by Child Care Resources in Missoula. Perfect for today’s tight
                                       economy, the class showed providers and parents how to reuse ordinary household materials
                                       for preschool games, sensory activities, crafts projects, and individual artistic
                                       expression - all building a foundation for success in school.
According to Sonnie Atwood, almost anything can be reused for arts and crafts projects.
                                       “We often send wish lists home with the children. Some of our perennial favorites
                                       are magazines, maps, paper towel rolls, juice cans, and paint sample cards. Egg cartons
                                       are incredible. With a child’s imagination, some paint, and a little glue, they can
                                       become all kinds of critters (spiders and bugs are always popular), boats, helicopters,
                                       or trucks. With scissors and adult assistance, a plastic apple juice jug can be transformed
                                       into a hat, a horn to play, or a fun way to catch a ball, much like the game of jai
                                       alai. ”
Here are some simple steps to start going green with any young children in your family
                                       or circle of friends:
• Be a role model for smart environmental choices: Kids always pay attention to what adults are doing, especially the important adults
                                       in their lives. Carry water - for them and for yourself - in a reusable metal or safe
                                       plastic water bottle.
• Introduce a green vocabulary: Reduce, reuse, and recycle are words that kids can learn and learn to do. The new
                                       series of Little Green Books™ (visit your local library for reusable books) is a fun
                                       way to read about environmental adventures.
• Think outside the box about boxes: Let children be your green guides when thinking about how to reuse boxes before recycling
                                       them. Maybe the box can become a building block, a train car, a robot head, an animal
                                       mask, or even a guitar?
“In addition to our daily routines, like composting kitchen and table waste, we make
                                       environmental choices into games for children,” notes Ms. Atwood. “When we are done
                                       with some packaging material, we let the children help us decide how to reuse or recycle
                                       it. Sorting items for recycling into the proper bin is actually one of their favorite
                                       activities! And, as the days get longer and the soil warms, we are all looking forward
                                       to lots of gardening fun in the yard.”
The programs of the MSU Extension Service are available to all people regardless of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, and marital or family status. Issued in furtherance of cooperative extension work in agriculture and home economics, acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Dr. Douglas Steele, Vice Provost and Director, Extension Service, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717.
Montana State University Extension Service is an ADA/EO/AA/Veteran's Preference Employer and educational outreach provider.
