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Childcare

How a Childcare Can Help Reduce Kids’ Screen Time 

Screen time is something almost every parent worries about these days. Tablets, phones, and TVs seem to have a way of keeping kids calm, but too much screen time can be a problem. 

Here’s the good news: enrolling your little one in quality childcare can make a big difference. 

At Discovery Village – a trusted childcare for Sleepy Hollow families, we’ve seen how the right environment can naturally reduce children’s interest in screens. 


How Childcare Helps Balance Screen Time for Sleepy Hollow Families 

When children spend their day in a structured childcare setting, they’re too busy having fun to think about screens. 

In our Sleepy Hollow childcare, we focus on hands-on activities that keep your kids actually engaged, make them curious about real-world experiences through outdoor play games, and spend time with real-life friends. 

Our childcare in Sleepy Hollow, NY offers: 

  • Human connection
  • Physical activity
  • Real learning experiences 

We design units of exploration focused on children’s interests. While we track children’s academic and social-emotional growth, children experience it all as play. Units have included: space exploration, water, gardening, vehicles, creating our own restaurant, architecture, and so much more. Children in our childcare build with a range of materials including blocks, legos, and our favorite – cardboard boxes. They engage their artistic creativity with clay, paint, materials collected in nature, recyclables and more. Movement is central to our day with a wide range of sports, dance parties, yoga, and walks exploring nature. Central to all we do is engaging with friends, discovering ways of understanding ourselves and others. 


Screen-Free Activities to Keep Kids Engaged in Our Childcare

In our childcare in Sleepy Hollow, we keep little hands and minds busy with activities that spark curiosity and creativity. Some favorites include:

  • Art and sensory play, such as painting, clay modeling, and messy fun
  • Outdoor adventures, such as playground time, gardening, and nature walks
  • Music and movement, such as songs, dancing, yoga, and rhythm games
  • Social games, such as building teamwork and sharing skills
  • Cooking and life skills, with tons of hands-on projects

These activities in our Sleepy Hollow childcare help children develop fine motor skills, gross motor skills, problem-solving abilities, and social confidence. All of this helps keep screens out of the picture.

Even in our infant care program, little ones benefit from: 

  • Face-to-face interaction
  • Songs
  • Physical and sensory play 

Our Childcare in Sleepy Hollow Is A Screen-Free Fun Zone

At Discovery Village, we create environments where screens aren’t needed because everything else is more interesting. 

We provide a fun and engaging experience for children (from infants to preschoolers). Every day is filled with exciting activities that help our children explore and be creative.

Are you looking for childcare in Sleepy Hollow, New York that promotes healthy habits from the start? Discovery Village is a licensed high-quality infant care for Sleepy Hollow families.

Our childcare programs provide a warm, engaging, and screen-free environment where children develop healthy habits at an early age.

For any queries, please contact us at 914-266-9922.

Categories
daycare

Daycare Readiness Checklist for Tarrytown Parents

Do you want your child to start daycare but feel nervous? Starting daycare in Tarrytown can feel like a big step for both you and your child, and it is. 

You may be feeling excited and overwhelmed at the same time. No worries. We’ve guided countless Tarrytown families through this transition over the years. 

All you need is a little preparation, and your child will arrive on their first day smiling, curious, and ready to explore. 


Before Your Child’s First Day

    • Visit the daycare together before the first day. Meet the teachers, see the classroom, and explore the play areas to help your child feel more comfortable. It also gives them familiar faces and spaces to look forward to.

    • Schedule a one to one meeting with your child’s teachers to discuss your child’s routine care needs, and goals you have for your child. 

    • At home, talk about daycare in a positive way. Tell stories about making friends, playing outside, or learning something new. 

    • Some of our families like to play “pretend daycare” at home: packing a small bag, saying goodbye, and playing together in a “classroom” space. Children love knowing what to expect.

    • Adjust your child’s sleep schedule about a week before daycare begins. Having the same bedtime and wake-up times as the daycare schedule will make mornings easier for both you and your child.

What to Pack for the First Day

A labeled backpack is the easiest way for teachers to keep track of your child’s belongings. 

Here’s what we suggest packing:

    • Extra clothes for spills or accidents.

    • Weather-appropriate layers for outdoor play.

    • A small comfort item for nap time.

    • Diapers/wipes or training pants, if needed.

If your child takes medication, let the staff know ahead of time. We follow clear safety procedures, including signed instructions and secure storage, to keep children safe.


Helping Your Child Adjust

You can start with shorter days, if possible. 

A gradual schedule, such as half days during the first week, can give your child time to get used to their new environment.

Drop-offs work best when they’re short and sweet. 

A warm hug, a smile, and a consistent goodbye signal that it’s time to begin the day. We’ll be ready to greet your child and help them settle in.

Stay connected with your child’s teachers. 

We share updates, photos, and daily notes to let you know how their day is going, so you can celebrate their successes as well.

Doing these little things will be enough to help you and your child start their daycare in Tarrytown with confidence and joy. We are here to support you during this change. 

Have some questions? Call us at 914-266-9922

Categories
Childcare daycare Infant Preschool Toddler

How to Raise an Adventurous Eater

Do you want to raise an adventurous eater? Do you have any picky eaters in your family?

We are happy to share wisdom from Kelly Gumpel, RD, CDN, CDCES. Kelly is a Registered Dietitian and Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialist. She’s also a mom of one of Discovery Village’s preschoolers and a lover of all things food!

Kelly generously volunteered her time, leading a conversation with Discovery Village families about how to raise an adventurous eater. We are happy to share some of what we learned.

On Meal and Snack Times:

  • When you can, eat together as a family.
  • Make meal times pleasant.
  • Avoid distractions while eating.
  • Schedule meal and snack times rather than eating at different times each day.

On Introducing New Foods:

  • Expose children to new foods patiently. It can take up to 20 tries for a child to eat a new food.
  • At meals provide at least one food your child likes. Your child may only eat that one food. In time your child will try other foods. 
  • Introduce new foods on the plate with a food your child already knows and likes. 
  • Get creative with various presentations of new foods. For example, on different days offer carrot sticks, baby carrots, cooked carrots, or carrots with cinnamon. 
  • Get playful with new foods. Arrange food on the plate with a smiley face or in other fun arrangements. Consider it a win if your child explores a new food the first time; sticking fingers into it or moving it around on the plate.

On Learning about Different Foods and About Eating:

  • Include your child in trips to the grocery store. Or, if because of COVID you prefer not to take your child to the grocery store, have your child help you unpack the food.
  • Model using utensils and chewing with your mouth closed. 
  • Help your child learn to talk about food.  Teach not to say “that’s yucky” or “that’s disgusting”. Instead, let you child know it’s ok to say that you don’t want that now. Tastes change over time.

On Helping Children Understand and Respect Their Own Bodies:

  • Children have a natural ability to eat. They can assess for themselves how hungry and how full they are. Your responsibility as a parent is to offer balanced, healthy meals. It is your child’s responsibility to decide how much to eat and whether to eat. 
Take a look at the links below for some valuable information on ways to raise an adventurous eater.
 
Have fun with adventurous eating!
 
How to Raise an Adventurous Eater: Parent Education Session
Categories
Childcare COVID-19 daycare

COVID Made Us Better!

Early Childhood Education During COVID and Beyond

There are so many stories of early childhood education during COVID to celebrate. Many daycares never closed. Many others found ways to maintain relationships and engagement with preschoolers, toddlers, and even infants remotely. Discovery Village did both. We remained open for our essential workers, while providing remote learning for children whose families were sheltering in place.

Something surprising happened in the process. We not only navigated through COVID. We’ve gotten better! 

 

Creative activities in early childhood education during COVID

Early Childhood Education During COVID: Programs That Never Closed

Outdoor Experiences in Early Childhood Education During COVID

It was almost exactly one year ago that I first sensed we were experiencing the beginning of something new for early childhood education.

There were only six children present, ranging in age from 18 months to five. Children saw new possibilities for a farm they had built out of a cardboard box.

One child took the road they had used to bring supplies to the farm. He turned it into his very own “highway to happiness.”  Any person could drive on the road. At the end they would find arrive anyplace they wanted to vacation, real or imagined.

Two children took the farm itself and redesigned it. They built a carwash. Now cars would be super clean before driving down the highway to happiness. They found a way to funnel real water into the carwash to wash the cars. 

Three children, younger toddlers, were also interested in animals, cars, and water. They took individual bins filled with soapy water and  gave baths to the toy animals that had just earlier that day lived in the farm. 

Hand-washing

The focus on washing, both cars and animals, came from our  constant hand-washing. Between each and every activity, and at minimum every half hour, children washed their hands. They delighted in splashing in the water, savoring the feel of the running water and soap suds. Hand-washing had become the punctuation mark of our days, offering a moment of respite between each and every activity. 

In the following weeks, our children’s curiosity about water brought us in many new directions. We explored the depths of the sea, and designed our very own aquarium. We looked to the rain clouds above, showering our world with water, and built our own cloud observatory. We marveled at the power of water to nourish plants and people, and tended to our very own indoor garden. Losing ourselves in our playful learning, the outside world melted away. 

Children showed us the ways to navigate through COVID; playfully and focusing on the positive.

 

Early Childhood Programs That Went Remote: Putting Relationships at the Center

I will never forget the moment, very early in the pandemic, that I heard about early childhood education programs offering remote learning. At first, I thought teaching toddlers and preschoolers remotely was perhaps the most ridiculous educational idea I had ever heard. Within a week, Discovery Village was offering remote learning for preschoolers, toddlers, and even infants. Many childcare and preschools had gone entirely remote, at least for several months.

The learning included live video sessions via Zoom, videos teachers created, and packets of activities to do at home. The live sessions included Spanish, sign language, and lots of exercise and movement. It changed frequently to keep children interested. At the core of the experience was being together, even while physically distanced. We always knew relationships and care are at the heart of early childhood. We found ways to strengthen those relationships even while physically distant. 

The Possibilities that Lie Ahead 

While COVID forced us to change, we had the choice to change for the better. So many of us id. The creativity that emerged in early childhood can be a beginning, offering possibilities for improving the quality of learning and care. It is a conversation many are having. I welcome you to join in and reflect on what we have learned through these challenging months, and what we will intentionally bring with us moving forward.