250+ Creative Ways to Keep Your Family Sane During the COVID-19 Crisis
Experiencing lots of "family togetherness" during the Coronavirus pandemic? KidsOutAndAbout.com provides over 250 ideas for making the most of your time together and avoid driving each other crazy.
Some of the best parenting advice I ever received was: "When it rains, play in the rain." There are ways of making the best out of any situation, this one included. We have a unique opportunity here: We can make the COVID-19 crisis into a moment that will live vividly in our kids' memories, so that in other times of uncertainty they'll recall fondly how their family pulled together and made the best of things, and they'll be able to do the same.
250+ Creative Ways to Keep Your Family Sane During the COVID-19 Crisis
Below are the categories for this article. Click on any of them to jump to that category below.
Games and Activities
Clean / Fix
Plan
Cook
Science Experiments
Arts & Crafts
Perform
Outside your Perimeter: Driveway, Yard, Garden, and Beyond
Links to Online Fun and Learning
Surprise! You're Homeschooling! Here are tips for success.
Operation Storytime
Virtual / Online Event Calendar
During a time when we're all practicing social distancing, events, classes, and activities go online!
- 1000 Things To Do During COVID-19: Online activities for Kids, Teens, & Families
- Webcams, online tours, exhibits, sneak peeks, activities, games, and lots more: 24/7 virtual experiences
- Classes that can be taken online: Kids, Teens, and Families
- Today's online events (it's easy to click to tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow...)
- Surprise, you're homeschooling! Tips to get you through
(Organizations offering virtual events, classes, or experiences can post them for free! Click here to get to the form.)
Games and Activities
- Pull out any not-yet-used holiday gifts
- Play “jump the river”
- Make a timeline
- Read a good book
- Join Audible and listen to books together
- Research your Family Tree
- Have an indoor campout
- Start some indoor seed plantings
- Indoor Scavenger Hunt
- Build an outside fort
- Build a blanket fort or tent (check out ideas at 15 DIY Teepees and Play Tents Your Kids Will Spend All Summer In)
- Hand-Clapping games like Miss Mary Mack, Double Double, and Tic-Tac-Toe
- Mad Libs
- Go on a Bearhunt
- Huckle Buckle Beanstalk
- Hide something sweet and create a Treasure Map for the kids to follow
- Learn Morse Code
- Invent your own code
- Build a house of cards
- Memorize the state capitals
- Learn some yoga poses
- Meditate with help from Headspace for Kids (free trial)
- Play balloon volleyball
- Look at old photos and share their memories
- Write old-fashioned letters and postcards
- Make gratitude lists
- Play charades
- Invent a card game
- Learn a few magic tricks
- Using stuff from around your house, set up a bowling lane
- Mark out a hopscotch field with masking/duct tape
- Speak only in Pig Latin
- Thumb wrestle
- Play MASH
- Play Hangman
- Plan a family vacation
- Learn about nautical flags and how to communicate with them
- Learn the parts of a sailboat
- Play dress up
- Teach your kids how to play black jack (it helps with math skills after all)
- Play the silent game
- Have a staring contest
- Learn some yo-yo tricks
- Build the biggest LEGO/block tower in history
- Make shadow puppets
- Have a tea party
- Have a doll or stuffed animal wedding
- Play Simon Says
- Talk with an accent
- Make a stuffed animal zoo
- Learn a little American Sign Language for kids
- Invent a new sport
- Polish the silver (raise your hand if you have your grandmother’s silverware or cute bud vases!)
- Do a puzzle
- Invent your own nation
- Memorize all the Presidents
- Memorize all the states and capitals
- Match up your socks, roll them up, and have a sock fight
- Play dominoes (extra credit for making your own)
- Teach your kids how to play Solitaire
- Make your own Bingo game
- Bust out the flashlights and go on a “ghost” hunt
- Learn how to tie cool knots
- Go on the Duolingo app and learn a new language for free
- Make your own crossword puzzles
- Make your own Sudoku
- Practice drilling holes in scrap wood
- Hammer nails into scrap wood
- Read to the pets or Grandparents (via Facetime/Skype)
- Play with their older toys
- Learn coding for Free through MIT
- Go on a Sunday Drive any day of the week
- Make a dollhouse with shoe boxes
- Empty furniture from the middle of a room and do somersaults across it (notice we did not say cartwheels!)
- Teach your old dog (or new puppy) new tricks
- Play the game Clue using real props, costumes, and rooms in your house
- Have a backyard camp fire (if your city or town allows it)
- Play Alligator
- DIY manis and pedis
- Host a Virtual Trivia Night
Clean/Fix
- Put on your "Bob the Builder" caps
- Encourage and help your kids re-do their rooms
- Make a new play space by cleaning part of your attic or basement
- Sort the toys
- Find, sort and wrap all your loose change
- Print your photos and write on the backs of them for posterity
- Clean out your junk drawer(s) together and find family treasures
- Alphabetize your spices
- Tighten knobs/handles
- Look for squeaky doors and spritz with WD-40
- Wash the windows (your kids will love using the spray bottle)
- Alphabetize your books
- Match your socks, and then have a sock fight
- Hang your favorite picture
- Dust your baseboards (your littlest ones might like this best)
- Make your own eyeglass cleaner
- Make your own household cleaner
- Clean out your closet and collect too-small clothes to donate
- Find household stuff you no longer need and give it away on your local Freecycle
- Make a paradise for your pets! Clean out your fish tank / hamster cage / bird cage etc.
- Find all of the available house paint and decide either to throw it away or plan your next project that uses it - freshen up a wall or some trim!
- Get yourself some free "new" clothes: Sew rips / patch your jeans / sew on missing buttons
- Clean out, vacuum, and disinfect your car
- Corral and sort the 10,000 charger cords in your house
- Create an Easy and Great-Looking Workspace With Lots of Storage Underneath
- Change your smoke detector batteries
- Install smoke detectors
- Organize/purge kids art together
- Make cleaning a game.
Plan
- Plan your next birthday party (theme, place, cake, decorations)
- Plan an any-occasion or no-occasion party
- Plan for summer camp (things to remember, and look up on the top of this KidsOutAndAbout.com page under our "Classes and Camps" menu)
- Plan a staycation (look for our 101 Family Day Trips article under "Resources" on your local menu above)
- Plan a bucket list from our Top 20 Places to Take Local Kids article as voted by local parents - find it under Favorites on our menu above
- Plan a dream vacation
- Plan a realistic vacation (where, when, how, what to pack, links to venues in the region)
- Plan a month of educational theme days (themes like nature, sports, music, robots, Hamilton, or whatever)
- Plan your day-by-day pandemic menu
- Plan something to make each day
- Plan your family's fire escape plan and have a fire drill
- Plan a garden
- Plan for higher education: High school kids can research colleges and scholarships, and brainstorm college essays
Cook
- The complete list of KOAA kid-friendly recipes and food tips
- "Cuban" Cooking
- ANY Cooking. Or baking.
- Create a Family Cook Book
- Invent a new recipe
- Make an old family recipe
- Have a feast
- Create a cookbook based on your favorite story/book
- Meal plan for a full week
- Choose recipes from different countries and fix a different recipe for each course or for each day
- Make off-season Christmas Cookies in spring colors
- Make your own granola mix
Science Experiments at Home*
- Experiments from San Francisco's Exploratorium: "Science Snacks" in...
- Experiments from Spangler Science (a leprechaun trap, oobleck monsters, flying toilet paper, homemade root beer...)
- Experiments from Science Cafe (homemade ice cream, lava lamps, naked eggs, a shrunken head...)
- 32 Cool Science Experiments for Kids (that are Fun AND Easy!) -- they're sorted by the amount of time each takes
- Study.com offers up 10 home science experiments (elephant toothpaste, dinosaur bones, a lung model....)
- Kitchen Science Resources from the Franklin Institute:
Arts & Crafts
- Make puppets
- Make a "Celebrations book."
- Make homemade musical instruments Here is a site that shows you how to make homemade instruments. Here is another good one.
- Mix cornstarch and water
- Make a game (tic-tac-toe, checkers, chess set)
- Make a God’s Eye
- Make a colored “sand” sculpture
- Paint family portraits
- Make flags from around the world out of scrap paper or invent one of your own
- Make paper snowflakes
- Learn some origami (check out the Japanese tradition of 1000 paper cranes)
- Purchase a knitting loom and make a scarf
- Make a paper chain and see how long you can get it
- Make a tooth fairy pillow by hand
- Monogram your socks
- Make stationary with stamps
- Create a family playlist on Spotify
- Make paper dolls
- Make a putt putt boat and sail it in your bathtub (you’ll need blue tack, a couple straws, a soda can, a cardboard milk carton, a tea candle and something to light the tea candle)
- Make pictures to give to nursing home residents or elderly neighbors (you can even mail them; everyone loves getting mail)
- Make necklaces and bracelets using beads or even pasta
- Build a model car, plane, boat or building
- Make accessories for your pets (kerchiefs, capes, bows)
- Make pet toys
- Make tissue paper flowers
- Sew buttons onto scrap fabric
- Make paper beads
- Paper mache a balloon
- Write poems, limericks, and haiku
- Write a song
- Create your own “Dr. Seuss” book
- Make and decorate paper crowns
- Print out your photos and make a scrapbook
- Learn Calligraphy
- Teach your kids cursive
- Make your own playdough
- Fortune cookies are difficult to make but creating a Fortune Jar is a snap
- Make a map to your favorite place
- Make a comic strip or book
- Make your own slime
- Make an old-fashioned address book
- Decorate a pair of plain white sneakers or old shirt
- Make a simple bird feeder
- Make a dreamcatcher
- Make a family time capsule to open at a future date
- Paint your toenails or fingernails with wacky designs
- Make your own coin or piggy bank
- Make a “selfie” background with an old tablecloth or sheet, and markers or paint
- Create your own picture frame for the selfie
- Download an animation app for your phone or tablet and do stop motion animations (There are many simple free and low cost ones!)
- Tie dye a pillow case
- Create an old fashioned sampler
- Make an arm-knitted scarf
- Build a terrarium
- Paint a rock (from "Kindness Rocks")
- Make a pet rock
- Make a $10 DIY compost bin and use the compost later in your garden
- Make fleece monsters
- Pencils and Plums features a free 120 page ebook called 2500+ Drawing Ideas as well as printable drawing pages
Perform
- Read a Newbery winning book, then make a 90-Second Newbery Film Festival tiny movie submission on your phone
- Silent Disco Party
- Dance Party
- Puppet Shows
- Turn a big box into a television set and put on shows (this can also double as a puppet stage)
- Have a Joke-a-thon
- Re-enact your favorite story or movie as a play
- Memorize a poem or two and put on a show
- Magic Shows
- Fortune Telling
- Read a story out loud and create your own illustrations
- Record your kids reading/telling their favorite story and replay it after dinner
- Put those music lessons to good use and have a concert (bonus points for Facetiming the grandparents while you do it)
- Write a rap song and perform it
- Perform your favorite fairy tale in dance
- Fill glasses with water and make music
- Record a family podcast on your phone to send relatives
- Record a pots and pans orchestra performance
Outside your Perimeter: Driveway, Yard, and Garden
**Make sure you click on our RESOURCES link in our menu at the top of the page for plenty of ways to have fun outside and parks/trails where you can enjoy nature with your kids while staying away from others.
- Bike, scooter, or Ripstick in the driveway: You can set up an obstacle course or try new tricks.
- Build a Fairy House - here are instructions for building one from the official Fairy Houses web site
- Star gaze
- Learn and find constellations
- Climb a tree
- Enjoy the classics: Play hopscotch, 4-square, Mother May I, or jump rope.
- Get artsy with chalk, water soluble paint, or MUD
- Measure the Rain
- Hunt for worms
- Let rain inspire art
- Perk up your plants
- Shake a rainy tree
- Play flashlight tag
- Walk the dog
- Collect leaves and press them to make place mats
- Create a nature journal and record what you see
- Hang a bird feeder and count the birds (in February each year, participate in The Great Backyard Bird Count)
- Catalog the birds in your neighborhood by listening to their sounds and songs
- Make luminarias and light up your driveway
- Do a plein air painting of your neighborhood
- Make a rock garden for your yard
- Go on a bike ride
- After a walk or bike ride, create a map of your neighborhood - “Cat in the Hat Can Map This and That” tool
- Do some Backyard Geology
Links to Online Fun and Learning
- 12 Famous Museums You Can Visit From Your Couch
- 5 rainy day toddler activities from American Baby. It works for snowy days too!
- Winter Gardening Activities for Kids from the Green Mountain Gardener.
- Help your child create an original book from a story/artwork: This service is from Tikatok.com but there are others that do this as well.
- Documentaries available from streaming services. So you'll feel less guilty about screen time. Updated for 2020.
- Online Craft classes from Creativebug.com
- Online coding for kids at Tynker.Com
- Tons of online art/craft classes for kids and teens at DIY.Org (free 14 day trial)
- The Kid Should See This: Smart Videos For Curious Minds of All Ages
- National Geographic: Kids Videos
- The Brain Scoop: Videos exploring all kinds of science topics with Emilie Graslie, the Chief Curiosity Correspondent of The Field Museum in Chicago
- Watch animal live cams at Explore.Org, including the famous Decorah Eagles
- Sign up for a MASTERCLASS or two with your whole family
- Find free educational explanations about just about any academic subject at Khan Academy
- Pokemon Go app: Monster Collecting at Home
- Nancy Drew mystery games from HER Interactive: Fun for the whole family, especially age 12 and up (younger kids may need help with the puzzles)
- Actors read stories on Storyline Online
- A list of educational companies offering free memberships due to school closings put together by the Amazing Educational Resources Facebook group
- Virtually tour college campuses on YouVisit.com
- Scholastic has launched online Learn at Home lessons
- Check out animal cams from a variety of zoos, including the San Diego Zoo, the National Zoo, the Houston Zoo, and more
- Many national parks also offer live webcams
- Grown and Flown suggests 100 soft skills to teach teens
- Amazon is offering free streaming of family shows
- Google offers fun arts and cultural lessons
- We Are Teachers has a big list of children's authors reading their books
- Ultimate Boredom Buster: 101 Things to Do When Kids Are Bored
- Indoor activities for families.
Tips for Temporary Homeschooling
If your child's school has closed due to COVID-19 and you are suddenly tossed into monitoring your child's education, we can help! Below are a few tips to help you orient yourself to temporary homeschooling. Please click on the link below for our complete list of tips for how to manage this challenging time.
First...
- Remember that everyone else is in the same situation.
- Remember that the goal is to keep up the momentum of learning, not to imitate school or to compete to see whether your kid can do it better than the others.
- Convey that we all have our work to do, and that you'll help your kids get set up to do theirs while you do yours.
- Try to assume more the role of cheer-leading coach than overseer.
- ...and a lot more. Click here for our complete article: Surprise! You're Homeschooling!... It's full of tips to help you survive make the most of it.
Special thanks to Helena Robin, Katie Beltramo, and Carol White Llewellyn for their work on this article.
*We wanted to call the "Science" section "Science the $#!& out of the virus" to amuse fans of The Martian, but we restrained ourselves.
© 2020. This list may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without written permission from KidsOutAndAbout.com. Feel free to link to it, though!