The concept: A memory game in which players attempt to remember which two items make the same sound by picking up two cups and shaking each one. If a match is suspected, the player can turn the cups over to see if the images on the bottom match.
The inspiration: This is not our idea. In fact, it's an idea we got from a beautifully-constructed wooden toy by Guidecraft called Sound Cubes that performed very poorly. The blocks contained a number of beans, rocks or small bells and were intended to operate as described above, but four of the pairs were virtually indistinguishable - the sounds simply were not different enough for children to tell them apart, and we tested them on several adults too, all of whom failed to identify the "correct" pairs. Talk about a fun killer. We ordered the game online from Toys 'R' Us and made a case to their customer service department that the toy was defective because it simply does not work as it should. We are getting a refund, including refunded shipping, and free shipping back to them. Kudos to Toys 'R' Us Online for their great customer service! But we liked the toy idea so much we decided to make our own.
Time required: An hour with a toddler, or a little less without.
What you need: Twelve paper cups, construction paper (several pieces each of one or two colors), 6 pairs of matching stickers, tape, scissors, a bowl or cup a couple inches larger in diameter than the opening of the cups (for tracing the lids), and six different kinds of shakeable objects. We were pretty picky in selecting the objects to use based on our experience with the Sound Cubes game, and settled on six distinct sounds:
Pair 1: Jingle bells (one in each cup)
Pair 2: Paper clips (4-5 in each cup)
Pair 3: Barley (a small handful in each cup)
Pair 4: Dried garbanzo beans (any small beans will do)
Pair 5: A string of three linked plastic Mardi Gras beads (okay, you're on your own for that one)
Pair 6: Pennies (two in each cup)
We thought about lining the messy tape-construction paper seam with ribbon. We ended up going for the quick and dirty version in pretty much all respects.
Divide each set of items in half, and make sure you like the sound they make in the cups. Use the larger bowl to trace circles on the construction paper and cut them out. Then trace the inner circle on each of them with the mouth of a cup, like this:
Tape these covers over the cups and add paired stickers for each pair. We used dinosaurs - it was that or fluorescent happy faces.







9 comments:
We have the Guidecraft sound cubes at my preschool program, and you are right that the sounds are hard to distinguish. However, the children still like to play with them, and the handles are great for little hands. We use them mostly as percussive instruments. I love your homemade craft project memory game! I bet Z learned more from that than a store bought version.
http://www.ecochildsplay.com
What a GREAT idea! This would be a perfect entry into the Festival of Family Flair!! http://blogcarnival.com/bc/cprof_887.html
GENIUS.
I love your handmade toys articles. Keep 'em coming.
Jennifer: Z had a moment of doubt when she realized we really, really didn't want her to take the stuff we'd put into the cups back out again. After that, 100% fun.
Barb: Done. Thanks for the tip!
Jim: Likewise with Baby Toolkit! We discovered your blog through Hackszine 's posting on your great babyproofing hack and have been following it since. Great stuff!
What a wonderful idea! Thanks for sharing with the festival!
Megin
GNMParents
Jeremiah-
I take no credit for Baby Toolkit other than encouragement and tech support (and maybe a little editing help now and then).
I have a few posts that I am writing, but I am slow in getting them done.
Adrienne does it all. I have passed on your kind words.
I like this idea a lot, look forward to seeing more of your creativity in the Festival.
Thanks, Erica! We will be sure to resubmit as soon as we finish our next project!
What a great idea! I think I'll see if my older kids want to make this for their little brother. :^)
Just because I think it can't be said often enough in these settings: dry kidney beans are toxic, and shouldn't be used in craft projects for young kids. Here's a link (scroll down to the "What's on your mind?" section): http://foodsafety.wisc.edu/wffoodfactsforyouaug2003.htm
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