Gross motor development
Toddlers practice different ways of jumping.
UPDATE: The Optional Reading book originally suggested for this activity (Five Green and Speckled Frogs) may be challenging to secure. An alternative book has been added.
Be Prepared: Offer this activity on a carpeted or soft floor. Provide a well-defined space for each toddler’s participation with a nonslip carpet square or use of masking tape to create an area of approximately 36 x 36 inches. Note the activity description below suggests that shoes with smooth soles should be removed to prevent slipping while jumping. Arrange for another adult or preschool-age child in your center to demonstrate the simple physical movements and jumping approaches described in the activity plan if you do not wish to do so.
Invite 3–4 toddlers to do some jumping. Encourage each toddler to help you look at the bottoms (soles) of their shoes to make sure they are not smooth. Explain that we might slip if the bottoms of our shoes are smooth. Invite toddlers with smooth soles to remove their shoes for the activity. Encourage each toddler to stand in an activity space (carpet square or marked area).
Explain that we will get our bodies ready to do some jumping. First, demonstrate and encourage each toddler to stand with his/her feet apart (but not a wide distance from each other). Explain that this helps us keep our bodies from tipping when we move different parts of our bodies. Demonstrate what it means for our body to tip by leaning your body slightly to a side.
Then lead toddlers in simple movements that help them focus on balance. Possibilities include:
Explain that we will jump in different ways. Demonstrate and then lead toddlers in the following types of jumping:
Conclude the session by inviting each toddler to sit in his/her area, take 2–3 deep and slow breaths, and tell what we did. Kneel or sit to participate in this conversation. Emphasize that, when we jump, we bend our knees, lift both feet off the floor, and then land on the floor with both feet. Remind toddlers that we worked hard to keep our bodies from tipping. Emphasize that each jump was different.
Be prepared to see and positively acknowledge a range of gross motor actions, including (1) lifting and landing on each foot at different times in a jumping effort, (2) not leaving a carpet square or defined area when jumping forward, (3) stepping, not jumping, to return to a carpet square or defined area, and (4) reluctance to lift one foot and stand on the other foot (opening segment). A toddler may prefer to watch only or to participate in one of the types of jumps only.
Toddlers may prefer to jump from a squat position rather than to jump from a standing position because lightly placing hands on the floor when squatting supports balance and stability. You may wish to flip the order of the second and third jumping approaches if you anticipate maintaining body balance will be a challenge. Squatting is offered last in the activity description because it involves an extra set of movements compared to jumping forward from a standing position (second approach).
Look for possible signs of limited confidence in jumping. Providing verbal support and moving closer to a toddler often can increase self-assurance. It is important for each toddler to have a positive experience with one or more of the movements in this activity. Avoid any type of competition or comparison, including louder cheers or more excited expressions of excitement for one toddler’s accomplishment.
Some toddlers may try to move quickly through the movements. The activity description includes a pause after each major movement (a jump, turning around) so toddlers can regain their balance and think about what to do next (motor planning). Explain that we are not in a hurry to jump. We are not trying to find out who can jump the fastest. Encourage toddlers to wait (pause) after jumping to make sure their body is steady (won’t tip) and before jumping so we have time to think about what we are going to do with our body.
The current activity builds on practice in jumping offered in Block 10 by offering different types of jumping. The prior activity included jumping off a low platform.
Extra support
Enrichment
Gross motor development
A toddler jumps from square to square.
Be Prepared: This activity is for a toddler who participated in Option 1 without major challenges. Arrange the nonslip carpet squares close together in a circle on the floor. If nonslip squares are not available, use masking tape on a carpeted or soft floor to define each square in the circle. Mark the starting point with colored tape that is affixed next to the square.
Invite one toddler to play a jumping game. Point to and explain there are squares in a circle. The toddler can jump to as many squares as he/she wishes. We jump once each time we jump. Try to land in the middle of the next square. It is not necessary to go all the way around the circle.
Demonstrate how to jump forward. Emphasize bending knees, lifting and then landing on both feet at the same time, and waiting (pausing) after we jump. Explain that waiting after we jump can help us keep from tipping and think about our next jump. Encourage the toddler to look at the square where he/she is jumping. Offer the option of pretending to be a frog by jumping from a squat position (hands touching the floor before jumping).
Walk alongside the toddler so he/she is aware of your presence. Give verbal support as appropriate without interrupting the toddler’s focus. It may be helpful to offer quiet reminders about waiting after each jump and looking at where he/she is going next. It also may be helpful to remind a toddler that we jump from square to square in our game.
After a toddler has jumped 2–3 squares, ask if he/she wants to jump, stop, take a break, or jump to several squares. Fully support a toddler’s preference.
Conclude the session by engaging the toddler in discussion of what happened. Enthusiastically acknowledge the toddler’s efforts in jumping from space to space.
This activity supports repeat practice in forward jumping. The squares offer a clear and consistent destination for each jump. Your midway check on whether a toddler wants to stop, take a break, or continue jumping is an opportunity to support a toddler’s response to the activity. Look especially for signs of fatigue. Jumping and/or doing a gross motor action repetitively may be a new and tiring experience for some toddlers.
The activity promotes the self-regulation skill of focusing on the squares, not on the circle. The squares are arranged in a circle. But we are jumping from square to square, not around a circle that just happens to be formed by squares.
The game’s rule that we jump only once to try to land in the middle of the next square may create a useful spatial problem for a toddler to solve. Example: A toddler’s feet may land on the closest edge of the next square rather than in the desired middle of the next square. This creates more distance for jumping to the next square. The extra distance may mean the toddler cannot jump only once to get fully on the next square. If this occurs, define the problem (a long way to jump to the next square) and encourage the toddler to think about what to do. Offer possibilities for the toddler to consider only if he/she seems uncertain about what to do. Example: A toddler could get both feet in the middle of the square by taking small steps or doing a little jump.
Extra support
Enrichment
Materials Needed: 6–8 felt squares or blocks, people figure
Provide additional practice in jumping (Option 1 or 2) if constant caregiver supervision can be provided. An additional option is to encourage a toddler to organize the felt squares or blocks in different ways, such as in a circle or line or a curve, and move the people figure in a jumping movement from square to square. The idea is to act out with toys what is offered in Option 2. A toddler need not have participated in Option 2 to benefit from this type of play with the materials. Encourage a toddler to explore different ways of putting together the squares, and to have the people figure jump forward and backward.
A preschool-age or older child may wish to offer demonstrations of different types of jumping in Option 1. Preschool-age children may enjoy the challenges of Option 2. A walking infant may signal interest in jumping. Sit on the floor facing a mobile infant, hold both of his/her hands, and say “jump.” Do not lift the infant by the arms. The infant may simply bend his/her knees and make a jump-type motion with his/her body.