PreschoolRocks.com

Free Preschool Activities,
Crafts & Ideas for Ages 2–6

Browse 2,500+ free activities, crafts, science experiments, fitness games, and learning ideas — educator-reviewed and parent-tested since 2006.

Founded by Stacey Lloyd · No subscription required · 100% free

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Activities
196 ideas for ages 2–6
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Crafts
247 hands-on projects
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Science
136 experiments at home
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Fitness
135 active games & moves
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Nutrition
153 healthy eating ideas
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Education
194 learning activities
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Games
99 games for preschoolers
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Parenting
102 parenting tips & guides
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Kindergarten Readiness
31 school-prep activities

About PreschoolRocks.com

PreschoolRocks.com has been a trusted resource for parents and caregivers since 2006. Founded by Stacey Lloyd, our mission is simple: give every family free access to high-quality early childhood ideas without needing a teaching degree or a big budget.

Every activity is designed for ages 2–6, uses materials you already have at home, and takes 20 minutes or less. We cover crafts, science, fitness, nutrition, music, books, outdoor adventures, and much more.

More Topics to Explore

🩺 Health (48) 🗺️ Adventures (45) 📖 Books (86) 🎵 Songs (37) 🔨 Projects (54) 🏠 Decorating (39) 🎃 Halloween (15) 🧸 Toys (18) 🍴 Food Fun (12) 🎄 Christmas (53) 🦃 Thanksgiving (8) 🐣 Easter (7)
PreschoolRocks.com · Free Preschool Activities Since 2006

Nutrition Tips and Tricks

Around PreschoolRock.com

Preschool Alphabet Soup Craft

Mmmm! Alphabet soup! This preschool construction paper craft uses letters of the alphabet to create imaginary alphabet soup on a real paper stovetop. Get cookin' with your preschooler as s/he searches newspaper and magazine ads for letters of the alphabet – the main ingredient in this educational preschool craft.

The Importance of Crafting With Your Preschooler

Creating preschool holiday crafts together benefits preschoolers in many ways, including building memories, creating pride, and promoting quality time.

Apple for Teacher Preschool Gift Crafts

Teachers love to receive gifts, and your child's preschool teacher will adore these faux apple gift ideas. Crafted by your preschooler, the Apple for Teacher Preschool Gift Crafts are fun and simple and will delight your child's teacher on the first day of preschool or kindergarten.

Helpful Tips for Parents

  • Family meals where everyone eats the same food are the most powerful eating behavior intervention available. Children whose families eat together have better diets across childhood and adolescence.
  • Protein + fat + fiber at every meal stabilizes blood sugar and prevents the energy crashes that drive meltdowns, irritability, and inability to focus.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many servings of vegetables does a preschooler need per day?

The USDA MyPlate recommendation for preschoolers is 1–2 cups of vegetables per day (about 2–3 servings). For reference, a serving for a preschooler is approximately 2–3 tablespoons (their palm full). Because preschoolers have small stomachs, frequency of offering matters as much as serving size. Offer vegetables at every meal and snack across the day rather than trying to deliver all servings in one sitting.

Related reading: See also our cooking projects guide and our smoothie recipes guide for more ideas on this topic.

🎓 Skills Your Child Will Develop

  • 🔄 Trying New Things — Regular exposure to new foods in a positive, low-pressure context teaches children that trying something unfamiliar is safe and often rewarding — a disposition toward novelty that accelerates learning in all domains.
  • 🌍 Environmental Awareness — Understanding where food comes from and how food choices affect the planet begins the environmental literacy that leads to conscious, sustainable food choices throughout life.
  • 🌈 Sensory Exploration — Experiencing the tastes, textures, smells, and colors of different foods expands sensory tolerance and — over many exposures — is the most evidence-based pathway to accepting previously rejected foods.
  • 🧪 Science Literacy — Understanding where food comes from, how cooking changes its properties, and what nutrients do in the body connects food experiences to biology, chemistry, and the broader scientific understanding of the natural world.

Week 3 Challenge - Family Meals with Preschoolers

Posted:

01/15/07

Eating family meals together is good for children and the family unit. But do you ever feel like your attempts at family meals are diverted by short-attention spans, sporadic hunger, food dislikes and battles over table manners? If you have preschoolers in the family, soften your vision of family meals and incorporate these tips for making family meals a success.

It's common sense that eating meals together as a family is a good thing. Even if the meal lasts only minutes, all members of the family are sharing a common experience. Recent social and nutritional research backs up this thinking with measurable benefits for children. Kids who have regular family meals seem to have healthier diets, higher self-esteem, fewer eating disorders, and positive social behaviors like less smoking and drug use. While we all want these benefits for our kids, families with preschoolers may be frustrated at their inability to make calm family dinners a reality.

If you are a family with a preschooler, please realize that the benefits of family meals mentioned above came from studies that looked at teenagers and older, school-aged children. With preschoolers in the house, consider the utopian family dinner to be a great future goal and one to actively work toward. The focus now can be on helping your preschooler develop an appreciation of family meals and something they forward to..

What to Work on This Week

1. Each day, try to have one family meal or snack where all family members who are home sit down together at the table to eat.

2. Let your preschooler know that eating meals together is important and pleasurable to you.

Tips for Success

Expect the family meals to be short. Preschoolers are just learning to sit - a ten-minute meal at the table is a success!

Be flexible. Whenever the whole family is home and hungry, plan a meal or snack and make that your family meal! Perhaps your preschooler is rarely hungry at the dinner hour. Try a family breakfast if the rest of the family is home then. Even snacks can count. If your preschooler is consistently hungry at 4 or 5 pm but the rest of the family likes eating later, make it a sit-down family snacktime with plates for everyone and a large, healthy snack for your preschooler. Even adults who prefer to sit down to the evening meal at 7 or 8 pm will enjoy a small snack at 5 pm.

Plan ahead. If you want to have a meal at a certain time, keep juice and high-calorie snacks to a minimum for one to two hours before the meal. This way, your preschooler will be more likely to be hungry and participate at mealtime.

Get your preschooler involved before you call them to the table to eat. It can by hard to stop playing on a moment's notice. To make the transition to mealtime easier, ask for help with pre-meal "jobs" - helping with simple food preparation, passing out the silverware, placing durable plates or cups on the table, or setting out napkins.

Prepare food early, if possible. Leave only heating and simple preparation for the pre-dinner hour so you don't feel rushed or get frustrated with a preschooler who needs your attention. Try a slowcooker - it's a great tool for reducing meal-time stress. Or when you do cook, double the recipe so you have leftovers or freeze meals for later.

Don't force your preschooler to eat certain foods. Include foods in each meal that your preschooler enjoys and offer other foods for them to try.

Have a house rule that eating and drinking are done at the table only. This will help preschoolers stay at the table when they are interested in eating. Now is the time to mold this behavior. Consistency in the early preschool years will pay off.

Invite friends and neighbors for dinner occasionally. The focus turns toward the fun of having guests and adult conversation. You might find that your preschooler goes with the flow of dinner when guests are present.

And always remember to make mealtimes fun - try this mealtime activity to help your preschooler look forward to meals.

Next Week

Healthy Snacking - We'll take a look at the quality of common preschooler snacks and give you ways to boost their nutrition.

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