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“Little Bird” by Germano Zullo is the launching point for this fabulous flight into the world of loose parts play. In these activities you will find unexpected treasures and build a collection of precious tiny parts to play with again and again.

Tiny Loose Parts

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Tiny Loose Parts

Image of two children looking through a tray of loose parts and engaging in Play-based Learning Activities at Home

Ready

  • 1 sectioned tray such as a muffin tin, jewelry box, ice cube tray or egg carton
  • A small tray/cookie sheet to play on
  • Create a collection of tiny loose parts. Here are some suggestions:
Bits of ribbonButtonsStraws cut into bitsPost-it notes
ShellsLittle stonesPompomsBottle caps
Glass gemsString or woolNuts and boltsCoins
BeadsFabric scrapsWashers
Paper clips
Image of a muffin tin filled with loose parts such as wires, pompoms, and scrabble tiles.

Set

  • Organize your tiny parts into each section of your tray.
  • Set your organized collection on the floor or the table.
  • Place your 2nd, empty tray, nearby.
Image of a young child engaged in a play-based learning activity at home using loose parts such as pebbles, pink sticky notes, and pompoms.

Play!

Explore and create with your tiny loose parts:

  • Will you build with your items?
  • Can you sort them into categories?
  • What if you line them up and count them?
  • Will you make a unique collage or sculpture with your loose parts?

Play your way! What can you do with these open-ended materials?

Why Play This Way?

Loose parts are the best! They can be found in a junk drawer, at the bottom of your bag, in your recycling bin, etc. These everyday treasures can be found just about anywhere! As natural explorers, children will love to arrange, line up and experiment with their loose parts. Not only that but as they play, they will get to exercise their fine motor, social, mathematical and problem-solving skills. When used with a friend, children will also enjoy an open-ended social adventure rife with possibilities. Best of all, your tiny loose parts collection can be re-sorted and packed up to be used again on another day for a whole new adventure.

Discover the book that
inspired this play

Read While You Play & Play While You Read

Image of a suggested book: Little Bird by Germano Zullo.

“Little Bird” by Germano Zullo

Book Summary

A man drives his truck up to a cliff’s edge. Unable to go any further, he opens the back door and a flock of birds flies out. Soon, the man discovers that a small timid bird remains. He shows the bird that he should fly off and join his friends. The man’s comic attempt at flight deepens the encounter between these two very different creatures. Soon, the bird flies off and the man drives away, but read on because there is a surprise twist at the end!

Why We Love It

Where do we start?! This super simple book is a delight to read and a brilliant reminder not only of the power of kindness but also that it is often the little things in life that matter most.

Learn & Play with

“Little Bird” by Germano Zullo

Extension Activities

Choose your own adventure! Select any of the extension activities or resources below and see where your play takes you next. They are all inspired by the featured book to invite deeper connections to stories through play. 

Don’t have the book? No worries! All of our activities can be enjoyed with or without a book in hand.

Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Loose Parts
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Read Aloud Questions
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Bring the Book to Life
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Phonics Fun
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Learn the Letter L
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Spotify Playlist featuring songs that start with L
Button for Play-based Learning Activities at Home: Related Books & Materials

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keep playing

more fun activities

Whoever said work isn’t fun?! These activities, inspired by Joan Heilbroner’s marvelous book “Robert the Rose Horse”, reinforce the notion that “Play is the work of childhood!” Explore countless opportunities to notice the important jobs and workers around you. Then, discover the ways that even the youngest among us can be workers too!

Splish, Splash I’m not takin’ a bath…I’m just playing with water! These activities are designed to delight your little one with all the sensory fun of water while also delivering the soothing social and emotional benefits inherent in this type of play. Discover ways to play with water in all kinds of places and with unexpected materials.

Make math time happy with these fun counting activities. #1: Create your own abacus. #2: Count and play all day! These activity ideas provide a playful introduction to counting and the many ways that we encounter and use math in everyday life.

Roll on into fruit play! Have a blast experiencing fruit in new and hilarious ways that will get you moving and laughing. Get your muscles ready, but be prepared! These activities might make you hungry and ready to quickly transition from playing to eating!

This game brings all the creative fun of printmaking to the sensory goodness of dough play and then adds a clever twist! You make the prints, and your friend guesses what you used to make them. But watch out…it’s simple to make a mark, but easy to be fooled when you are the guesser. When you’re done with the game, keep playing with The Dough Project’s super, all natural, dough.

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Play ideas for all those times you need a little gentle, quiet fun. Reach for these activities whenever you are looking for ways to create a soothing environment or bring calm to your mind and body.

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