[email protected]

Young Scholars Academy

Where Children Develop a Love of Learning

  • Home
  • About Us – Our Mission
    • Our Child Care Team
    • Team Leaders
    • Team Member of the Month!
  • Resources
    • Parent Resources
    • Additional Benefits
  • Contact Us
    • Careers at YSA
 5815 Tutt Center Point - Colorado Springs, CO 80922
 (719) 522-9099
Check Availability
  • Events & Updates
  • Programs
    • Infant Program
    • Toddler Program
    • Preschool
    • Prekindergarten
    • Junior Kindergarten
  • School Age Programs
    • Before and After School Program
    • Summer Camp
  • Enrichment Programs
    • Curriculum Ideas For Home | Young Scholars Academy
    • Art Projects
    • American Sign Language
    • Music & Fitness
  • Testimonials
    • Our Kids Speak!
  • Blog

7 Summer Enrichment Ideas for Your Preschooler … in Colorado Springs!

May 26, 2017 by Admin Leave a Comment

preschool student | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado Springs
Kids can learn outside in summer

This is a great time for your preschooler to keep learning through summer enrichment activities. Young children can benefit from structured activities that can be implemented in Colorado Springs, Colorado. It’s a city full of natural beauty and that offers countless teaching opportunities. You preschooler can continue to move, laugh, play and enjoy being with their friends and peers.

As the summer season quickly approaches, your preschool student is as energetic as ever. Engaging in summer enrichment activities may be a better option then a lot of “downtime”. This article gives you 7 summer enrichment ideas for your preschooler.

Jumping and Throwing and Kicking, Oh My! Your preschooler’s high energy levels and physical needs know no season. This is the norm for a healthy growing young child year-round. Kids can start developing fine motor skills like writing, drawing, and cutting with scissors. Young children also need plenty of opportunity to develop gross motor skills, like running, throwing, and kicking. Plan a trip to the park or choose a nearby open area. There is no shortage of those in breathtaking Colorado Springs to try these summer enrichment ideas.

 

  1. Scavenger Hunt

    Print a picture list of items for your little ones to look for. The items can include a leaf, a branch, an insect, a pine cone or any other accessible item you see in the area. Work the alphabet into the activity by having them find objects that begin with a different letters.

 

  1. Make the cake and enjoy it, too

    Young children enjoy spending time with other kids their age laughing, playing, and racing each other. Build a relay course with your kids using boxes, rope, tape, mobile tubes, balance beams, and any other item that is easy to assemble.

 

  1. Timeless three-legged race

    Kids at this age are discovering the joy of playing together. Let’s encourage them to work together toward a common goal with this classic race. Plan other fun games as a part of their summer enrichment activities.

Fine Motor Skills in Summer Camp Like large muscle development, fine motor skills can be exercised using nature’s help. Preschoolers enjoy playing with colors and anything messy is a sure win with kids. Manipulating different materials and playing with different textures adds to their imagination. Try these ideas:

  1. Sensory table

    Use an old baby bathtub or a large plastic bin to fill with sand and let kids use plastic kitchen scoops and measuring cups to build. This is a great summer enrichment idea that can be set up anywhere using inexpensive items.

Use rice or beans and washable food coloring for young preschoolers and kids who may need an extra boost in tactile skills.

  1. Arts and crafts using leaves

    Have kids run and collect several leaves in different shapes. Then put craft paper on top of a leaf one at a time. Use a colored pencil or crayon to “rub” the image of the leaf onto the paper.

 

  1. Finger paint pine cones

    summer camp | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado Springs
    Plenty of fun activities during summer camp

    If there are pine trees close, children can collect pine cones and use tempera paint and large paint brushes to paint them. No pine trees? You can bring a bag of the store-bought or previously-collected natural canvases.

Manners and Social Skills are a Big Part of Preschool Enrichment. One of the most important lessons preschoolers learn in summer camp is acceptable behavior. Educators start teaching these skills through self-serve lunches and role play, among other tasks.

  1. Promote independence and social-skill building during preschool enrichment with self-served lunches. Give children jobs to prepare, serve, and clean up after summer meals. Praise a job well done or gently correct mistakes to encourage positive behavior.

 

What Will We Do Today, Brain? A child’s brain is a sponge that craves information and opportunities to soak up as much as possible. Summer activity programs are tailored to your child’s needs, unlimited energy, and their desire to move and learn.

Summer enrichment is often associated with older children, but Young Scholars Academy gives your preschoolers the chance to enjoy a fun, age-appropriate summer learning program that’s safe and focuses on their physical, socio-emotional, and cognitive development.

Contact Young Scholars Academy for enrichment for your preschooler in Colorado Springs for summer enrichment programs.

Filed Under: Programs & Curriculum

May is National Foster Care Month

May 15, 2017 by Admin Leave a Comment

May is National Foster Care Month. This month is set aside to recognize the individuals and families who give their time, their resources and their homes to children who are going through the most difficult times of their life.

Foster Parents

foster care | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado
Open your home to foster children

Most people would have a difficult time letting a stranger in their home to shower, sleep and eat. It would be the equivalent of picking up a homeless person and taking them home. You know nothing about this person except what you can see and perhaps what they have told you.

For foster parents, the person is a child. This child may have severe mental or physical trauma that is not apparent to the naked eye. Emotional damage may be hidden under layers of disdain, hatred and aloofness. Now imagine that you open your home, your family and your heart to this child. Is that hard to imagine? That is what foster families do every day. It is all about placing your fears and doubts aside to meet the needs of a child who has nobody else to turn to.

National Foster Care Month

May is the time to bring awareness to foster care. Foster parents are honored during this month. The need for more families to volunteer is brought to the forefront of the public eye. The needs of the foster care families are recognized. Resources are introduced to help meet the needs. After all, foster care is more than just opening your home up to a child in need. Foster care awareness is critical to help families and communities meet the needs of the children and the families that care for them.

Where to Find Help

Many people caring for children do not know that there are resources available to help them. Respite babysitting services, community clothing closets, support groups and even activities and sports programs for the children are all in place to help families foster these children. However, the problem is that not all families know about the resources available. During May, resources of all kinds are brought to the forefront in an attempt to help families caring for foster children.

Grandparents, aunts and uncles are often kinship caregivers. This means that they have assumed the role of caregiver since the parents of the child are not an option. Often, this causes a change in family dynamics. An adult child may resent the grandparent becoming the primary caregiver of their child. Maybe a grandparent does not know what to do about things like medical care, legal issues with the school, etc. Resources like

The Grandkin Guide can help grandparents to navigate the legal system, family issues and the new role of caregiver.

Such resources are critical to helping foster care families cope with the changes that come from having a new child in the home. Online resources, support groups, financial aid and more can all be beneficial for the care of foster children. Whether kinship care is decided between family members or set up by child welfare services, there is no reason to feel alone and adrift in this new circumstance. Help is available.

Why is Public Awareness so Important?

National foster care month | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado
Get educated on foster care

Foster care is often shown in a negative light. News stories of tragedies, rumors of greed and horror stories from former foster children get the spotlight, while great foster successes go unheralded.

Care of these children must be brought to the public in a positive light. People will remember success stories of foster children who went on to college and beyond. Foster parents who go above and beyond to help children find their passions, like painting or horseback riding, should be highlighted and commended. The children should have their success stories shared, just like in a traditional family. These children can thrive if the parents have the resources available to help them. Even severe mental and physical abuse of the past can be overcome with love and support from foster parents who really care.

Foster care takes a whole community to be successful. Outreach groups, support groups, legal and financial help, respite caregivers, teachers, child welfare advocates – everyone must work hand-in-hand with the foster caregivers to ensure these children are protected, loved and given the chance for a successful, happy life.

Use May as the month to educate yourself about the foster care system and how you and your community can help these families. A community picnic, a toy or clothing drive, volunteering your time or even offering your talents (like free piano lessons) – there are plenty of ways you can help with foster care. The keyword is ‘care’.

Filed Under: Family Tips

Mental Breakdown

May 4, 2017 by Young Scholars Academy Leave a Comment

On July 4th, 2016, I received the biggest blessing in my life, my son Mitchell! But why do I feel so blue? Why do I cry because my boyfriend won’t make me a bowl of cereal? Or when he gets to go fishing and hunting? Why do I want to be by myself all of the time?

The joy of my life!
The joy of my life!

I love my son with everything I have, but…. why am I not happy? Motherhood is hard but new mommy hood is life changing. You have to adapt to the lifestyle so fast and it’s hard!

I used to be interested in so many things and I was able to get out and do whatever I wanted whenever I wanted. But why don’t I care to do anything anymore? I lost interest. Or is it because I feel like I can’t do it anymore because I have a son now?

That’s what happens with postpartum depression… your mind goes crazy thinking unwanted thoughts and your emotions go through the roof. It has been an emotional rollercoaster the first 7 months of having Mitchell and I could never understand why. I’ve always been emotional but never this intense!

I did research and had to understand these 5 steps to wrap my head around what was happening to me.

DENIAL. So, what was going on with me? My boyfriend would ask, “Do you think you have postpartum depression?” Me: “No. I love being around baby boy and he is the best thing ever.” A lot of women feel disconnection with their newborns which is a symptom of postpartum and that wasn’t the case with me so there is no I way I have it. We moved on from the idea because “I DID NOT HAVE POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION.”

ANGER. 8 months goes by and it was still bad; I was very irritable and emotional over any and everything! Your brain flips this switch that has you thinking all negative thoughts and you literally question your whole life. You get mad at your spouse for not looking at you the right way, for saying something the wrong way, you get frustrated with your children for not leaving you alone.

These all seem like normal symptoms when you’re a new mom, right? But it’s different with postpartum; you lock yourself in your room and leave all the duties for whoever wants to take them on. You hide under the covers and just cry. You can’t stop. So, what do you do? How do you shake this feeling?

BARGAINING. You try to self-cure and find ways to “slow down” the thoughts. You believe that it’s what you’re doing or not doing physically this is causing all this emotion and turmoil. You start to think, “if I just get more sleep everything will be easier.” Or, “once I get the hang of this routine and what works best I won’t feel this down anymore.”

I always felt like I was in a funk and that if I could change something about my life or my routine, then I would fix the funk and everything would be better. So I did. I got a new position at work and I got excited about my days all over again. But that feeling was temporary; there was still something deeper down that was not okay.

DEPRESSION. Once you realize that self-curing is not working you start to overthink. You start to resent your partner, your biggest blessing, and you’re mad at the world. You still don’t know exactly what is going on with you but you know it’s not normal.

Did you know 15-20% of other new moms are in the same position? It’s a relief to know I am not going through this alone and that I am NOT crazy.

ACCEPTANCE. The next step is to understand that you are off balance and that you need to find help. As hard as this was to write and admit to, I can no longer be afraid to share what has been going on. When you finally accept that you need help, it’s easier to reach for it and obtain it. I was put through an intervention and realized that “whoa, I do have postpartum” because this wasn’t normal, even for me and my emotional self.

Postpartum is treatable with medications and therapy, so go talk to your doctor and ask for help. I am beyond grateful that my family noticed my symptoms and didn’t just ignore them but pushed for me to go talk to somebody.

Motherhood isn’t easy. Being human isn’t easy, notice what you need to do for you, and everything else will fall in place.

Filed Under: Family Tips, Health & Wellness

“Is there any real way to achieve balance?”

May 3, 2017 by Young Scholars Academy Leave a Comment

There is the breakdown at the store. I know it isn’t the first or the last. I know he isn’t trying to torture me. But I am tired and want to get home. I can guide and preach. However, can I always follow my own advice? The majority of the time, yes. However, there is no perfect parent! The balance of positive and disciplining is a true struggle. The never ending give and take balance of it all. The bargaining of life.

Kids: always an adventure!
Kids: always an adventure!

My key to anytime I am dealing with my tiny humans (I parent like I teach. I also love my class like they are my own) is make it about them, not me. Focus on the message being sent through their actions and behavior. But I am human, and sometimes I want it to be about me. Sometimes I feel their pain and want to throw myself on the floor and scream too!

My biggest struggle in this parenting adventure is to remember I am not only mom; I am a strong woman, a wife, a sister, an individual who had has her own needs. Guilt is a heavy feeling that I don’t think any parent hasn’t felt. That overbearing guilt that makes you question am I doing this, right? But maybe we are asking the wrong question. Shouldn’t the question be; am I doing the best I can?

Is there a balance between all the roles of a parent, and still being you? I am sure there is. However, I don’t believe I am even partly close to gaining that balance. I have been raising a free spirited, “wild” little boy for two years now. I have been teaching little ones for seven. Another little boy on the way. They are my priority in everyday life. My wind down for the night is “did I do the best I could to guide those amazing minds to greatness”?

Luckily my husband embraces my passion and supports me beyond expectation. So being the wife is made a little easier with that kind of support. I should remind myself to save a little bit for him. I must remind myself that he works, and is a parent too. So, my biggest support for him is to stay in touch with his hobbies and activities. Which I can be bitter about at times because of guilt. Not his fault I didn’t open my mouth and say, “I could use a little me time.” I think dads are over looked in the huge scheme of things. But, they have the same struggle as us moms and are trying to balance just as much as we are.

Taking me time is the biggest struggle that I have faced. To remember that I need to step back and be me if I am going to be the best for them. This I am not sure I will ever be able to master. The second you get alone time your mind goes racing. You spend it either talking about those little humans or worrying about them. At least that’s me.

So is there any real way to achieve balance? I am sure there is. However, it will be an ever-ending teeter-totter for me. A balancing act that will ever be in motion. I am also okay with that. Life isn’t always easy but it is always an adventure. One I feel blessed to be on.

“A good life is a collection of happy moments”- Denis Waitley

Michaela
Child Advocate

Filed Under: Family Tips

5 Qualities of a Great Summer Program

April 29, 2017 by Admin Leave a Comment

Summer camp is an excitable time for all ages. The school year is over. Your excitable 4-year-old is home for the summer. You want your child to continue their education. Whether it’s to help them do activities or you cannot take care of them over the summer, a summer program is a perfect opportunity. There are many different types of camps your preschooler can go to. The benefits of a summer program could help your child prepare for the school year or even for kindergarten.

Importance of Summer Programs for Academic Success

Attending a summer program will benefit your preschooler in many ways. It helps the children begin to build structure, preparing them for when they go off to regular school. The activities provide a way for your child to gain many skills. Math, writing, and reading can be skills learned. If your child has not yet been to a school, independence is another benefit. Your child will learn how to interact with other children and trustworthy adults when you are not around. According to summer program statistics, summer camps help children gain achievement in school. Sending your child to a great summer camp will help your child be the best that they can be before they begin kindergarten.

5 Qualities

1: Variety of Activities

For your child to get the most out of their experience, the camp should have plenty of activities for them. Each activity should enhance their education as well as entertain them. Activities can have art, music, swimming, sports, and other kinds to keep your child entertained while learning.

Sample Activities:
• Arts and Crafts
• Swimming
• Music
• Camp wide games

2: Good Supervision

importance of a summer program for academic success | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado
The children will have adult supervision

Every parent wants their child to be safe whatever activity they are doing. That is why it is important for there to be good supervision. There should be counselors for the campers, and at least 2 with each group. For preschoolers, the counselors should always be with them until the end of the day. You should make sure the place you choose has quality supervision of their campers.

Good Supervision:
• Campers should be with their counselors always
• Counselors should be able to respond to any situation involving a child
• All children should be accounted for by the counselors
• Counselors/supervisors have the phone numbers of parents in case they need to be contacted

3: Fits the Needs of Your Child

Whatever the need of your child, the camp should be able to provide it when you’re not there. For example, if your child has an allergy, the summer camp should be able to address it. Children should be able to bring their own lunches in case they have an allergy. If not, an alternative should be provided. If an allergic reaction does occur, counselors should be prepared. If your child has a special need and can attend the program, assistance should be provided. If possible, your child should receive as much help as possible. However, your child should still be able to enjoy all of the camp activities.

4: Safe Environment for Time Outdoors

benefits of a summer program | Young Scholars Academy in Colorado
Outside play for children in a safe environment

Summer camp can be a time to spend outdoors playing in the environment. The program of your choice should have plenty of time dedicated to outdoor play. Whether it is daily or through field trips, preschoolers should have time to be outside. It allows them to get fresh air and to get a lot of exercise. Children will also have a chance to explore their surroundings. Being able to explore enhances their learning and need to try new things.

Safe Environment:
• Distance from things that could possibly hurt children
• Constantly supervised
• First aid available in case of accidents

5: A fun a place for your child to grow

Your child should be able to have fun while they are learning new things. Each activity should enrich your preschoolers learning, as well as have them enjoy it. Over the summer, your preschooler should be growing educationally even while not in school. That way, they are prepared for the upcoming school year, while having fun along the way.

When summer comes, it is good to have options. Having a place for your young preschooler would be a nice opportunity. There would activities for he/she to do and friends he/she could make. If your child’s needs are met and there is proper supervision, it can be a safe environment for your child to grow. With the best qualities, the summer camp of your choice will be an enjoyable experience for your child.

Filed Under: Programs & Curriculum

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 58
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • 62
  • …
  • 83
  • Next Page »

CHECK AVAILABILITY

Photo of Best Childcare School

Young Scholars Academy
5815 Tutt Center Point
Colorado Springs, CO 80922
(719) 626-9650
Mon - Fri 6:00am - 6:00pm

DRIVING DIRECTIONS

Follow Us

Summer Camp Signup!
Programs
Review Us Online

Categories

  • Activities
  • After School
  • Art Projects
  • Calendar
  • Events
  • Family Tips
  • General Updates
  • Health & Wellness
  • Holidays
  • Newsletters
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Preschool
  • Programs & Curriculum
  • Email Login
  • Disclosures
  • Site Map
  • No Joke Childcare
  • Admin Login
  • Contact Us
  • Updates Simplified

5815 Tutt Center Point Colorado Springs, CO 80922, (719)522-9099

Copyright 2025 Young Scholars Academy All Rights Reserved.

Email Login| Site Map| No Joke Marketing For Childcare| Contact Us| Updates Simplified