Inexpensive Educational Supplies
some suggestions for where to look, and what to look for
How much are supplies for unschooling? It ranges somewhere between nothing and everything--the whole budget. Once a family starts to consider
everything educational, even groceries and cleaning supplies are educational.
For beginners, though, part of the trick is working on the definition of
"educational."
First the scare stories. It is possible to pay $4 for a plastic bag
containing fifty plastic American pennies. We bought the 30 plastic fifty
cent pieces instead. It seemed like a better deal. (I know it's stupid, but
we still have most of them and sometimes they get played with.) Real money
can be bought for face value (or sometimes very young children will sell you
two dimes for a nickle, but it's best to slip them back later).
There are educational games which are wonderful, glorious, and cost $30 and
more. Go to stores, look in catalogs, familiarize yourself with them, and
then hit the thrift stores, garage sales, or the flea market. You might find
the same games for $2 and if they don't have all the parts, wait for another
one for $2 and combine them. We have found some wonderul games at thrift
stores. We have one out of print game called "Pilgrimage" about going from
London to Jerusalem in the Middle Ages, the game board for which is a map of
Europe and the Mediteranean. We bought "Scotland Yard" for $3, the
Ravensburg version. We found a German dice box with various sorts of dice
and a booklet, all in German, with details of lots of games.
One of our best math tools is a revolving holder full of poker chips.
Babies discovered and continued stacking-patterns started by a parent or
sibling. They were counted, stacked, rolled, spun and thrown. Older kids
use them as coins in adventure games, or try to make patterns too hard for
parents to guess.
On good days the search is the best part. Our puppet collection built on two
puppets, both from thrift stores. Now we have ten or so, all kinds, from at
least five different countries. When puppet shows come on TV or articles on
marionettes come by, we perk up. While scanning for the things you are
needing or collecting, though, marvelous surprises can surface. What
conversations can follow the purchase of a cutwork or pulled-thread
handerchief or napkin? A handwrought aluminum wall plate from the 50's
might have been ho-hum then, but might inspire your 90's children to many
hours of play with aluminum foil or wood or a thin sheet of scrap metal and a
hammer.
Used Easter baskets will be on sale everywhere in the Spring for nearly
nothing. We have used ours for birdfeeders, storing doll clothes, storing
kindling (eventually just burn the basket), rinsing toy dishes outside (water
runs out), for hanging plants, or storing socks, caps or hair scrunchies on
tops of dressers. While you have those baskets, see if you can look at
where they're from, how they're made, and of what material. When weaving
pictures or examples of basketry come by, point that out to your children (or
just appreciate them yourself).
Costumes! Other people's used clothes or cast-off souvenirs can form the
basis for your own historical or multi-cultural costume collections.
Dishes, vases, jars and canisters--a collection of antique (or just funky)
international art could become your hostess collection, your storage system,
your in-home museum!
Learning is everywhere. The five dollars that will buy nothing but plastic
pennies or pencils at some stores will buy a sackful of treasures other
places. |