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Setting up playroom similar to preschool plan? X-Posted in Decluttering, Org& Simp.  

post #1 of 5
Thread Starter 
I hope it's okay to put this here. We struggle constantly with toy organization. We have four kids, but one's a baby, so there are three that play with the toys all the time. We have a small bin for each type of toy. We rotate. Now my kids can get in the front closet where I keep the extra toys though, and get all of them out at once. BIG mess. So I moved them all but five bins to the storage room in the basement.

We used to have an "art cart" which was a three drawer cabinet with paper, markers, crayons and coloring books. It was in the kitchen and the boys could use it anytime they wanted, but crayons and markers needed to stay at the table. We had some issues with crayon on the wall and floor in other rooms and they weren't cleaning up, so it's been removed now.

I'm always trying to find ways to make it better and give them more chances. One thing I've been thinking a lot about is how well things work in preschool. They have an area for each type of toy. Puzzles, blocks, trains, dress up, art, etc. I think it's neat, but the room is also huge. Our playroom is 12x11, I think. Right now all that's in it is an activity/train table. We bought it for the train set, but after preschool last year, I regretted it because they put the train together on a big rug, so it could be put together by the kids however they wanted. Ours can really only be put together one way (by me) to fit on the table. I love the table for block building though.

Does anyone do this with your playroom? Do you have suggestions for organizing it? I think we need to find better ways to store things to make it work. At preschool, they have a shelf that holds big blocks. We do need some type of rug for the train set (or they could use the tile in the entry way. It's big and totally wasted space (as long as they keep it away from the front door so people can come in). I wish the builders used some of the space from that and made the playroom bigger.

They all do so well at preschool with playing in designated areas and cleaning up after. Is this wishful thinking and a design that wouldn't work well in a house? Or has anyone done it and found that it's possible? Do you have suggestions for making it work? Or any other ideas for better organization? I want them to actually play with what they have instead of being too overwhelmed with so many.

I've been reading a lot about the Montessori philosophy and it's interesting. I'm not sure how that design would work in a house though.
post #2 of 5
I posted this picture a while back of my son's room, which I've organized Montessori-style. He also goes to a Montessori preschool so he already gets the idea of a tray equals an activity and you put one tray back before you get out another.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v3...s/toyshelf.jpg

The animals on top are actually puppets, I need to get a stand for them. The trays on the shelves contain different activities.

First shelf: wooden puzzles in ziploc baggies, playdoh, doll & outfits, CD player w/ headphones and some books on CD

Second shelf: bouncy balls and wooden cage, crayons/markers/paper/scissors, digital camera & cord, take-a-part airplane and tools

There are some loose toys like matchbox cars and playmobil figures and whatnot in the drawers. To be honest he never gets them out.

The wooden trays came from Michael's, they were about $3 each.
post #3 of 5
Thread Starter 
Wow, that looks GREAT! Thank you so much for sharing the picture. Right now none of the art stuff is available to them without supervision. My oldest just started kindergarten last week though and the teacher said she lets them have some of their supplies at their desk to be responsible for. She said they take great pride in taking care of their stuff when you expect them to instead of expecting them to have a problem with it. I'd like to mimic that thought at home too. I'm a little scared though! Does he do okay with that stuff? With play dough too? Is your play space carpeted?

I'm going to go to Michaels today to buy some of those trays. Those are nice. We have a two shelf bookshelf that I can move in there to store them.

Since I have three kids playing with toys, they each get a tray and it has to be put away before moving on. Is that the idea? So your playroom probably always looks great, doesn't it? I'm so impressed that he gets it! My twins are June/03. I know so much of it is consistency too, which I've been lacking up until now. I really want to find a system that works for the whole family, not just them and not just dh and I.

Thanks again for sharing the picture and details!
post #4 of 5
It doesn't always look great, no, but at least there IS a system to strive for, kwim? I was really inspired to do this by the fact that when I was a kid, there would be these horrible battles over "clean your room" and I truly had no idea what I was supposed to do with everything. I didn't know where to start. So for DS I wanted to make sure there's a structure in place.

The crayons/markers haven't been a problem in our house, but our floorplan is such that DS is rarely out of my sight. He has a table in the living room where he's supposed to work on his playdoh or whatever and he's mostly been good about keeping it contained there. Paint has been a little more of a problem, so I keep that put up and he can only paint if I'm right there.
post #5 of 5
I had two main play areas: the dining room that I set up as a Montessori type room, with different activities on trays/ art easel and supplies/ puzzles and board games, etc. Mostly, things in that room really worked better with adult supervision, since my 2 yr old is not great about cleaning up, and it was things that have a lot of small pieces. I had some practical life activities, like pouring water or rice, and such. I could block off that room when friends came over with a baby gate, to minimize mess.

Then I had the main play area, and I have a play kitchen area, dress up bin area, blocks/ train/ small animals/ cars, and stuffed animals. There is also an area for balls and gross motor type stuff. In Anna's room there is a bucket of duplos, a dr's kit, shopping cart, and Fisher Price little people house/ school/ farm. Some musical instruments are near the piano.

Books are mostly in our bedroom, since we all read together on the king sized bed, but there are some book piles in different places around the house. (Anna's room, the bathroom, the living room by my chair.)

Stuff isn't always clean/ picked up (ha), but it does make it easier to do so. Everything has a place, and is arranged in a logical fashion.
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Mothering › Forums › Parenting › Ages and Stages › The Childhood Years › Setting up playroom similar to preschool plan? X-Posted in Decluttering, Org& Simp.