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Locality: Mississauga, Ontario

Phone: +1 905-507-2398



Website: www.kijiji.ca/v-childcare-nanny-service/mississauga-peel-region/grand-highland-childcare-daycare-service/1464086375

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Grand Highland Child Care 26.05.2021

Fall Art can be messy but very colorful. This art work was a result of a triumphant nature walk in the creek with our toddlers. They collected some fall leaves and Maple keys which they thought were fascinating. What you see here is a non constricted art work, that was purely led by the children. We provided them with some washable paints, brushes and paper. The rest was all magic! Art should be about the process, not the product. Children love to use their senses to explore their world. Half way into this painting episode the kids were feeling the paint with their fingers, smelling it, and enjoying the colours they were unintentionally creating. After all art is all about having fun.

Grand Highland Child Care 10.05.2021

Children are like sponges; they absorb everything that they can hear, see and feel. Hence why it is important that we provide them rich material to learn. It's never too early to introduce children to reading. Here are some tips and benefits of reading to young children... 1) Helps with sound recognition 2) Improves listening skills 3) Opens up their vocabulary bank 4) Helps children to visualize and imagine... 5) Teaches them routine 6) Provokes their thinking and inquiry Tips to engage young children in learning.. 1) Choose books with simple repetitive words 2) Books with big colourful pictures are a great choice. 3) Pick books with a few pages, if it it too long you'll loose your young enthusiastic audience. 4) Enunciate the words as much as you can. 5) Show and retell using the pictures.

Grand Highland Child Care 21.04.2021

Season Greetings from Grand Highland Child Care. A little message from us to you. We are heading into the core of winter season, typically now is when you want to cozy up indoors. However it is important to bring your toddlers outdoors for a quality outdoor playtime. Outdoor play time in winter helps your child develop cognitive skills, social interaction, and sensory skills. It builds physical strength, boosts immunity, and most of all alows them to have fun in the snow. Here at Grand Highland Child Care center we make sure to gear up our kiddos and bring them outside for playtime in the snow.

Grand Highland Child Care 16.04.2021

Did you know that we provide tax receipts?Did you know that we provide tax receipts?

Grand Highland Child Care 31.03.2021

A SILENT TRAGEDY There is a silent tragedy that is unfolding today in our homes, and concerns our most precious jewels: our children. Our children are in a deva...stating emotional state! In the last 15 years, researchers have given us increasingly alarming statistics on a sharp and steady increase in childhood mental illness that is now reaching epidemic proportions: Statistics do not lie: 1 in 5 children have mental health problems A 43% increase in ADHD has been noted A 37% increase in adolescent depression has been noted There has been a 200% increase in the suicide rate in children aged 10 to 14 What is happening and what are we doing wrong? Today's children are being over-stimulated and over-gifted with material objects, but they are deprived of the fundamentals of a healthy childhood, such as: Emotionally available parents Clearly defined limits Responsibilities Balanced nutrition and adequate sleep Movement in general but especially OUTDOORS Creative play, social interaction, unstructured game opportunities and boredom spaces Instead, in recent years, children have been filled with: Digitally distracted parents Indulgent and permissive parents who let children "rule the world" and whoever sets the rules A sense of right, of deserving everything without earning it or being responsible for obtaining it Inadequate sleep and unbalanced nutrition A sedentary lifestyle Endless stimulation, technological nannies, instant gratification and absence of boring moments What to do? If we want our children to be happy and healthy individuals, we have to wake up and get back to basics. It is still possible! Many families see immediate improvements after weeks of implementing the following recommendations: Set limits and remember that you are the captain of the ship. Your children will feel more confident knowing that you have control of the helm. Offer children a balanced lifestyle full of what children NEED, not just what they WANT. Don't be afraid to say "no" to your children if what they want is not what they need. Provide nutritious food and limit junk food. Spend at least one hour a day outdoors doing activities such as: cycling, walking, fishing, bird / insect watching Enjoy a daily family dinner without smartphones or distracting technology. Play board games as a family or if children are very small for board games, get carried away by their interests and allow them to rule in the game Involve your children in some homework or household chores according to their age (folding clothes, ordering toys, hanging clothes, unpacking food, setting the table, feeding the dog etc.) Implement a consistent sleep routine to ensure your child gets enough sleep. The schedules will be even more important for school-age children. Teach responsibility and independence. Do not overprotect them against all frustration or mistakes. Misunderstanding will help them build resilience and learn to overcome life's challenges, Do not carry your children's backpack, do not carry their backpacks, do not carry the homework they forgot, do not peel bananas or peel oranges if they can do it on their own (4-5 years). Instead of giving them the fish, teach them to fish. Teach them to wait and delay gratification. Provide opportunities for "boredom", since boredom is the moment when creativity awakens. Do not feel responsible for always keeping children entertained. Do not use technology as a cure for boredom, nor offer it at the first second of inactivity. Avoid using technology during meals, in cars, restaurants, shopping centers. Use these moments as opportunities to socialize by training the brains to know how to work when they are in mode: "boredom" Help them create a "bottle of boredom" with activity ideas for when they are bored. Be emotionally available to connect with children and teach them self-regulation and social skills: Turn off the phones at night when children have to go to bed to avoid digital distraction. Become a regulator or emotional trainer for your children. Teach them to recognize and manage their own frustrations and anger. Teach them to greet, to take turns, to share without running out of anything, to say thank you and please, to acknowledge the error and apologize (do not force them), be a model of all those values you instill. Connect emotionally - smile, hug, kiss, tickle, read, dance, jump, play or crawl with them. **** https://yourot.com//2017/5/24/what-are-we-doing-to-our-chi