Top 10 Cheap and Easy Family Trips to Build Learning Through Experiences

Framed Mweeman

Over the summer I took a class, which was the basis for our article Family Travel to Build Emotional Intelligence. I learned that significant emotional events help not only to teach us but to form the sort of people we will become.

As a result, here are some ideas I plan on trying to do with our boys (and some we have already done that I would love to do again). These are one day activities that any family on any kind of budget could do.

  1. Visit a local hiking spot and take a nature hike, allowing children to fill a bag with found items or photograph them. At home sort the items or pictures into interesting categories and/or label them. Older children can write their own labels. Sorting based on categories your child comes up with on their own is a great way to promote higher order thinking.
  2. Go somewhere where you can feed animals (local fish hatcheries, duck ponds, zoos, and farms are great for this). Allow children to feed animals that are okayed by staff for feeding. Get out library books about the same animals when you come home and or draw the animals.
  3. Visit an old fashioned town or history museum to see history in action. Be sure to have your child ask questions of the rein actors. It is super fun to try and get the actors to leave character when asked twenty first century type questions (be sure to ask some questions to gain insight into historical facts as well).
  4. Visit a factory; food factories are the best. It is very interesting to children to see where their favorite foods and candies are made.
  5. Pick fruit at a local orchard. Many children think fruit comes from a grocery store. Make some sort of fun recipe or smoothie with the goods when you arrive at home.
  6. Go to a sports hall of fame or museum. Children love sports, but they often do not know the origins of their favorite games. Many of these ideas on this list of ten including this one support multiple intelligences. They can apply to learners with a variety of learning preferences, not just active learners or visual learners alone.
  7. Go to a high school or cheap local theater play. Many favorite movies and children’s books are made into wonderful live theatrical performances. Kids need to see plays for the experience that cannot be matched by just movies and television.
  8. Go to a restaurant that serves food from another country. We love taking our children to a favorite Vietnamese restaurant and trying new foods. We also like that the owners are Vietnamese and enjoy talking to our family each time we visit about their food and culture.
  9. Take your child on grocery or hardware store for errands and have them calculate the bill as you shop. Older children could plan and coupon clip and budget for the trip prior to going, young toddlers could label food and colors.
  10. Take children to a cooking class or art class as a family. Nothing shows children that learning is fun more than being a lifelong learner yourself!

I hope my thoughts on Learning through Experiences and travel strike a chord with you as well. Most of all, I hope they awaken your inner learner to experience some family travel. Happy memory making!

Do any of you have favorite one day family trips or family bonding ideas to add to these lists? Please comment on what your family enjoys doing to learn together. These were pretty standard ideas so I would love to hear more creative places and things to do for my family to do together!

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Family Travel to Build Emotional Intelligence

Framed Mweeman

“Without new experiences, something inside of us sleeps. The sleeper must awaken.” – Frank Herbert

Over the summer I was studying and going back to school. It is against every fiber of my being to learn during these beautiful sunny days, as I am such a summer lover. Doesn’t it seem crazy to be cooped up inside when I could be swimming with my boys? But, alas I had to continue some of my education in order to meet some of my work aspirations, and so I found myself taking a class about emotional intelligence. As a reader of this travel blog, you may be wondering why I am choosing to write about this topic to you readers. I could not help myself. I found myself thinking so much about travel, while learning in class, that I knew the information could be the basis for a terrific article. Specifically, my thoughts wondered how travel can foster so much growth for all ages in both Emotional and Cognitive Intelligence.

I think the biggest standout I took away from the entire class is how the lessons supported all of our beliefs on how we teach our boys. If you have been a long time reader of this blog, you know that my husband and I take our children everywhere and absolutely love nothing more than traveling as a family. We hear a lot of advice that we should not spend the money or that taking such young children on vacation is pointless because they will never remember the trip.

This is counter intuitive advice according to the way the brain learns. The human brain makes the strongest connections (connections that tend to last the longest) when a person experiences something firsthand. So for example, when we take our children to a farm and they get to milk a cow and hear it moo and see that cow has a baby calf, in turn they are making vital brain connections that are longer lasting than the ones that were made when we showed them a picture of a cow and practiced saying moo. Sure, they may never remember where or when they saw a cow in a few months, but they will have more connection to animals when they learn about them in school and certainly more basis for vocabulary concerning animals because of this real and hands on experience.

On our most recent trip to Hawaii we knew taking the kids would be a massive amount of work…and luggage. We heard how crazy and brave we were to take them from everyone. Deep down we knew we were a little crazy too, but we wanted to mainly see if we COULD actually do it. By doing a long family vacation together we learned so much more about ourselves as parents. The boys learned a lot too.

My youngest son, Lan-Shark (1) learned new words, that he loved to dance and hula, and that he could really dig the sand (both literally and figuratively). My oldest son, Bug (3) learned to hold his breath and swim underwater, he learned up close and personal what sea turtles look like in their natural environment, and that he could safely try new things with his parents guidance without being too afraid (things like sliding down slides and seeing a dinosaur exhibit).

I realized upon returning home at the end of almost three weeks, that for my husband, this was the longest stretch of time he had ever been with the boys without having to work (a priceless souvenir). When we left Hawaii, all four of us left with so many new things learned and so many connections made that would have never been possible in our busy lives at home. It was worth every bit of planning…and luggage, that it took to take two kids under three all the way across the country and the ocean.

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Paper Pandas- A Review of the Lantern Festival at the Missouri Botanical Gardens

Part of the wonders of having friends scattered around the world is I get to see different things that we may not get to experience. I still am looking for that magic potion to be everywhere at once. So when our great friend Jill from St. Louis posted pictures of the Japanese Lantern Festival from the Missouri Botanical Gardens, I was mesmerized by the beauty and intricacy of each paper display. So I was very grateful when Jill decided to write a guest post for us detailing the information and highlighting some of her beautiful photography. Please join us in welcoming Jill to the InACents family!

First of all let me say I feel honored to be part of the InACents family and share my experience at the Lantern Festival! The festival is currently a limited time exhibit at the Missouri Botanical Gardens in St. Louis, showing nightly through August 19, 2012.

Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Gardens

Missouri Botanical Gardens Tree

Missouri Botanical Gardens Waterfall

The gardens are one of the true gems of St. Louis, and I like to go to at least one exhibit there a year because it is always beautiful. The festival was a little pricey at $23 per ticket for adults; however, let me be the first to say it was WORTH IT! Even my mother, who has a hard time spending money on anything artsy, enjoyed herself and could not stop talking about how pretty it was the entire car ride home.

23-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns The Dragon Pillars Gate (Huabiao)

The Dragon Pillars Gate (Huabiao)

The lantern festival was a huge hit and has been at the Missouri Botanical Gardens all summer. The Lantern Festival has been selling out nightly, so we were delighted to get tickets at the door; however, I recommend buying tickets online to avoid being turned away.

04a-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Panda’s Paradise

04b-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Panda’s Paradise

04c-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Panda’s Paradise

Panda’s Paradise

There were 26 lanterns throughout the park, and I would be hard pressed to pick a favorite (but the pandas might take the gold). They also had shows and a Chinese bazaar with beverage stations throughout the park selling soda, beer, wine and water (All their cups and food containers are compostable!!).

22-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Goddess Blessing Buddha

Goddess Blessing Buddha

21-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Moonlit Pathway

Moonlit Pathway

20-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Cherry Blossom

Cherry Blossom

My family and I got there as soon as they opened at about 6:00 P.M. to go through the garden prior to the lighting of the lanterns. We went through the Japanese garden in the back of the park that has fish and ducks you can feed along with waterfalls and rock gardens. The garden also has a lot of really great kids areas including a playground, hedge mazes, and a fountain to play in.

19-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Exhibit

16-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Butterfly Lovers

Butterfly Lovers

12-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Exhibit

Wishing Well

At 8:00 P.M. the lanterns were lit, and I really do not have words to describe how beautiful the display was to see! One of the displays was a wishing well lantern that had little gongs hanging labeled “health, all wishes, love, riches” etc., so it was fun to hear the gongs ringing when people threw their coins in.

15a-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Dragon Embracing the Pillars

Dragon Embracing the Pillars

13-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns The Flying Apsaras

The Flying Apsaras

14-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Wishing Tree

Wishing Tree

They also had a bunch of trees called wishing trees. For $2 you could get a gold coin with a ribbon and throw it into the wishing tree. There were hundreds of wishes in the trees!

06a-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Porcelain Dragon

06b-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Porcelain Dragon

06c-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Porcelain Dragon

Porcelain Dragon

The porcelain dragons were made of traditional Japanese dishes like plates, soup spoons, saucers and cups! The dragons also moved their heads and had smoke coming out of their mouths that had a sweet smell that filled the air.

11-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Nine-Dragon Mural

Nine-Dragon Mural

09-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Heavenly Temple

Heavenly Temple

17-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Sail Boat

Sail Boat

The ship was made of plastic water bottles and will be recycled after the exhibit is taken down!

08-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Double Seventh Festival

Double Seventh Festival

07-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Blissful Wedding

Blissful Wedding

05-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Lotus Ponds

Lotus Ponds

The Lantern Festival is open until 10:00 P.M. nightly, with last admission being accepted at 9:00 P.M.

03-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns Lotus Flower

Lotus Flower

02-Missouri Botanical Gardens Japanese Lanterns The Terracotta Warrior

The Terracotta Warrior

The exhibits were set up in a big circle to keep the crowd all moving in one direction and also to make it easy to see all of the lanterns. Overall the Lantern Festival at the Missouri Botanical Gardens was a beautiful exhibit, and I would highly recommend it!

Thank you again Mr. and Mrs. InACents for allowing me to be a guest writer on the lantern festival!