Hobbies And Interests

Games to Play Dress-Up

Pretending to be someone we are not is a concept as old as Cain and Abel. We have built a successful Hollywood industry out of make-believe and role-playing. Your young children are no different. They see people around them and want to emulate styles or stories or lives. Dress-up games are a creative way to allow them to explore their world and teach them that they can be whatever they set their mind to.
  1. Role-Playing

    • Young children learn from role-playing. Children should be allowed to raid their parents' closet to dress up and play house or put on a play or skit. Erect tents and allow your children to put on a play or reenact a scene from their favorite movie. Encourage them to change outfits and see what they like and can put together. Give them a prize for the most creative outfit or the look most resembling Mom or Dad.

    Masquerade

    • Allow your child to host a themed masquerade party. For instance, have every child wear the costume of a Disney character with a mask. Kids will have to guess who everyone is. The child who correctly matches the most names with the character wins a prize at the end of the night when everyone removes the masks.

    Makeup

    • Using basic makeup, instruct kids to paint an animal face on their partner. If the child wants to be a zebra, use white eye shadow and black eyeliner to create stripes on the face. Kids from the other teams must guess the animal correctly to get a point. The team that guesses correctly first gets to dress up with makeup next.

    Guess the Character

    • Using simple materials such as newspaper, paper towels, markers, tape and scissors, kids divide into groups and dress up one person on the team as a character. The other team has to guess the identity of the person to win a point. This is an effective game to play when studying stories from history, the Bible or Greek mythology.


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