Plans for Kids
Introducing Your
Little Ones To Woodworking
Woodworking is an interesting hobby with a lot of
potential. Once you learn and master the basics of this craft,
the possibilities are endless. Combine this experience with
teaching your kids, and you have something truly special. Not
only could you instill in your children a deep appreciation for
the craft of woodworking, you can also incorporate many lessons
and learning skills without your child knowing it! Woodworking
can help kids with their eye-hand coordination, dexterity,
problem solving, and measuring skills. Woodworking can also
teach a child how to take an abstract idea and make it real
through careful planning from start to finish. However, before
you put those grand designs in motion, cover a few basics
first.
One of the very first lessons your child will learn is
that mommy or daddy’s tools are not toys. The kids need to know
that if they are going to be working in the woodshop, there are
rules that everyone - even you - have to follow. Saws are
sharp, hammers hurt, nails or screws left on the floor can
cause a fall or other injury, and in the woodshop, everyone has
to be careful and pay close attention. When working in the
woodshop, teach your child that he or she should wear safety
glasses at all times. Above all, never leave your child to work
unsupervised.
Keep in mind that you want to start slowly. You
wouldn’t want to begin by teaching your four year old how to
use a rotary saw. Instead, give your younger child small jobs.
A good task would be helping sand a plank of wood to prepare it
for staining, or letting him or her draw a measurement while
you hold the ruler and point out where the line should begin
and end.
Start with the most basic tools and techniques and
build on them one by one. A child’s first project might be
something as simple as making a set of shelves or a small
bookcase.
Teach your child about the different types of wood,
what trees produce that wood and the properties of each. Tell
them why you would use oak instead of pine for a certain
project. Show your child that there is more to woodworking than
cutting and nailing boards together. Wood can be bent, carved,
burnt, painted, glued, or stained to make many different and
beautiful things. You can point out kitchen cabinets, furniture
in the living room, a guitar in the corner, or the picture
frame hanging on the wall as examples of wood’s
versatility.
For those of you who have children under four years
old, you can still get them acquainted with tools. Many toys
resemble the kinds of tools daddy uses in the workshop. You can
get a toddler-sized workbench with a set of tools safe for tiny
hands, or toy versions of little power tools that your child
can pretend to operate. Whatever the child’s age, you can find
a way to spark an interest in woodworking that will last a
lifetime.
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