Mini-Lessons > 9. Activities for one-on-one time

one-on-one time activities

There are two types of one-on-one time: 1) Unplanned time, and 2) Planned time.

Unplanned Time

Unplanned time is when you do something spontaneously, like walking the dog. “Hey, wanna walk the dog with me?”

It could be running an errand together. “Hey, I’m running to the store. Wanna come with me?”

It could be something you know your child likes to do. “Hey, you wanna throw the ball for a few minutes?”

It could be an activity your child does NOT like to do. “Mind if I give you a hand with that chore?”

It could be an activity that your child chooses. “Hey, I’ve got a few minutes. What would you like to do?”

Bed time is a good time for unplanned one-on-one time. After your child gets into bed you can spend a few minutes reading or talking.

When you are alone with your child in the car, turn off the radio and strike up a conversation.

Teaching your child a life-skill can be a good way to spend unplanned one-on-one time together.

Keep in mind what interests you may not necessarily interest your child. And what interests one child might not interest another. Exposing them to many different activities and life-skills will give them opportunities to choose what they like and what they don’t like—and being able to choose helps satisfy their need for a sense of personal power.

Planned Time

Planned time works like this: Say to your child, “Let’s you and me do something together—just the two of us. We’ll set a date and write it on the calendar. What would you like to do?”

There’s something about writing it on a calendar that gives an event importance. Your child will feel important and look forward to your daddy-daughter date or your father-son activity.

When you do what your child likes to do, you will be entering her world, so be ready to play. Depending on her age, you might build a tower with blocks, read a book together, kick around the soccer ball, or go on a hike. Your time together should be face to face. No TV.

Be prepared to give your child a choice between two activities if she can’t think of one. “Would you like to play a game or go for a walk?”

To get you thinking of ideas you can do with your children, here is a list of 70 things I have done with my children. This list is by no means exhaustive and these activities can be used for either unplanned or planned time.

  1. Lie on the trampoline or grass at night with blankets and pillows and look at the stars
  2. Play catch
  3. Play a game—Old Maid is a card game with matching cards. Turn them all face down and take turns flipping over two cards, trying to find the matching pair
  4. Shoot some hoops
  5. Take a trip to the library
  6. Bake something: cake, cookies, brownies
  7. Build something with blocks or Legos
  8. Draw or color something
  9. Go to a golf course. Practice putting on the putting green, hit a bucket of balls, or play a round.
  10. Build a snowman
  11. Make snow angels
  12. Have a picnic—outdoors or indoors
  13. Visit a museum
  14. Take the dog to a dog training class
  15. Write a letter to someone you both know, like Grandma, or a friend
  16. Look at family photos
  17. Sing songs
  18. Tell stories about when your child was a toddler or a baby
  19. Simply hold your child
  20. Build a blanket fort
  21. Plant flower or vegetable seeds—create a garden
  22. Go to the park
  23. Finger Paint with chocolate pudding
  24. Take pictures or videos—make a movie
  25. Visit an aquarium
  26. Put together a puzzle
  27. Build a fire and make s’mores
  28. Build something with wood—maybe a bird house
  29. Make homemade pizza
  30. Rake leaves and jump in the pile
  31. Make water balloons. Play catch with one as you slowly back farther away from each other
  32. Go on a bike ride
  33. Have fun with Play-Doh
  34. Go on a hike
  35. Attend a baseball, basketball, soccer, or football game
  36. Go fishing
  37. Go out for ice cream, pie, bagels, donuts, pizza, chicken or burgers
  38. Look at things under a magnifying glass
  39. Look at things under a microscope
  40. Go horseback riding
  41. Blow bubbles
  42. Paint a picture by numbers
  43. Attend a play or dance performance
  44. Wash the car
  45. Fly a kite
  46. Jump rope
  47. Play hopscotch
  48. Exercise together
  49. Go jogging together—enter a 1-mile or 5K race
  50. Color with crayons or colored pencils
  51. Go bowling—or set up a bowling alley in your hall with empty 2-liter plastic bottles and a softball.
  52. Play Simon Says
  53. Listen to music and play homemade instruments together
  54. Start a journal with each child
  55. Prepare a family meal together
  56. Start a collection
  57. Play with sidewalk chalk
  58. Play tetherball
  59. Play ping pong
  60. Indoor or outdoor miniature golf
  61. Tell jokes
  62. Play hillbilly golf (Google it)
  63. Ride inner-tubes or toboggins down a snowy hill
  64. Go to a movie
  65. Feed the ducks at a local pond
  66. Have your child teach you something he knows but you don’t
  67. Write a poem
  68. Experiment with a new recipe
  69. Go swimming
  70. Go camping in the woods, the backyard or the living room

You can find a lot of suggestions for activities to do with your children at any age, by going to Google and searching on:

  • Activities with 3-year-olds
  • Activities with _____ year-olds
  • Activities with teenagers