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DOs and
DON'Ts For Kids Parties - A Parents' Guide
Author:
Stephen Turner, for www.invitationbirthday.co.uk
You'd love to throw a birthday
party for your child, but such events are not without their
headaches. Kids expectations, the clown that did not turn
up, the treasure hunt with permanently hidden treasure. All
parents have stories to tell, and I gathered dozens of them
together to give you a list of children's party DOs and DON'Ts
which will hopefully make your party pains a thing of the
past.
DO
- Find the time to organise
the party yourself. Get help from family or friends
if you need it --a child's party is at least a two person
job. Parents know that it takes time to organise a child's
party, which has lead to the trend for hired party organisers.
But such events lack the personal touch and cost a fortune.
A good kid's party should not cost a lot--it's your love
and imagination that will win the day with your child,
not your money.
- Let your child in on
the planning. Learning to plan is all part of growing
up, and who better than your child to tell you what children
like.
- Think twice before running
an activity party such as rock climbing at the local
gym. The cost can be very high per head and you'll often
find kids who are not interested in the activity--and then
what do you do for the next hour?
- Have a theme and then
stick to it from the invitations, to the children's
dress, the decorations, through the fun and games and into
jelly and ice cream. You need to create a unified experience,
whether it is super heroes, outer space, dinosaurs or cartoon
characters. A themed party will definitely streamline your
planning and it will give you ideas for activities, whereas
running an unconnected series of games is to invite chaos.
Being a parent is hard enough.
- Consider your child's
interests when picking your theme. Horses, rockets,
cartoons, football
Let his or her interests be a guide.
- Spend time thinking about
the invitations. See the invitation as the first party
activity and set anticipation and excitement. Invitations
with a gift are a good idea. A pirate party invite with
an eye patch, or football party invite with a football chocolate.
Balloons with hidden invites are always a winner.
- Dress for the part.
Where is the magic when the pirate games master is dressed
in jeans and a t-shirt, or, worse, in a shirt and tie?
- Set off with a bang.
A good idea at the start, when everyone is gathered round,
is to reinforce the theme with something visual, and incorporate
a little gift. For example, pirates get a pirate medallion,
cowboys get neck scarves. Then it's into something energetic
like a relay race, obstacle course, followed by something
creative and calming then something active, and so on. In
this way you can moderate energy levels through out the
party.
- Let the children have
a small snack early on to keep energy levels up.
- Keep your party short
but active--two hours is fine. If you keep it short,
the children's experience will be richer and they will enjoy
things so much more than if you drag things out. Your child
has a reputation to keep after all and having parents who
throw a good party is important, stupid.
- Plan for quick changes
in activity and focus. Kids will love it if there is
always something new to do, so plan a selection of activities.
Jumping from one to the next is the key to success. As a
guide, plan for one activity for each 15 minutes of party
time, and have two or three as backup.
- Keep the prizes and surprises
coming, and give the children some goal in doing the
activity. For example, the first one to find five chocolate
eggs gets
- Aim to have the children
go wishing the party had never ended. The end is all
about show biz and pizzaz. Have the pile of coats and goodie
bags all ready before this final activity, then fill the
final minutes with spectacle. You could release helium balloons,
run a silly race - anything that will send the kids off
with smiles on their faces and leave one on yours.
- Stay relaxed and enjoy
yourself. Yes, you have to make the whole thing run
smoothly but make sure you enjoy yourself. You are running
a birthday party not a trade conference.
DON'T
- Let your child pressure
you into an overly complicated or expensive event at
a local restaurant complex, with all manner of fee charging
special entertainers. Your child is a consultant, you are
the parent. Have the party at home, space allowing, where
you can control it, and have maybe one entertainer if you
think it necessary. Remember that you can create
sufficient fun and excitement in your own back garden with
careful planning and high energy on the day.
- Greet arriving guests
at your child's dinosaur themed party by charging out the
front door dressed as Godzilla, roaring like a formula one
car. If you do, things will most likely start with tears
when some of the more nervous guests don't see the funny
side of this six foot terror coming down the garden path.
- Forget to write down
your plan. Know where you're going and what's next.
As any teacher will tell you (your author has ten years
teaching experience) once a child loses confidence in the
games master, non cooperation and trouble are never far
away.
- Forget to add a bit of
make believe. If your theme is pirates and treasure,
build up the story. 'You are shipwrecked and now have to
follow the clues to the magic coconut. Knock the coconut
off the perch and get the clue to hidden treasure!'
- Forget to allow enough
time for jelly and ice cream - twenty minutes should
be fine.
- Try to reinvent the wheel.
The tried and tested party games like relays and treasure
hunts are so popular because they work. You can always
build in more novel ideas around them, but have the tried
and tested 'get out of jail free card' activities central
to your plan. They will save the day.
- Don't listen to anyone
who tells you nonsense rules about how many children
should attend for a 5 year old, how many for a 6 year old.
Ask your child who they want to invite and take it from
there, keeping things manageable. Make sure that no one
important is left out due to a recent children's arguement,
and make sure you don't have a room full of strangers.
- Forget to ask invitees'
parents for an RSVP by a certain date then follow up
with a phone call.
- Panic. Expect the
unexpected because it will happen and you will just have
to adapt. Such is the lot of the parent.
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