Five EYFS Activities Ready in Two Minutes Flat
When You Need Something Good, Fast
There are mornings when your carefully planned activity just isn't happening. A child is overtired, your resources are in the wrong place, or someone new has arrived and you need to bridge a gap. In those moments, a quick-to-set-up activity that still hits the EYFS learning areas is worth its weight in gold.
These five ideas use things you likely already have to hand. They're not fillers — each one supports meaningful learning across Communication and Language, Personal, Social and Emotional Development, or Physical Development, depending on how you run them.
1. The Treasure Basket
Fill a low basket with safe everyday objects: a wooden spoon, a fabric scrap, a small metal tin, a smooth stone, a fir cone, a silicone spatula. That's it. Babies and toddlers will explore through touch, taste (supervised), sound, and sight — this is pure heuristic play. It supports sensory development and early problem-solving without a single printed worksheet. Prep time: under a minute if the basket lives somewhere accessible.
2. Mark-Making Tray
Pour a thin layer of cornflour, sand, or dry rice into a shallow tray. Hand a child a stick, a finger, or a small toy car. Let them go. Younger children will make random marks; older ones might draw lines, shapes, or attempt letters. This supports fine motor development and early writing skills — both clearly EYFS-aligned areas. You can add loose parts like leaves or pebbles for variation.
3. Story Stones (Grab-and-Go)
Keep a bag of stones painted or stickered with simple images — a house, a tree, a sun, a person, an animal. A child pulls three stones and tells you a story using them. For younger children, you tell the story together. This builds narrative language, vocabulary, and communication skills in a beautifully open-ended way. Make the stones once and they're ready whenever you need them.
4. Threading and Sorting
A handful of large pasta shapes, chunky beads, or wooden discs alongside some string, a colander, or a muffin tin is all you need. Children can sort by colour, size, or shape — or thread items onto string for fine motor practice. Sorting activities support early maths understanding (categorisation, pattern) and require sustained concentration, which feeds into the Characteristics of Effective Learning.
5. Mirror Play
A small unbreakable mirror placed at floor level opens up a world of self-discovery for babies and toddlers, and imaginative play for older children. You can extend it by adding loose materials — feathers, fabric, shiny spoons — around the mirror for reflection exploration. For two-year-olds this is rich PSED territory: recognising themselves, noticing expressions, beginning to understand identity.
Planning Doesn't Have to Mean Hours of Prep
The best activities are often the simplest. What matters is your involvement — the questions you ask, the language you model, the way you extend a child's thinking. These five ideas give you a solid starting point that you can adapt to the children in front of you on any given day.
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Start free — from £9.99/mo →These articles are general guidance for registered childminders in England, not legal or Ofsted advice. Always check the current EYFS statutory framework and your local authority childminding advisor for your specific situation.