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By Marie Hartwell-Walker, Ed.D.
In summary, to foster learning as well as fun . . .
    

Remember that play is the “work” of childhood. Good toys help kids learn new skills and practice relationships with others and their world.
When you choose a toy, ask yourself if it is really for the child or for yourself. (It’s okay to use toy buying as a nostalgia trip. Just don’t expect the child to share your enthusiasm.)
Don’t get hung up on gender-specific toys. Little girls and little boys both need to learn to be comfortable with babies and with tools in the world they are going to inhabit as adults.
Get in there and play with your kids. It’s part of the fun of being a parent.

 

Marie’s list of most important toys

1. Unit blocks. Plain wooden blocks (lots of them) in enough sizes to encourage hours of construction, alone and with others.

2. Legos or some other manipulative toy that encourages development of fine motor skills and creativity.

3. Baby dolls and a few basic changes of clothing. Nothing fancy. I’m not crazy about the dolls that crawl, eat, say something, etc. They usually break too easily and they reduce the amount of creativity required to play with them by whatever thing they do. I do suggest having dolls with various skin tones in the playroom. When children love their dolls, they are practicing loving people who look different from themselves.

4. Play kitchen stuff and a play toolbox — both toys for both genders. Kids love to imitate their parents and other adults around them and their play helps them get comfortable with doing lots of different things.

5. Dress-ups — scarves, hats, animal masks, leotards. Look in your closets or in the local Salvation Army store and put together a box full of stuff for hours of creative play.

6. A collection of sturdy rubber or plastic animals (farm animals, zoo animals, and definitely dinosaurs) and a few vehicles scaled to work with the blocks. Your kids will spend hours making farms, zoos, and dramatic scenes.


7. Art stuff. Lots of it. Playdough and cookie cutters, chunky crayons and paper for little kids. Older kids like glue, glitter, safety scissors, and lots of colors of paper.

8. Finger paint. Every kid deserves to be messy once in a while. You might also include an inexpensive plastic tablecloth to put on the floor when it’s finger painting time.

9. Something for making rhythms and music. A pot and a spoon will do for kids under two. Jingle bells for the young child. Something more complicated like a thumb harp for older ones.

10. A sturdy dollhouse with some basic furniture and durable dollhouse dolls that represent everyone in your family. The house needs to be big enough and open enough that the kids can really get in there and play. (Don’t be surprised if you find the dinosaur or the zoo animals in there sometimes.) You don’t have to take out a second mortgage to buy one of those expensive wooden houses. This can be a fun family project. Find a few sturdy boxes for rooms, cut out windows and doors, decorate the walls and put a scrap of fabric down for a rug. Small boxes, jar lids, some fabric and scraps of wood can be easily transformed into furniture. Dolls can be made out of old-fashioned clothespins. Even if you aren’t the creative type, remember that your kids are.

11. Anything that encourages physical exercise: jump ropes, balls, basic sports equipment, skates, age-appropriate riding toys. Too many of our kids lack physical confidence and competence.

12. An age-appropriate board game or two to encourage cooperative play and problem solving.

 

Read More:

http://psychcentral.com/lib/choosing-toys-for-your-child/000538

http://psychcentral.com/lib/choosing-toys-for-your-child/000538

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TakToy produces educational toys that develop different sets of skills. Our mission is to produce toys that can develop children’s physical and intellectual abilities, as we consider children as treasures that have to be found and polished. Accordingly, we use the latest technology, the best material and colors that are safe for children to produce the best quality toys with the lowest price.

 

 

 

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Reddot design musueme: creativity for kids

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What began in 1955 as “Ständige Schau formschöner Industrieerzeugnisse” (Permanent Show of Elegant Industrial Products) in Villa Hügel in Essen, Germany, has now become the world’s largest exhibition of contemporary design.