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Wednesday, July 30, 2014

How to Play with your 18 month to 3 Year Old to Build Social Skills and Joy




Toys That Help Your 18 Month to 3 Year Old Learn

Toys That Help Your 18 Month to 3 Year Old Learn


This age group can be described two ways- the terrible twos or the terrific twos, I choose the latter and it is all a matter of knowing how to help your 18 month old to 3 year old learn!

Mobility

Wonder Walker

Starting at 18 months of age you child has become mobile, they are starting to walk or are already pretty steady on their feet and they are ready to move! They love to push and pull toys and collect things. While pushing the Wonder Walker they also have a place to select and collect their toys and move them to where they want to play. As they become 2 -year olds they like to ride and pretend. They can be a fire fighter on the Fire Engine or just ride and be anyone they choose on the Driver.

Learning

Bouncing Sorter

Your 2 year old is very busy as he/ she starts developing their hand-eye co-ordination. Playing with a Bouncing Sorter gives your child the sensory input  of touch and strengthens hand eye coordination while they learn about shapes through sorting. They also continue to love music and playing a toy piano gives them the sensory input of touch and sound, add words to their songs and language skills become enhanced. A Deluxe Playcube will keep your 2-3 year old busy and learning all day long, moving colorful beads, playing with the alphabet blocks or spinning the gears and there is no clean-up because it is all self-contained.
Deluxe Playcube


Language


Barnyard Activity Boxes
Between you child’s 2nd and 3rd birthday is when language explodes. Your child begins to store words in categories moving from sounds to words to description. Playing with barnyard activity boxes encourages one of the first categories of animals. In addition to playing with farm animals sing Old MacDonald Had a Farm or read a book like the classic The Little Red Hen. Playing, reading and singing stimulates your child's language explosion and gives form to their play. Your child will be building their vocabulary through fun. Did you know at 24 months a child understands 500-700 words and by 30 months as many as 800-900 words!

Pretend Play
Corrugated Blocks

“ A 2 year old’s imagination develops naturally, but there is a lot you can do to spark it,” says Kristi Alexander, a pediatric psychologist at Alliant International University in San Diego. “ As you expose your child to new sights, sounds and sensations you open her mind to a bigger world.” Imagination! It really begins now. Building with big blocks they can they can build a castle, a city, a house, a road and play alone or with others to create a make-believe world. Your child’s imagination through play builds a deeper understanding of the world around them. Ding- dong! Let’s play house.  It is so much fun to learn all the names of the furniture and rooms of the house while playing with a mini house with a doorbell that works. Social skills of greeting and inviting begin here.

Doorbell House

Although you could just sit and watch, it is even better if your join in to your child’s play. By playing with them you are teaching them so much while you learn about your child.
At each stage of your child’s imaginative development, listening to him and taking part in his games will help you keep up with what he is thinking. You might revitalize your own imagination in the process.

As always, wishing you lots of fun through play!





 About the Author

Lois Kam Heymann, M.A. CCC-SLP is an expert Speech, Language and Learning specialist with over 30 years of helping kids reach their full potential in communication and learning skills. She is a recognized leader in the treatment of children with language, learning and auditory challenges. She is the Director of Communication Therapy at the Center for Hearing and Communication in New York City. She has been a professor, is a noted author and a frequent guest speaker. Her book The Sound of Hope has been endorsed by Rosie O'Donnell and many others.  Her mission is to teach parents about active listening and how to understand the developmental needs of their children. She's now delighted to be bringing parents the quality toys she believes will enhance children's development on her new website-ListenLoveLearn.com 

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