Children Learn Best with ‘Real Toys’

Do you ever feel swamped in plastic toys that have a way of multiplying when you turn your back?

Then they hold your child’s attention only moments until he is on to the next thing?

Most children have too many toys in general; and most of these toys do not encourage or support children’s optimum play.

Webster defines a ‘toy’ as “an object, often a small representation of something familiar for children to play with; a plaything.” I find this definition somewhat limiting, especially when the definition of ‘play’ is “an activity engaged in for recreation, as by children.”

Children do have fun playing; however, for them it is more than simple recreation. Play is serious business for them.

Play is the way children learn, which means children love and enjoy learning. This is their natural state, a perpetual state of exploring, experimenting, and discovering, and learning. They LOVE it!!

(This is important to remember when we see what happens to children’s love of learning when they participate in most educational programs. I wrote more about this in a recent post How Children Learn Best) http://www.joyousfamilyliving.com/children/how-children-learn-best/

Because play is essential to their optimal development, it is important to provide learning environments that nurtures your child’s full potential to learn. This is where ‘real toys’ come in.

Real toys are real-life objects, such as measuring spoons and cups, lids, jars, rocks, bungee cords. Often the seemingly mundane of objects of life hold great fascination for them.

Older children love much the same materials. What’s different is the complexity and skill with which they use them.

If you observe your child when he is playing, you’ll discover the skills he is developing that motivate him to keep learning.

One of Bas’s favorite activities is collecting things from my desk and seeing what he can create with them. These include my stapler and staple puller, scratch paper, 3 by 5 cards, scissors, tape, pens, markers.

Last week in our backyard, he balanced bricks on a piece of wood, then used it as a lever, then used what he’d made to build a house for Mouse-Mouse. (I’m not sure where he got this name.)

Fifteen minutes later, he’s in another section of our backyard and using redwood needles to build a castle, which he promptly destroyed. Then he decided to build a bridge across a narrow rut using a redwood twig and discovered that it was too short to span the distance.

Then he hunted around and found a couple of longer sticks. Woo-la! He built two bridges!

And so it goes from one exploration – creation to the next and not a single plastic ‘toy’ touched!

Children love real objects. They love materials they can manipulate and which they can use in diverse ways.

Traditional toys, plastic toys, often lack options for creativity and self-expression. They have limited function and learning potential to your child. Once she masters whatever learning is in the toy, she loses interest.

Once you realize your child uses toys for discovery and self-expression, you’ll easily understand your child’s limited attention to these toys.

So next time you consider buying your child something from the toy store, no matter how cute, colorful, or invitingly displayed, take a moment and consider it’s learning and self-expression potential for your child. Many buttons that make different sounds has little potential for either learning or self-expression for your child.

Invest wisely in few toys that give your child hours of exploring and discovery, and remember every-day objects provide optimal learning and self-expression for your child. You can put your wallet away!

While you’re at it, tell your family and friends what you toys you want for your child, especially during the holidays and for his birthday.

Please share with me and other parents what ‘real toys’ your child loves best. What is a toy you purchased for her that enjoyed for a long time? What did she lose interest in quickly?

Fun Family Photos – Easter 2011

Okay, we had a great time in Mendocino over Easter weekend. I tried to choose just a few photos and I simply could not post any fewer. I love so many of them!

I love sharing my family with you!

Camping Adventure in the Libyan Sahara

To shorten our driving time, my British friends and I flew from
Tripoli to Sebha – a one hour flight – before heading out in 3 Land
Cruisers into the Sahara the next morning.

Driving for 5 hours on the highway was very uneventful, except for
frequent checkpoints where we gave the military personnel a formal
paper with a list of all the people in our party including the cook
and his driver.

Driving off-road into the desert sand was spectacular! The first two
days we drove through the Acacus Mountains, black rock structures
draped in pale orange Sahara sand. Our campsites were dramatically
beautiful with untouched dunes to climb and photograph.

While here we delighted in ancient rock art images dating from 10,000
years ago. I especially loved the giraffes and horses, although
everything was interesting. Fascinating to know these and other
animals used to call the Sahara home.

The last two days and nights in the desert we were surrounded the
gracefully undulating dunes, stretching as far as the eye can see,
with nothing else in sight. It was unendingly beautiful!

Highlights of the trip —

Our drivers, each with their own beautiful heart and playful
personality. Have you ever raced up sand dunes at 60 mph and then slid
down the steep side, 200 to 300 feet below? Two of the drivers were
like cubs, trying to out-do the other in speed and driving ability,
never passing the skilled lead driver. It often took my breath away
and was such phenomenal fun!

One of the other women and I went running down one of these steep
dunes, picked us so much momentum we were moving our legs as fast as
we could just to keep upright and then did a full-on face plant in the
next dune. Talk about momentum and propulsion. We never saw it
coming. Good thing about sand – it’s painless!

Another highlight was climbing a 400 foot dune of very soft sand in
the last light of day with our fantastic guide Dave so we could get
high enough to get cell coverage and send text messages to my family.
Then standing in the dark with the sand blowing at our feet and
pulling up a gps map of our location in the dunes. Totally cool! Then
retracing our steps going down, using our headlamps for light in the
now totally dark night!

Also, the last night we had a pretty strong wind so my tent was
blowing a lot during the night and then tried to take off with me in
it the next morning. Our guide posted a video of this on YouTube,
which I haven’t seen yet. I’ll post it when I return. The internet is
slow here so I can’t.

Not to be forgotten, our sweet, tender-hearted cook indulged us with
delightful, tasty meals of couscous, veggies, and camel meat for the
carnivores.

I will always treasure this fun adventure with my British friends!!

I’m in Libya!!

I’m here and I’m delighted! Much more Westernized than I expected. Similar energy to other Third World countries done in a Libyan style. Frontier feeling. Nice group of Brits – 7 of us plus 2 guides and a security person, although he wouldn’t intimidate me if I wanted to cause trouble. Kinda like the 2 guys with the sling shot in Guatemala who said they were protecting Doug and me several years ago.

Thrilling when we flew in over the Mediterranean and I saw Africa for the first time. An exotic land out of a storybook.

We walked around the medina – old town- before dinner. Beautiful mosques and my beloved arches everywhere.

Tomorrow evening we fly south into the Sahara and then camp in the desert the next 4 nights. I know I’m going to have fun!!!

I’ll write again when we return. I am in good hands.

A Day of Profound Encounters in Holland

Today was awesome! I did exactly what I planned and went to the North Sea. It was overcast and no rain or wind.  I walked the beach about 4 miles round trip. Loved being on the North Sea!

My day was a series of encounters – from the interesting to the fun to the difficult and challenging to the profoundly heart-touching to the ones that helped me grow. Actually all of them did that, including the tiny little snail I met at the side of the trail in the dunes, as she moved herself along about 1/4 inch at a time with no sense of rush and urgency. She reminded me of the horses – accepting wherever they are and whatever they are doing at the moment without judgment or resistance or desire to be somewhere else.

Every encounter was a story, which I’m sure I will share in the coming weeks and months.

Tomorrow -Saturday – is the Big Libya Day!  I have my train tickets and plan already set to get to the airport tomorrow morning. I fly out at 10:30am.

I met a man on the beach today who has been to Libya 2 or 3 times on business. He said there are so many police in Tripoli that it is one of the safest places I can go. Excellent! Interesting how many people have said they thought Libya would be dangerous. I can certainly understand why based on the media and international news.

I’ll write more as soon as I can. We leave to go camping in the desert on Monday evening.

Blessings to you all!