The Peterborough Examiner

Old school toys vs. high-tech gifts: here’s some advice

Pediatrici­ans say jigsaw puzzles spark imaginatio­n and creativity in children

- KAREN D’SOUZA

Bust out the wooden blocks. Set out the toy train. Pediatrici­ans prefer old-fashioned toys for small children than high-tech gadgets, a new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics finds.

Pediatrici­ans say hands-on gifts, like old-school jigsaw puzzles — and even the cardboard boxes they come in — spark imaginatio­n and creativity better than the electronic devices that parents often feel pressured to buy at the holidays. The doctors advise parents to ignore the flashing screens, which have become ubiquitous in our digital age, and get back to the basics. A cardboard box, for example, can be transforme­d into a house or a cash register by the child, which engages their brain while they play.

“The best toys are those that support parents and children playing, pretending and interactin­g together,” said Alan Mendelsohn, co-author of the report and associate professor in the Department­s of Pediatrics and Population Health at New York University. “You just don’t reap the same rewards from a tablet or screen. And when children play with parents, the real magic happens, whether they are pretending with toy characters or building blocks or puzzles together.”

The best toys are those that match children’s developmen­tal abilities, while encouragin­g the growth of new skills, according to the AAP. Toys are important to developing children’s brains, language interactio­ns and social interactio­ns and physical activity, particular­ly as they move out of toddlerhoo­d. Without the right toys, it’s easy for kids to become passive and let the gadgets do all of the work while they play.

Doctors also warn that while many electronic devices are billed as educationa­l, that is not always the case. Much “interactiv­e” media, such as videos, computer programs and specialize­d books with voice-recorded reading, make claims about educationa­l benefits in advertisem­ents that are unsubstant­iated, according to AAP.

“Toys have evolved over the years, and advertisem­ents may leave parents with the impression that toys with a ‘virtual’ or digital-based platform are more educationa­l,” said Aleeya Healey, a lead author of the report. “Research tells us that the best toys need not be flashy or expensive or come with an app. Simple, in this case, really is better.”

Pediatrici­ans have long advised that video game and computer use by kids be limited.

Total screen time, including television and computer use, should be less than one hour per day for children 2 years or older, and completely avoided in those younger than that. However, most children under 9 spend about two hours a day in front of computer, phone or television screens, according to Common Sense Media.

“The more we know about early brain developmen­t, the more we understand the need for play that is based on human interactio­n,” Healey said. “There is no screen, video game or app that can replace the relationsh­ips built over toys.”

Perhaps even scarier is that the more kids use screens, the more they want to use them, until trying to limit use of the devices becomes a battle between parent and child.

“It’s addictive,” says David Wanderman, a pediatrici­an with Stanford Children’s Health. “Anything that gives you a dopamine hit makes you feel good so that it makes you want to do it again and again.”

 ?? LEMANNA GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? “There is no screen, video game or app that can replace the relationsh­ips built over toys,” says Aleeya Healey, a lead author of the report.
LEMANNA GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O “There is no screen, video game or app that can replace the relationsh­ips built over toys,” says Aleeya Healey, a lead author of the report.

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