Arab Times

Top tot toys? Blocks and boxes backed over high-tech toys

Simple hands-on toys spark imaginatio­n and creativity

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SBy Lindsey Tanner

kip the costly electronic games and flashy digital gizmos. Pediatrici­ans say the best toys for tots are old-fashioned hands-on playthings that young children can enjoy with parents – things like blocks, puzzles – even throwaway cardboard boxes – that spark imaginatio­n and creativity.

“A cardboard box can be used to draw on, or made into a house,” said Dr Alan Mendelsohn, coauthor of a new report on selecting toys for young children, up to around age 5.

Many parents feel pressured by ads promoting tablet-based toys and games as educationa­l and brain-stimulatin­g but there’s not much science to back up those claims, Mendelsohn said. Their main misconcept­ion: “The toy that is best is the one that is the most expensive or has the most bells and whistles or is the most technologi­cally sophistica­ted.”

In this Nov 9, 2018 photo, toys sit on the shelves at a Walmart Supercente­r

in Houston. (AP)

Simpler hands-on toys that parents and young children can play with together are preferable for healthy developmen­t, said Mendelsohn, a pediatrici­an at NYU Langone Health in New York.

The report published Monday by the American Academy of Pediatrics cites studies suggesting that heavy use of electronic media may interfere with children’s speech and language developmen­t, replace important playtime with parents and lead to obesity.

Studies also have found that more than 90 percent of US kids have used mobile devices and most started using them before age 1.

The pediatrici­ans’ group recommends no screen time for children up to age 2, and says total screen time including TV and computer use should be less than one hour daily for ages 2 and older.

“A little bit of screen time here and there is unlikely to have much harm if a child otherwise has other activity,” Mendelsohn said. But he added that screen time can overwhelm young children and is difficult to limit and control.

The academy’s website offers suggestion­s on ideal toys for young children, including balls, puzzles, coloring books and card games.

Shopping recently at Dancing Bear Toys in Asheville, NC, a store that doesn’t sell electronic toys, Leah Graham Stewart said she supports the academy’s advice even if avoiding digital toys and games is tough.

She said she’s noticed her two young boys tend to misbehave after playing on an iPad she typically reserves for long airplane rides.

“We try to keep it as minimal as possible,” Graham Stewart said. “I just tell them to go outside and play.”

Erika Evers, Dancing Bear’s co-owner, said the store’s mission is to give kids an alternativ­e to tech toys.

“Not that video games and electronic toys don’t have their place – in moderation, in our opinion,” she said. “But we feel like kids really need opportunit­ies to socialize and interact with their environmen­t in a way that is hands-on and tangible.” (AP)

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