Saturday, June 29, 2013

help on how to make an educational toy for a infant?

best infant educational toys
 on Educational Baby Toys - The Best Educational Toys for Infants
best infant educational toys image






okai basically for a school project we have to make ann educational toy for an infant but like no wood or metal jus fabric e.g. cotton wool
and i dont know what to make so i was hoping that you can help think of some ideas?



Answer
do diffrent colors like do a fleec piec the color pink and sew the leter p on ther so they will learn the letter p is for pink and when you are playing with the baby say pink is the color p is the leter put it together and you have pink pigs like a rime hope it works

Is My baby can read worth the hassle?




Chris


So my grandma is stuck on getting this for my Nephew. He just turned 1. I have read quite a few reviews where it doesn't work, some I've read where it worked pretty good. Should we really get it for him or buy more educational toys?


Answer
If you let your child do this they will have 200+ hours of screen time in 9 months or something. Don't buy "educational toys" spend time playing with and reading to your child. that is how they learn not from a toy.


Research has linked infant screen time to sleep disturbances and delayed language acquisition, as well as problems in later childhood, such as poor school performance and childhood obesity. If parents follow Your Baby Can Readâs viewing instructions, their baby will have watched more than 200 hours by the age of nine monthsâspending more than one full week of 24-hour days in front of a screen. Meanwhile, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no screen time for children under age two.


The last thing babies need is to be drilled with flash cards and to watch videos. Itâs particularly worrisome that screen time takes away from the two activities known to be educationalâtime with caring adults and hands-on creative play. Babies learn in the context of loving relationships, and with all of their senses. Yet, 19% of babies under the age of one have a television in their bedroom and 40% of 3-month-olds are regular viewers of television. And we all know that screen time is habituating. The more time babies spend with screens, the harder it is for them to turn them off when theyâre older.




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