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Child Development

  • World Safer Internet Day

    Safer Internet Day

    Today is Safer Internet Day and an opportunity for us all to consider how we can ensure the internet is a secure and rewarding experience for us all, especially for children. WoodenToyShop supports all efforts to promote the “safe and responsible use of online technology and mobile phones for children and young people" and so we have taken the opportunity to highlight some of the important messages and ideas put forward by the UK Safer Internet Centre and related organisations.

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  • Back to School…Again

    New School Shoes

    I don’t know about you, but I’ve always needed a little time to settle into the summer. Maybe it’s because I’m British and us Brits aren’t fully comfortable with the concept of weeks or months of warm and sunny weather. Perhaps we don’t dare to dream about donning our summer clothes until we’ve had a good few weeks of heat and we can be absolutely sure that we can leave the long trousers in the airing cupboard for a month or so. Whatever the reason, it’s always taken me a while to relax into summer, but when I finally manage to do so, I forget that any other season or way of living exists. That is until the ominous Back to School adverts start appearing. When I was a little boy I used to dread seeing the posters in Rawcliffe’s clothes shop in Southport (where we bought our uniforms), but at least they waited until August. This year I swear the supermarkets were selling back to school items as soon as the schools broke up and even if you avoided the shops, the blogosphere has been awash with advice for parents who are sending their children back to school or even off to school for the first time. Here at WoodenToyShop we have taken a look at some of these articles and offer you some of the highlights…

     

    Pencil Case

    Diana Carney, whose husband just happens to be the Governor of the Bank of England, takes an admirably thrifty and green approach to back to school on her blog Ecoproductshthatwork by encouraging parents to buy good quality products and look after them to avoid having to replace them year after year. Sound advice indeed, but best of luck to anyone attempting to persuade their teenager of the merits of looking after the contents of their pencil case.

    Over at Tots100, bloggers have provided an avalanche of brilliant advice and tips for surviving back to school. We particularly liked the advice to hold a ‘uniform evening’, where you take the time to check you have everything you need, label it, check and pack PE kits and then pack everything away so that it is ready for the big day. We also appreciated the advice to bring bedtimes back to a more sensible time (let’s face it, they often slip during the holidays) in the week or so before the first day back. This advice also extended to parents and carers, who will need to get up just as early (or even earlier) than the little ones when they return to school!

    Over at Mumsnet, there is plenty of useful advice for anyone whose children are going to school for the first time. As with so many things, common sense and preparation are the buzzwords. Mumsnetters’ advise that you talk to your children about school, but don’t oversell it: going to school is exciting for children, but it won’t help to let them think it will be brilliant and fun all the time. Stay positive, but let the children know that if they feel tired or sad about something, it’s okay to tell the teacher or teaching assistants and mummy and daddy when they get home. Other nuggets of advice such as practising the school run and rehearsing the school routine sound so obvious that they are easy to miss.

     

    School Bag

    Children are often blissfully unaware of the trauma and stress that their parents go through the make their everyday life run smoothly and happily. I had no idea, when I was 7 years old and worrying about going back to school, that my Mum was living it with me as she wiped away my tears. So while we wish all children a very happy first day at school or first day back after the holidays, we offer a big round of applause to all the parents, carers, grandparents, friends and relatives who work tirelessly in the background to ensure that the first day is merely one of many happy days of learning and development.

     

     

  • Role Play Toys and Child Development

    John Crane Tidlo Kitchen Station

    When playing in a kitchen such as the John Crane Tidlo Kitchen Station children can talk about what they are doing; they may talk to themselves or to the adult/child who is with them. It is a great way to learn new vocabulary and/or practise vocabulary they already know that is associated with cooking: hot; cold; cook; chop; oven; etcetera. Role play toys offer so many exciting possibilities for learning and development.

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  • Toys and Activities that Encourage Physical Development in Children

    Melissa and Doug Jumbo Paint Brushes

     

    A child’s physical development can be separated into fine motor skills, which consist of hand movements such as finger control, gripping, cutting with scissors etcetera and gross motor skills, which consist of all large movements: walking, running and jumping for example.

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