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What Are Educational, Entertaining Games/toys For My One Year Old To Play?

she seems to get so bored with the toys we have for her now, any sug­ges­tions? What does a one year old like?

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  1. The Papa Of Two Feb 7th, 2010 @ 12:54 | #1

    From our own expe­ri­ence with our kids, they both (now 3 and 6) were bored with toys that made noise, music or lights. On the other hand their atten­tion span seemed to increase dra­mat­i­cally, once we intro­duced them to clas­sic edu­ca­tional toys like wooden beads on wires, sim­ple wooden puz­zles or shapes and col­ors sorters and stack­ers. These toys encour­aged kids to be proac­tive and play with toys the way they wanted, at their own pace and man­ners. Edu­ca­tional toys can grow with your child (when­ever the child is ready he will reveal some new way to play, cre­ate or get new expe­ri­ence). Our kids just loved toys from this site:http://www.1888toys.com/index.asp?PageAc…
    Hope this helps!
    Good luck.

  2. ~Biz~ Feb 7th, 2010 @ 15:41 | #2

    Well, I actu­ally used to let her bang on pots and pans with wooden spoons, because she loved the kitchen too. She loved to roll a full-size soc­cer ball around the liv­ing room.
    As far as actual toys, she had two favorites which I also loved, and have bought for my niece since! Here are the names, and a web­site you can get them at (so you can see a descrip­tion of the toy). I liked these best because they were edu­ca­tional, she loved them, and they grew with her — they were good toys for a cou­ple of years.
    Mozart Magic Cube (by Munchkin)http://www.amazon.com/N-A-03106-Munchkin…
    Baby Tad (by Leapfrog)http://www.amazon.com/LeapFrog-Hug-Learn…
    Hope that helps!

  3. kiki68 Feb 7th, 2010 @ 18:16 | #3

    one year olds are at the stage where the whole world is an adven­ture. they do not have a long atten­tion span first because their brains are not devel­oped enough and sec­ondly because every­thing is too excit­ing to con­cen­trate on one thing at a time. dont expect her to be engrossed in one item for more than 15 min­utes.
    toys in pri­mary col­ors, things that make noise (rat­tles, tele­phones, squeaky soft toys). also things she can manip­u­late, tho dont expect per­fec­tion. my kids how­ever loved the con­tents of the bot­tom kitchen drawer bet­ter than all shop bought toys.nothing beats hav­ing a wooden stick and a pan to bang on!

  4. Geraldine J Feb 8th, 2010 @ 01:06 | #4

    Toy Safety first
    Chil­dren under 3 tend to put every­thing in their mouths. Avoid buy­ing toys intended for older chil­dren which may have small parts that pose a chok­ing dan­ger.
    Never let chil­dren of any age play with unin­flated or bro­ken bal­loons because of the chok­ing dan­ger.
    Avoid mar­bles, balls, and games with balls, that have a diam­e­ter of 1.75 inches or less. These prod­ucts also pose a chok­ing haz­ard to young chil­dren.
    Chil­dren at this age pull, prod and twist toys. Look for toys that are well-made with tightly secured eyes, noses and other parts.
    Avoid toys that have sharp edges and points.http://www.familiesonlinemagazine.com/ki…

  5. Amanda Feb 8th, 2010 @ 05:59 | #5

    My daugh­ter is almost 2 and she loves her Elmo sing along toy and her blocks. She has the type of blocks with pic­tures and let­ters on them so I’ll ask her what the pic­ture is and she’ll tell me if she knows and then tell her the let­ter and she repeats it back to me. She also can tell me what color is on that cer­tain block. Also, we dont keep pots in the bot­tom cup­board any­more because she has deemed that her “house” She crawls in there says “OK Bye. I love you” and then closes the door and plays with her toys in there. She’ll pop open the door every now and then and say “Hi” and then close it again.

  6. Little Miss Big Mouth Feb 8th, 2010 @ 08:57 | #6

    Get a plas­tic coke bot­tle and quar­ter fill it with rice and put the lid back on tight. I dont know why but kids seem to love this toy. Also boxes are always great fun for kids.

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