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What Are Your Favorite Educational Toys For 14 Month Old Toddlers?

I have 14 month old iden­ti­cal twin girls who love to learn and seem to be lit­tle sponges right now! We have a ton of fun, bright, and edu­ca­tional toys but I would like some spe­cific sug­ges­tions from expe­ri­enced par­ents. It is hard for us to phys­i­cally visit stores (going any­where with twins is hard!), so I do most of my order­ing online. Some online sights pro­vide cus­tomer rat­ings and feed­back, but most do not. I would like to order some new and fun toys and activ­i­ties, but don’t want to waste money on items that won’t be ben­e­fi­cial or are poorly made. Thanks, in advance, for your help and feedback!

  1. izzymo Dec 25th, 2009 @ 13:25 | #1

    My daugh­ter at that age really started to enjoy musi­cal instru­ments. It can get a bit noisy around the house, but this is a great time to intro­duce them to it. We bought her a drum a piano key­board and a tam­borine. She still has so much fun play­ing all three. (she’s 2 1/2 now)

  2. JUICY Dec 25th, 2009 @ 14:54 | #2

    I would buy toys that speak, back to the child after they give a answer. Or musi­cal pro­grams about A, B C’s 1, 2, 3’s. If kids learn with music they have a musi­cal beat to relate to learn­ing and it will make it much eas­ier for them to remem­ber. When you sing A, B, C, D it’s in a musi­cal form.

  3. wasian ? ? ? Dec 25th, 2009 @ 17:23 | #3

    instead of going for the best ( because your kids wont be young for­ever) try some­thing that will have more mean­ing to you try a home made toy ( imag­ine the joy your heart will feel see­ing your chil­dren enjoy­ing the toy as much as the one you bought) not only will it save you money but it also give you the chance to rack your brain try­ing to think of what they would enjoy as far as col­ors shapes and sizes … good luck ?

  4. zeus1129 Dec 25th, 2009 @ 23:58 | #4

    My son loves puz­zles… I got him one that has wooden let­ters. He loves it when I put all the let­ters in a pile and ask him to pick out a par­tic­u­lar let­ter and put it in it’s proper place.

  5. Ladybug Dec 26th, 2009 @ 06:57 | #5

    Depends on what you want to develop in your child. Dif­fer­ent toys pro­vide dif­fer­ent devel­op­ment and it will be good to mix and match.
    Check out the fol­low­ing site which pro­vides a guide on what devel­op­ment each toy brings. You can then decide on what to buy.

  6. $mitty $ux Dec 26th, 2009 @ 12:21 | #6

    cro­quet set with sponge mallets

  7. giftbask Dec 26th, 2009 @ 17:57 | #7

    Did you try any of the Baby Ein­stein prod­ucts, they have edu­ca­tional movies and toys. My daugh­ters actu­ally loved Sesame Street, which sounds funny, but they learned how to count, speak some span­ish words, and can sing the whole alpha­bet. If you don’t want them to watch the whole show, they have movies ded­i­cated to each learn­ing point. And they have great infor­ma­tive toys too, if you find the right ones. And don’t for­get to read to them.

  8. Mommy2On Dec 26th, 2009 @ 19:58 | #8

    Look into leap­pad prod­ucts. They have a wide range of edu­ca­tional toys for all age groups and I haven’t found a sin­gle prod­uct of theirs that I didn’t like or more so, that my son didn’t like. V-tech also makes great edu­ca­tional toys.

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