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What Do You Think Of All Those Educational Toys?

Do you think that they are just a way of mak­ing money by mak­ing par­ents inse­cure? Or do you think they really help? Or, do you pre­fer spend­ing a lot of time with your kids out­side and show­ing them things?
I per­son­aly can see the point of those toys and would buy my kids some of them, but I also think it is impor­tant to spend active qual­ity time with kids. What do you think?

  1. ?Pamela? Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 07:42 | #1

    I agree with you. I have some edu­ca­tional toys for my daugh­ter, but we also go out every day to mix with other chil­dren and spend time together all the time.
    I think that it is unfair though, that the way they are mar­keted preys upon our fears that we would be branded bad par­ents if we don’t by this and that for our children.

  2. Anonymous Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 07:48 | #2

    They increase the amount of money par­ents are forced to spend on toys. Also makes them com­pete with their friends on whose kids do things first in life. Quite sad. We didn’t have that many in our day and there’s noth­ing wrong with us.

  3. AerynneC Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 11:46 | #3

    I’m against them. I think that toys that aren’t try­ing to be edu­ca­tional are more edu­ca­tional. Blocks, sim­ple dolls, sim­ple toy cars, toy kitchen or food, etc, are actu­ally build­ing very impor­tant parts of a child’s brain. If you get into the academic-type learn­ing too early, you might miss some of that. If a child expresses an inter­est in some­thing like the alpha­bet, a par­ent teach­ing the child him­self can appro­pri­ately gauge how much is enough but the toys don’t know that and just repeat the same stuff over and over. Most of the edu­ca­tional toys are battery-operated and if kids always get accus­tomed to a toy “doing” some­thing then the other stuff seems bor­ing, but it’s the basic toys (and adult inter­ac­tion) that build their brains. A lot of peo­ple seem to like them because their chil­dren have learned so much from them, but first of all they can learn all that from their par­ents. My daugh­ter has not owned one edu­ca­tional toy but knows col­ors, shapes, num­bers, and the alpha­bet because she felt like learn­ing them so we taught them to her when she expressed inter­est. Also the edu­ca­tional toys develop a kind of learn­ing that par­ents can actu­ally see, but the way the brain devel­ops when kids play with more basic toys is not as vis­i­ble but much more impor­tant than raw facts like num­bers or the alphabet.

  4. xLoubieL Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 14:00 | #4

    I am all for them
    my son has come on in leaps and bounds with his speech and that with edu­ca­tional toys he has, i think they do teach chil­dren
    but i also spend alot of time with my son and show him things, and we read books together well i read it to him and he looks and he loves it :-)
    edu­ca­tional toys tho should not be used in place of you teach­ing your child things

  5. jeromedu Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 17:41 | #5

    I see noth­ing wrong in toys that help your kids’ devel­op­ment
    In my own opin­ion its proven they do work. But they should never be a sub­stitue for qual­ity time, ever.
    I would like to buy some of those toys myself.
    Am hav­ing some trou­ble with mem­ory and math lately.
    Like that new nin­tendo thing with a smalll touch­screen?
    And this soft­ware for the nntendo that helps you train your math and mem­ory skill?
    If I had the money I would defnitely give it a try.
    Any expe­ri­ences with it in here?

  6. smiler Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 22:01 | #6

    i agree toys which help with colours and count­ing ect are good for them, but so is feed­ing ducks ‚kick­ing a ball round a park ‚rolling about the floor with them .i know my son loves run­ning about bonkers with me much more than me play­ing with any toy , they all want atten­tion from us.when thats not pos­si­ble sure give them toys and if they learn some­thing from them all the bet­ter ‚but i wouldnt use as a sub­sti­tute for crazy time!!

  7. mari Jan 3rd, 2010 @ 23:26 | #7

    I think the edu­ca­tional toys are great but the time spent with your child is even bet­ter really i think what makes those toys work is that the par­ent is actu­ally tak­ing the time to play and teach the child so that’s why they work . …

  8. kittylov Jan 4th, 2010 @ 01:06 | #8

    As an adult who was raised on almost noth­ing but edu­ca­tional toys, cou­pled with parental atten­tion, I can tell you they work. When given a non-educational toy I would become bored of it in 10 min­utes because it did not give me as much plea­sure as the more chal­leng­ing puz­zles and cre­ative games. To this day, I love brain teasers, var­i­ous puz­zles, and actu­ally use cross­words and sudoku as a way to unwind so I can get to sleep. More prac­ti­cally, I can gen­er­ally think up 10 dif­fer­ent ways to solve any prob­lem I am thrown in life or pro­fes­sion­ally in about 5 minutes.

  9. KathyS Jan 4th, 2010 @ 01:10 | #9

    I think they are mostly a waste of time and money. Why is it so impor­tant that lit­tle johnny learns the color red from a toy 3 months before Lit­tle Brian does? Even that’s a big maybe. Any­thing a child plays with can be edu­ca­tional is some way but it does not have to cost $50.

  10. spencesh Jan 4th, 2010 @ 02:54 | #10

    Life has so many inter­est­ing things for chil­dren to learn about and explore in every­day objects and nature, expe­ri­ences and reac­tions. Chil­dren view ‘learn­ing’ in dif­fer­ent ways to adults. for exam­ple we see nui­sance dan­de­lions they see flow­ers that you can blow and scat­ter wishes, we hear music thats not how we like it they hear music and think its a new tune to dance to. A child’s opin­ion is always more pre­cious and unique than that of a cal­cu­lated adult. Chil­dren find ways to learn with what­ever they are pre­sented with be that home­made toys, leaves, or edu­ca­tional toys. I agree with you and oth­ers who say the most impor­tant thing is that we share expe­ri­ences with our chil­dren and aid learn­ing through what­ever activ­i­ties we have.

  11. Anonymous Jan 4th, 2010 @ 07:04 | #11

    i wouldnt mind buy­ing maybe one or two but it is the job of the par­ent to teach them not let it be to a toy..what fun is that if you cant inter­act and take pride in the fact that you are the teacher not some $40 toy

  12. Natasha B Jan 4th, 2010 @ 09:13 | #12

    do dil­dos count?

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