Blocks: powerful for your child’s development
Very few toys, even in their simplest form, offer the same advantages blocks do, from emotional growth and resilience, to art and visual-spatial practice, to the more obvious engineering aspects. Research confirms what kids, parents, and teachers have known for centuries: playing with building blocks is not only fun, it’s also really, really good for you. Blocks, though deceptively simple, are perhaps the most versatile toy ever conceived.
Educators universally recognize that wooden blocks offer children crucial lessons in physics, engineering, science, maths, and open-ended imaginative play. Kids approach blocks in both common ways (stacking, building, toppling) and more unique ones (making a bed for a baby doll, serving them as “food” in a play restaurant, or making a two-dimensional picture). Watch five kids play with blocks, and you’ll likely see five different approaches.
Here are some of the many benefits of block play:
Speech & Language Development
You might not naturally associate block play with speech and language development, but block play actually promotes a lot of oral self-expression, particularly in telling stories about what they’ve built.
Fine Motor and Hand-eye Coordination Practice
Stacking blocks on top of one another and fine-tuning a wobbly tower require both fine motor skills and precise hand-eye coordination.
Discover Engineering and Science Fundamentals
When they play with blocks, children get a chance to problem-solve, troubleshoot, and test hypotheses about structure, gravity, and elevation.
Learn Basic Maths Lessons
Pattern recognition, symmetry, fractions, and linear measurement—all elements of maths—are an intrinsic part of block play. Young children can also practice basic counting and learn one-to-one correspondence, which means making the connection between the number word (“one”) and the quantity (1).
Speech & Language Development
You might not naturally associate block play with speech and language development, but block play actually promotes a lot of oral self-expression, particularly in telling stories about what they’ve built.
Social and Emotional Development
When working with other children, block play offers opportunities to practice cooperation, problem-solving, turn-taking, sharing, and self-advocacy. These skills take a long time to develop and are a big challenge for young children.
Imagination Growth
Blocks can be incorporated into pretend play as food, in building a crib for their baby or a house for little animals. Blocks are considered “open-ended toys” which mean that they can be played with, in many different ways and be combined with other toys.
Here are the stages of block play
Stacking three blocks
Between 16 and 18 months, your toddler may work up to stacking three blocks on top of each other. Building a tower requires your child to line up and balance one block on top of the other, releasing it at just the right time, so it doesn’t fall.
Stacking six blocks
Between 18 and 22 months, your toddler might build a four-block tower, then stack up to six blocks a little while later. At this point, building a tower together may become an especially fun challenge, and knocking it over is often a triumphant way to celebrate 🎉
Lining up blocks
At around 23-26 months, your child may start practising alignment by imitating you if you line up a few blocks end-to-end, in a row. This is an exercise in precision, a brand new skill for your toddler. Imitating your row of blocks (keep it in their view) with their own will take practice and patience.
Creative block play
Once children turn three, their block play becomes more creative and imaginative. They may start building bridges, archways, tunnels, and more elaborate structures. They will also start to sort the blocks and make roads, paths, and patterns. Your child may start to tell stories about what they’re building and act out scenes from their life.
Blocks for all ages
Even as they grow older, children still benefit from playing with blocks. Because blocks have universal appeal, they are perfect for groups of mixed-age kids. They also offer opportunities to practice 21st century skills like collaboration, problem-solving, critical thinking, and communication. Preschool and early elementary teachers love using blocks for lessons in maths, science, and even language arts and social studies.
It’s amazing, isn’t it, how something as deceptively simple as a block set can do so much good work for your child’s brain? There’s a reason blocks have been around for so long—they offer benefits other toys simply don’t.
In this post
The Block Set
A brilliant set of 70 quality solid-wood blocks for building spatial, language, and problem-solving skills for more than 20 stage-based activities. See inside The Block Set by Lovevery.
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