“Lloyd,” he tells me. “His name is Lloyd.” Of course Why would a green Lego Ninjago be called anything else? The plastic figure has topped my son Sam’s Christmas list.
Anyone who knows a young child will sympathize. They crave the Barbie Color Reveal Deluxe Styling Head that promises instant cheer, we want to buy a forest activity kit that’s sure to nourish body and soul.
If you despair of such options, help is at hand. Thanks to a growing understanding of the cognitive benefits of certain toys, we now have a better idea of the relative merits of various ones. This Christmas, I decided to use research to help me identify the perfect toy, or at least get as close as I can.
Delving deeper into this world, I soon discovered that some toys are better than others for young brains, discovered that computer games aren’t as evil as you might think, and discovered the secret to buying a toy that won’t fade into the background. a wardrobe
You might think that toys are relatively modern inventions, but they have been part of our lives for millennia. In the Western Cape, South Africa, analyzes of rock fragments between 60,000 and 80,000 years old suggest that children made blunt and functionally useless copies of the stone tools of adults. It is believed that these were ancient toys the key to developing cognitive skillsfor example, our ability to imagine alternative scenarios and generate new ideas…