Batteries Not Included: Toys for Building Language

Emily Cohen
2 min readJun 8, 2017

Children learn by doing. Your child may have dragged you down the toy aisle at Target recently. You were both bombarded by toys with sounds, lights, music, buttons, and the dreaded screen. When you purchase these types of toys, the toy does all the work. This means your child is not building any of their skills. They are not doing; the toy is doing. Start building your child’s toy collection with these must-have toys, and you will be well on your way to supporting the development of critical early language and play skills.

Books, Books, Books

Reading is essential for all children, but a good collection of books for preschoolers is particularly vital. Children can build early literacy skills that directly correlate with later academic success when reading books. Books that have simple sentences, a simple storyline, and include rhyme, rhythm, and repetition are the best. Dr. Seuss is one of my favorites!

Mr. Potato Head

This toy provides ample benefits, including encouraging fine & gross motor skills (grasping), visual scanning (searching for a part), spatial awareness, naming body parts, labeling colors, and matching objects, just to name a few. I like larger sets with multiple Mr. Potato Heads and many parts. This provides lots of opportunities to make requests and share with siblings or friends.

Basic Board Games

Taking turns and sharing are two foundations of communication that children should be exposed to early on. Early cooperative games are perfect for building social language skills, vocabulary, and matching skills. Don’t shy away from more structured cooperative games for older toddlers & preschoolers. You just may be surprised at how well your child can follow directions, take turns, and put their negotiation skills to use when playing these games.

Blocks

Research shows that Legos are one of the best toys for play and language building because they can be used in so many different ways. Children have to interact with their peers and parents as they plan and negotiate what they want to build. Blocks are also great for building fine motor and spatial awareness skills.

Photo by Ryan Fields on Unsplash

Batteries Not Required: Toys for Building Language June 7th, 2017

Originally published at www.tandemspeechtherapy.com on June 8, 2017.

--

--

Emily Cohen

I am a pediatric speech-language pathologist in Austin, TX. I own Tandem Speech Therapy and write a blog (and now an eBook) called Playing With Purpose.