Why Little Kids Love a Box

Before your child begins to invent pretend worlds and imaginary friends, she will usually love a toy for being exactly what it is. A block is magical, not because it can be reimagined as a telescope or precious gem, but because it is a block. It can be pushed through a hole, rolled across the floor or dropped repeatedly from the top of a high chair. This actually means that “toys” may not matter much to toddlers. A cardboard box, as all parents have seen, will delight them as much as a new train set, since it has so many fascinating characteristics to discover.

The Joy of Play

As your toddler interacts and examines the object, she is using her senses—sight, hearing, vision, taste, and smell—to learn about both the plaything and her world. Your child might be attracted to an object’s bright colors, the sound it makes when he bangs it with a spoon, the smooth feel of its sides or the new and unusual smells it emits. Good quality toddler toys should stimulate your child’s senses. They also need to be safe enough to be pulled on, sucked on and thrown out of the crib. Specifically, toys and materials given to young children should be up to safety standards established by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Benefits of Functional Play

While children may be happy with the sensory delights offered by dolls or empty toilet paper tubes, they get much more than sensory stimulation out of playtime. The simple repetitive activities that are common during functional play actually build pre-literacy, motor, and thinking skills. For instance, consider the following ways your toddler might play:

Lining up cars by color: Promotes skills such as identifying and classifying objects Snapping together interlocking blocks without making anything in particular: Builds hand-eye coordination Crashing a car into the wall and watching it bounce back off: Introduces the concept of cause and effect

Functional play may be known as “first play,” but it prepares tots for the complex skills they’ll need to utilize both in school and in life.