Filed under: Crafts

How Children Learn Through Play. The Importance of Imaginative Play for Toddlers

Through play, children learn the skills and knowledge needed for life; imaginative play encourages the toddler to use their mind and creative potential. Children can be taught to have the skills and knowledge to deal with life’s challenges and to solve problems creatively through being encouraged to be active in play that involves creativity, learning, investigation and discovery. There’s a saying “Give a person a fish and they eat for a day. Teach a person to fish and they eat for a lifetime.”

Imaginative Play
Play that is imaginative and creative will help the toddler to use their mind to find solutions to problems. One of the most important parts of imaginative play is for the child to pretend to be someone else or in different situations.
This type of play helps promote a toddler’s learning through using role play to develop their imagination. They will also be developing their emotional and social skills, sharing skills, manipulative skills, language and communication skills through this type of play. Not only this but it helps a child build on his or her self confidence and feelings of security.

Kids Play and Imagination
Through imaginative play, a child might run around, pretending he or she is a horse or a dog, an aeroplane or a train. At 3-4 years, they often do this on their own. At other times, an adult could encourage imaginative play so the child might explore new situations and fantasy worlds. This will help the child to explore their feelings and the world around them in a safe, supervised environment.
Children at this age are at Piaget’s preoperational stage. During the years from 2 to 6 Piaget saw the evidence of symbol use in many aspects of child’s behaviour. Children this age beginning to pretend in their play for example at age 2 or 3 or 4 a broom may become a horse, or a block may become a train.
Imaginative play, through building towers out of bocks, talking to and feeding their dolls, making tea with the tea set and dressing in grown-up clothes is important and should never be classed as trivial… Neither should soft toys or dolls be rejected as inappropriate for any age of either sex.

Examples of Imaginative Play Activities
Ask the children to make a pirate ship out of large cardboard boxes. They might make telescopes or binoculars out of kitchen tubes and a flag for their boat out of newspaper. Hats could be made and painted for them to wear while they’re at sea in their imaginary boat. How does this kind of play help in a child’s learning? As the children play with each other, they will be using their communication and language skills.

3 Comments July 24, 2010

Festival of Imagination – 5th And 6th June

LEGOLAND-logoBring your imagination to life at this brand new family festival that celebrates all things creative. Get your hands on the LEGO® bricks from the James May house and join LEGOLAND as they re-use them to create another amazing structure. Help the Rainbow Fairies locate their missing belongings for a chance to win an exclusive Rainbow Magic book in their special treasure trail. Be enchanted by the colourful creatures of Tinga Tinga Tales in their creative art area.

Join in the fun and go dressed in a costume inspired by your favourite story time character and take part in the parade at midday. Let your imagination run wild!…

Leave a Comment May 10, 2010

Happy Easter! – Join our Easter eggs painting

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2 Comments April 4, 2010

Congratulations to the winner in our Xmas craft competition!

The WINNER of our December Christmas Craft Competition is Michaela, 5-years old from Manchester!

With some help from mummy and dady she has made some fabulous Christmas tree decoration from simple and all eco-friendly ingredients like flour, salt and water.

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She wins a gorgeous wooden toy – just in time for Christmas! Congratulations!

Leave a Comment December 14, 2009

Lovely Christmas homemade tree

A lovely eco-friendly crafted Christmas tree kindly provided to GreenKiddie by Anna Southgate.

She calls it “our baby-friendly tree”, and it is! Well done, Anne! We can see here her lovely son’s handprints, making up some of the branches, so we need to thank him, too! How cute and creative is that!

Anna Southgate is a first time mum who decided not to go back to work after having her son. She tried to be environmentally responsible in the things she buys and does. She sais:  “I’m sure I don’t get it right every time but I’m doing my bit!”

Leave a Comment December 1, 2009

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