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Top Tips For Playing With Your Toddler

Be Your Toddler's Ultimate Play Date With These Tips
Mother and daughter toasting at tea party Cultura RM Exclusive/Matelly via Getty Images
Cultura RM Exclusive/Matelly via Getty Images
Mother and daughter toasting at tea party Cultura RM Exclusive/Matelly via Getty Images

Playing with children: easy, isn’t it? You just sit there, pick up some wooden bricks and build your own tower next to theirs...

That might be how our parents did it – if they did it at all – but actually, no, there’s a lot more to playing with your toddler than you might think.

Our children’s lives are full of instructions, expectations and structure. What happens if we follow their lead in play? Tessa Hardingham, parent educator and play therapist, explains that play encompasses many different aspects of a child’s development. “Unlike adults who can run things over in their minds, children need to show their thoughts through play,” she says.

So, if play forms such an important role, how can we be sure we’re doing it right?

Take a step back

“Sometimes the way children play doesn’t look like we might expect it to, for instance a child who lines up toy cars or crayons”, explains Sarah Ockwell-Smith, author of ToddlerCalm: A Guide for Calmer Toddlers and Happier Parents. “It’s important to take a step back and allow your child to play in their own way though. This will be far more valuable to them than any play you can construct”.

Remember all children are different

All children, boys and girls, vary in their play preferences. “Some are wildly imaginative and love role play games”, Sarah says. “Others prefer more methodical tasks such as shape sorting. Let your child find their own preferences wherever possible. And remember, children love repetition: it reassures them and helps them to make sense of the world. This is often reflected in play and your child may want to play the same game over and over again, which is totally normal.”

Let your toddler take the lead

Playing is what your child is an expert at – so let them be the boss. “Letting them direct the play and playing with your child is a way of seeing into their world and ‘listening’ to them’,” says Tessa. “Ask what they would like you to play with them, and be attentive and interested in what they are doing (without your phone or computer nearby!).”

Don’t ask questions

It’s tempting to ask questions, just like we would at work or with our adult peers, but, as Sarah explains, questions can be more about our agenda. “Try just being alongside them as they play and letting them direct and lead the play allows them to feel that their ideas are valuable,” she suggests.

Try not to worry

If your toddler or pre-schooler doesn’t play or share with others, don’t let it bother you. This is totally normal, Sarah explains. “At this age children will ‘parallel play’, which means they will play alongside each other, but with each other. At this age they haven’t grasped the concept of sharing either: it’s simple brain development and something your child will get in time.”

Encourage imaginative play

Try having some ‘real world’ toys available. Tessa suggest things such as: dressing up (hats, bags, medical kit), play money and shop items, toy phone, tea set, dolls house and people, cars, emergency vehicles, animals etc. “Notice what play your child is most drawn to and it may open your eyes to their world.”

Simple is best

For sensory play, try a tub of shaving foam squirted into an old washing up bowl, plastic animals frozen in an ice cream tub full of water and a tray full of mud, sticks and stones, Sarah suggests. Or make a ‘story sack’ by filling a cloth sack full of items from favourite stories, for example, a felt caterpillar, a plastic orange, a wooden slice of cake, a leaf and a picture of a beautiful butterfly to accompany ‘The Very Hungry Caterpillar’ book.

Take 10 minutes

Even if you find it boring (and don’t worry, many of us do!), try to find just 10 minutes each day when you play with your child, give them your total undiluted attention and allow them to direct the play. “It can literally turn parent-child relationships around and have a dramatically positive effect on a child’s behaviour,” Sarah says.

For more tips for parents, visit The British Association of Play Therapists.

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