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A Book Review: Great Resource for Group Facilitation
Anyone who is a leader or member of a group and wants to get things accomplished knows that there are many issues and challenges that groups commonly face as they seek to find creative solutions, launch new initiatives, and create high performing...

How to Identify Qualities Employers Want – The Top Ten Traits as shown in Handwriting
Find out how to identify personal qualities and characteristics of job applicants (or yourself), with one of the most accurate tools for measuring soft skills. A look at the traits most in demand with Employers, and how to identify them from...

Unemployment Blues: Are We Pre-Programmed To Be Productive?
Toiling away at our daily grind, we dream of running away to Hawaii or the South Pacific where we can lie on the beach and do absolutely nothing. Some of us are lucky enough to take a vacation there and temporarily cut ourselves off...

Why Do You Have a Job? Five False Beliefs that Lead People into Jobs they Hate
If you find yourself stuck in a job that you don't enjoy or in a company that isn't fun to work for, the first step to making a change is asking yourself, "How did I get here?" Your being here at this time in your life is not a random event. You...

Why learn to sing?
When you think about it, most of the cultures on this planet have some form of singing that is fundamental to their way of life. You may only sing when it’s absolutely impossible to avoid it, like at birthdays or when you are amongst a group of...

 
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Science Toys are Intelligent Toys

My son Jack had been quietly playing with his Meccano set when we heard him scream, sweet!

What a cool toy, my friend Dave said, it's a ferris wheel. It's a solar powered ferris wheel, said Jack. Dave asked me, How did you get him to play with educational toys, my son only wants to play video games. I asked Dave whether he had ever played educational games or built rockets or space toys with his son. I'm not really a hands on guy was his answer. So I proceeded to demonstrate to Dave that educational toys teach skills that all successful adults use in everyday life. I told him that construction toys require imagination and planning. Robots require the use of logic.


href="http://www.brainwavestoys.com/toys/home.php?cat=136">Strategy games
require competitiveness and forethought. And of course crafts require creativity. I think that's a bit too technical for my son, said Dave. Well, why don't you start with some magic. Most tricks are scientific illusions that require planning and practice. Or how about simply building a plane,train or automobile with him, a real mechanical toy. This way he can see how all the pieces interconnect to achieve a common goal, like a team of components. My son likes to collect baseball cards, said Dave. Well how about starting a bug collection or rock collection. It just might inspire him to be a geologist or entomologist. Of course you could always get him some anatomy models, so he can be a surgeon like his dad.



About the Author

Ted Moryto is a professional engineer and proprietor of Brain Waves Toys, a science and educational toy store. http://www.brainwavestoys.com