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Selecting safe Christmas toys for children
Its Christmas time, and many parents, grandparents, families and friends are rushing to buy
toys for gifts. Toys are fun, but they are also learning tools for play. Toys can serve
many developmental purposes for a child's life. Toys can foster creativity, enhance motor
skills, stimulate intellectual development, develop social concepts, promote a sense of
self-concept, and of course provide a way to relieve energy in a positive and supportive
way.
"We want to make sure parents realize just how important it is to select safe toys for their
children," says SUAREC East Baton Rouge Extension Agent. "In 2003, there were an estimated
206,500 toy-related injuries treated in U.S. hospital emergency rooms."
According to the Southern University Ag Center, when selecting safe and
appropriate developmental toys, consider the following:
- Look for a quality design and construction. Be sure to read the
Consumer Product Safety Commission label (CPSC). The label provides two important facts:
they let consumers know that a toy is not safe for younger children and why it is not safe.
- Look for labels to identify age recommendations.
- Select toys based on the age, abilities, skill, and interest level of the
child. Remember, just because the child asks for a specific toy, it does not mean it is
appropriate for him or her.
- If the child is a young infant, toys should be designed to attract
attention. Select toys the young infant can look at and feel.
- One or two year olds enjoy investigating toys. Select toys that can
be taken apart and put back together.
- Two to three year olds like to build with blocks and turn pages in
books. Selecting toys that appeal to the senses is good for this age group. To encourage
sharing, select toys that require your child to share with others.
- Three to four year olds enjoy pretend play and learn by doing.Selecting
dolls, painting sets, play telephones and tools are some of the toys that will bring
smiles to their faces.
- Four to six year olds enjoy the creative and dramatic stage and dressing
up in clothes and costumes. During this age, the child is learning to read and write.
Therefore, toys that foster the learning process is a good selection also.
- Avoid toys that are too complex for young children.
- Avoid toys with long strings or cords for infants and very young children.
- Avoid toys that shoot objects. These can cause eye injuries.
- Consider the toys the child currently has on hand, and the needed
storage space required. Each toy needs a safe place to be stored.
- Consider your budget beforehand. If electrical toys are selected,
factor in batteries and other needed accessories. Keep in mind electrical toys for children
under the age of eight should not require heating elements.
- Toys for older children can be more complex with multiple, detachable
parts. Younger children who are still putting objects into their mouth should avoid toys
with small parts, which could cause choking.
- If on Christmas day, a child is overwhelmed with a host of new toys,
consider putting some of the toys away for a later date. This will provide the child with
an opportunity to focus on one toy at a time.
- Examine toys regularly to check for damage or unsafe parts. The safest
toy can become a potential hazard if used often.
- Teach children safe ways to play and provide good examples.
- When in doubt, check the toy out! Call the CPSC hotline at 1-800-638-2772.
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For more information on selecting safe toys, contact your Southern University
Ag Center parish agent or visit www.suagcenter.com
.
Contact:
Southern University Ag Center East Baton Rouge Parish Extension Agent Karen Stevens at
(225) 389-2056 or karen_stevens@suagcenter.com
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©2003 Southern University Agricultural Research and Extension Center
Ashford O. Williams Hall ~ P. O. Box 10010 ~ Baton Rouge, LA 70813 USA
All Rights Reserved. Contact us here for more information.
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