Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Easy Building Blocks for Kids

Easy Building Blocks for Kids

Blocks are a classic type of toy that almost every child has played with and owns their own. Blocks help to develop intelligence and train hand-eye coordination. Arrangement, joining, looping, and symmetry are all good for your child's intellect when encountered in building.

There are several easy and fun ways to build.

1. Double

Pair two identical rectangular blocks to make a square, two triangles to make a square, two semicircles to make a circle, and so on. This game can help children understand the relationship between different shapes combined with each other, and understand the concept of part and whole. And in the process of playing, children need to use their eyes to observe whether the different shapes of the blocks can be matched, which is very beneficial to the development of observation.

2. Matching numbers

Prepare a set of blocks labeled with numbers. You can start by numbering the blocks from smallest to largest, and then have your child place the numbered blocks on top according to the next number. If you put the wrong blocks in, or if you knock over the original blocks in the process, you lose. This game can help children understand the relationship between numbers and make their concept of numbers clearer.

3. Assemble and tell a story

Prepare a set of assembly blocks with furniture, dad, mom, baby and so on. Teach your child to assemble the blocks as he or she wishes and then tell a short family story in words. Mom can make up the story with the child. This game also utilizes the child's imagination.

4. Curved path

Teach your child to arrange the long blocks at regular intervals so that they can be connected to a curved path. Give your child a toy car, and he can follow this "path" and play with the car, preferably without touching the blocks. This can exercise the child's ability to visualize the spatial distance, the development of three-dimensional sense and hand-eye coordination.

5. Bowling

First of all, different colors of cylindrical blocks arranged in inverted triangles, and then let the child away from a distance, take a ball rolled to the blocks, the blocks will be touched down. As the child's ability grows, the distance can be gradually increased. This game requires the child to have a sense of direction and is also helpful in improving concentration and exercising physical coordination.

6. Build a house

Build a house with blocks of various shapes. By building a house with blocks, children can learn simple principles of construction. For example, left and right structures are symmetrical to look good; putting a small triangle on the roof of a built house won't cause it to fall down, but if you put a big triangle on the roof, it may collapse. The child learns to compare, contrast, and draw lessons from this.

7. Teeter-totter

Place blocks of the same color and size on both sides of the teeter-totter and try to balance them. You can also put different sizes and numbers of blocks to see which side is lighter and which side is heavier. In continuous experimentation, children learn to differentiate between relationships such as how much and how light they are, which helps build concepts such as weight and balance.

8. Building bridges

Teach your child to put square blocks side by side at regular intervals as piers, leaving a distance in the center to represent the bridge hole, and then put long blocks on top as a bridge. The bridge should also have a certain slope so that people or cars can walk on it, and the child might then build two gentle slopes with triangular blocks. What is the right amount of slope? The child then needs to think. In a simple bridge-building activity, the child will be able to express his or her usual observations of things very well.