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Watch any child play outside,
and they will almost inevitably pick up a stick, or a handful of rocks, and
start playing. For thousands of years, kids have played with whatever is
available. It seems to be hardwired into their system. Parents joke about
giving their kids expensive toys, but the kids play with the empty box.
Playing with toys is fun, but
it also stretches children's imaginations, and develops brain synapses and
neural pathways.
It's also a way of imitating adult behaviour, and
thus learning adult skills and actions. Little girls have played with dolls for
eons. They copy the nurturing behaviours of their mothers, and when they become
mothers themselves, the cuddling and rocking seems to be instinctive. Little
boys in past civilizations learned to track and hunt their prey by copying
their fathers. Games played with sticks and toy arrows taught them to hone
their marksmanship, and slip silently through woods and grasslands.
Toys back in time
Simple wooden or rag dolls have been found in archaeological
sites from many different civilizations from Egypt to Pompeii to American
Indians. Kites have been known in China for thousands of years, and in India,
archaeologists have unearthed clay figures on wheels. The yo-yo, considered to
be a modern toy by most people, is believed to have originated in China also.
The first written mention of a yo-yo is found in Greek material dating from 500
BC.
Boys and girls have probably always enjoyed
drawing, although drawing at one time was most likely limited to drawing with a
stick in the dust of the ground, or the nearest mud puddle. Children of both
sexes have always had fun playing toys and games with coloured stones and pebbles that
were the forerunners of games such as jacks. These games enhanced eye-hand coordination
and quick reflexes—skills much needed by more primitive peoples when instant
action could mean the difference between life and death.
Learning life skills
Children today still play with toys which can help
them learn life skills, such as dolls, car toys and trucks. Crayons, markers,
and pencils have replaced the stick and the dirt, and finger paints have
replaced the mud puddle. Well, maybe not entirely. There are more kids toys
than ever before in history.
The big toy explosion started back in the early
part of the twentieth century, when manufacturers were able to make toys
quickly and cheaply for the mass market. Die-cast metal cars and trucks were
popular for boys, while Raggedy Ann dolls and Madame Alexander toys appealed to
girls. Crayola produced boxes of brightly-coloured crayons for kids to drool
over, and teddy bears were everywhere.
As the century progressed, board games such as
Scrabble, Monopoly, and Clue were invented and marketed. With the advent of
technology like radio and TV, marketing aimed directly at children was set in
motion. The toy market just kept on booming. Today's kids have more toys, both
old-fashioned toys like dolls and blocks, and technologically advanced toys
like Leap Pad. Every department or discount store has toy departments, there
are mail order catalogues, and online toy stores galore, and stores like Toys R
Us are big business.
All these toys, so many choices of playthings but
are kids any happier today than they were three thousand years ago? Article Source: http://www.ArticleBlast.com |