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4 Ways To Use Soft Play Blocks For At-Home Pre-School

by Andrea Ortiz

As many parents adjust home learning schedules for little ones, the traditional classroom setting is being replaced with more hands-on learning and activities. One way to engage your child and increase learning is through the use of soft play big blocks. Role-playing and physical activities can easily integrate the educational aspect and build a foundation for the child.

Learn how to use the children's soft play big blocks for at-home pre-school sessions and different ways to build core learning activities for a child.

1. Colors

When you order soft play big blocks, the blocks come in a wide range of colors. As you play with your child, you can separate the blocks into different colors, teach children the different colors, and also explain how colors mix together. For example, you can put a yellow block with a red block and explain the two colors mix to form the color orange.

You can play a color scavenger hunt game where a child has to find all of the blocks of a certain color. You could also use the blocks to set up color stations. At each station, the child would have to place toys or objects of similar colors to sort them all out.

2. Sorting

The sorting activities with soft play big blocks do not just apply to colors. Big blocks often come in different shapes and sizes, allowing you to teach children ways to sort and organize the blocks. For example, you could have a child separate the cubed blocks from the rectangle blocks.

The blocks stack well, allowing you to set up different towers and have a child sort them from tallest to smallest. Vary the sorting activities to give a child fun activities to participate in with the blocks each day.

3. Creative Thinking

You will find a lot of different ways to boost creative thinking in your child. For example, you can set up a section of blocks with one part missing. The child can figure out which block fits into the space, much like a puzzle. You can also give a child challenges, like building stairs or building a bridge. Creative thinking will keep their mind active.

4. Free Play

Not everything you do with the blocks needs to be structured play. Give the child plenty of free play with the blocks to help build independence, motor skills, and expand their creative mind. In some cases, a child may come up with fun games on their own and allow the educational elements to form naturally. Observe and lend a hand when needed.

The more you use children's big building blocks, the more ideas you will come up with to infuse educational elements into the activity. Consider a child-safe block like Bright Day Big Blocks, or ask around to see if anyone in your local community has a brand they recommend.    

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