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Games to Play with Your Toddler Boy
Raising a toddler can be frustrating at times, just ask any parent who is currently butting heads with one on a
daily basis. Fortunately, raising a toddler can also be a fun and rewarding experience. Handling a toddler
effectively means preparing yourself with ideas and activities that will keep your little guy busy and channel that
bundle of energy into constructive means. There are plenty of suggestions about how you can play with your toddler
boy, to help the two of you have a great time together and bond successfully. Activities can also be educational,
giving you and your toddler boy the opportunity to learn new things while playing fun games.
Watch Out
The first step in finding quality activities for yourself and your toddler boy is to determine what his interests
are. Not all toddler boys like the same things, so you will need to observe your little one for a while so that you
can gather some consistencies and in his tastes and preferences. While a child is unlikely to be able to tell you
exactly what he likes, careful observation will tell you whether he prefers music, dramatic play, building things,
or some other form of creative play. There is no book or speaker that can tell you the right games to play with
your toddler boy, but there are some techniques that you can follow to keep your toddler boy’s mind sharp and
active, allowing him to grow and expand his horizons while doing his favorite thing.
Fun with Learning
Regardless of what your toddler boy is into, you can play certain games that are educational without appearing to
be a lesson of sorts. Many children do not enjoy being taught at such a young age if it seems more like a task than
playtime. If you incorporate learning and education into the games you play, your toddler boy will enjoy his
playtime and learn basic skills at the same time. For example, you can work numbers, letters and colors into
everyday play. Show your toddler boy how to put blocks into a tub one at a time while you call out the number of
blocks being put away. You can also count toes, fingers, eyes and other body parts.
Letters are also very easy to interweave into daily activities. Learning how to read, spell or sound out words can
be achieved by identifying everyday objects. For instance, when your toddler boy points out a cat, you can say the
word and then spell it out; c-a-t. This allows him to associate letters and words with visual pictures. Eventually
he will be able to point something out and say the word that goes with it. Colors can be introduced in a similar
fashion, by saying a color aloud when he points at something. Over time, numbers, letters and colors will become a
natural part of your toddler boy’s knowledge, without him ever feeling like he learned a thing!
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