Archive for March 31st, 2011

Thomas Wooden Train Track Set

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Thomas Train Track Setups

About Thomas the Train Table

What Are Toy Model Trains?

Author: Jason R. Dodson

Thomas the Train solidified the train's image in little boys' heads and made it part of their deepest yearnings. When those boys watched the lovable train, they felt something but couldn't put their finger as to what it is. When they've grown into men, they realize that what they wanted to do all along was to control such a simple yet powerful piece of machine.  

Boys played with toys, and growing up never really takes that away. Grown men would look at a small replica and would feel elated and nostalgic about it. It could be because they needed to know how the machine worked, or they are simply interested in how the real thing was replicated without compromising detail. It could also be the fact that a train never leaves its tracks – a nod to everything that stays on course. It could also bring back good memories such as they experience of seeing a train go around the Christmas tree for the first time – and desiring to imitate that experience for the next generation. However, the term "toys" is no longer applicable to model trains. There's good news for men who loved trains: The toys they loved as kids grew up with them in the form of machines.  

It's not rare for you to see toy trains put up on sale during Christmas. Because they're made out of plastic, they're considered as of less quality, but are a good start for those who are interested in the hobby. Boys grow up and become men. Toy trains grow up with them and become locomotives. Locomotives are of better quality, and more durable than their plastic cousins. They can not be moved by pushing alone. Locomotives use electricity, which comes from the tracks that they make contact with, and makes them go. These concepts may be simple, but it lays the ground for that smile on the enthusiast's face. When it comes to engines, locomotives are far more superior. The more powerful the engine, the more powerful the train becomes, and the more cars it can pull. Toys are plastics while locomotives are metal. This is due to the fact that weight plays a role in the whole thing.  More weight means more contact with the track that supplies the train with power, which means it runs better.    

While there are various manufacturers supplying enthusiasts and hobbyists with model trains, there is one sought-after kind of train: The steam train. While there can be quality issues with steam trains, nothing makes your layout closer to life than a train with a steam engine.   

Driving trains are not seen as dream jobs by many. Those who end up driving one are often found imagining how other jobs would be better. If you have a knack for trains, there's no need to be a driver to keep your interest in them. Just pick up the hobby and be a model railroader – you can come home anytime and see the satisfaction of seeing your most loved objects: Trains.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/crafts-articles/what-are-toy-model-trains-2067113.html

About the Author

Jason R. Dodson is a toy enthusiast and a miniature piece collector with a special interest in locomotives. He pays special attention to his model trains and has built the website www.ultimatemodeltraincenter.com to help model railroaders get started with the hobby.



Brio Train Track Set

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Educational Toys Versus Edutainment Toys

Author: Laeke Gebre

Today's parents feel pressured to use technology to begin their child's education in utero. For example, the BabyPlus Prenatal Education System promises to "give your baby a headstart" by playing rhythmic patterns to help stimulate early learning. It is time, therefore, to step back and evaluate the true value of toys that incorporate technology to teach.

Toys that are formed from high-tech electronics embedded with semiconductor chips are generally known as edutainment toys. The quality and substance of their play may be limited by the number of buttons a child can push. Some promise to challenge a child by allowing him or her to interact with the educational content to learn it. For example, V.Smile offers a Baby Infant Development System aimed at introducing interactive learning to kids 9 months to 3 years. They can watch educational videos with this system or push buttons on a tray to influence what is happening on a television screen.

Some older toys are also adding electronic bells and whistles to appeal to the current technologically sophisticated generation of children. Dolls now interact with the Internet. Wooden Brio trains make electronic sounds and can be controlled by infrared remotes. The classic Fisher-Price Rock-A-Stack now also comes in a Dance Baby Dance version whose center rod lights up and plays songs when the rings are stacked on it.

Open vs. Closed-ended Toys

An open-ended toy encourages free play with an unlimited number of outcomes. For example, a building set can be used to construct a variety of different structures. A closed-ended toy, on the other hand, has a limited and often soon exhausted number of outcomes.

Not all closed-ended toys are bad. After all, a stacker is a classic closed-ended educational toy: it can only be put together correctly in one way. However, to solve a stacker, a child must develop and use logic and fine motor skills. The child benefits from the repetition of playing with the pieces of a stacker, manipulating them with his or her fingers over and over and thinking about how they fit together until the solution is mastered and then repeated for pleasure.

A closed-ended edutainment toy, on the other hand, may only require a child to press a few buttons. Eventually, it leads to a dead end and the child grows bored and tosses the toy aside. As Martha B. Bronson notes in The Right Stuff for Children Birth to Eight, although a child can have a rich play experience with any toy, basic, open-ended toys encourage this type of experience more than rigidly programmed toys with only one or two functions do. This sort of edutainment toy is not timeless. It is meant to be replaced sooner rather than later by the next big product in edutainment that uses the latest in technological innovations.

Often people assume that toys that use new technology are more innovative and educational than non-technological educational toys. In fact, childhood specialists such as Jane Roberts (president of Young Media Australia, a consumer advocacy group), question how educational and interactive high-tech edutainment toys really are, noting that "[p]ressing buttons and having items do things for you is fairly limiting in terms of how children learn." Furthermore, many traditional toys are themselves becoming more innovative about stimulating a child's imagination and creativity without having electronics in them. For example, the blocks in FoxMind's Cliko game can be used for a variety of games that are challenging to children and adults alike.

Negative Impacts of Edutainment Toys

Overall, parents might not want to encourage children, especially younger ones, to use too often edutainment toys that involve televisions and computer screens. The authors of "Effects of Preschool Television Watching on First-Grade Children," found that preschoolers who watched more television than their peers did worse in school and were not as well socialized when they entered first grade. Researchers Frederick Zimmerman and Dr. Dimitri Christakis found that babies watching Baby Einstein DVDs and videos scored lower on language skills than babies who had never watched them at all.

In addition, Allison Sloan notes in Shopper's Guide to Healthier, Greener Toys that computers and television sets emit EMFs, "invisible forcefields whose possible health effects, from headaches to sleep disruption to cancer, are the subject of heated debate." Children's developing brains are in the greatest danger from such outside influences.

A final caution about edutainment toys is that they can foster in children an acceptance of a disposable consumer culture. A timeless toy such as a set of wooden unit blocks will hold up under heavy use for generations and can be played with at the same time by children (and adults!) of a variety of ages. Edutainment toys, on the other hand, are usually played with by only one child at a time, and they generally have a shorter playtime and life span. Children quickly master and get bored of them, or their high-tech components break, rendering the toy useless, and then they are discarded, releasing toxic chemicals and metals into the environment.

What Parents Can Do

As technology and the Internet permeate society and people's lives more and more, it does make sense to introduce children to computers and other inventions that they will need to use as they grow older. A toy is not necessarily bad or useless because it incorporates technology. That said, smart parents should examine the stated purpose of an edutainment toy, evaluate how and what it teaches, and determine if their children could receive equal or greater value from a simpler, classic toy. Roberts warns against the dangers of a parent using high-tech toys as babysitters, substituting interaction with a machine such as a single-player computer game for what should be "the best learning for young children-real-life experience when they model, create, explore, and develop their own initiatives through play."

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/parenting-articles/educational-toys-versus-edutainment-toys-571602.html

About the Author

About Kids Toy Club
Kids Toy Club is an online provider of educational
toys
dedicated to adding value to the money its customers spend. Understanding that the purchase of educational toy is an investment in a child's future, Kids Toy Club makes the effort to provide quality products and useful information
about the relationship between toys and child development.