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Visual Training Toys

Toys are a very useful means of stimulating your child's vision development. Take care however, for they can also be a hazard and the safety of your baby is always your primary concern and responsibility. Make sure the toys you buy and use for the suggested activities in this web site are not so small that they can be swallowed or put into a nose or ear. Click on the appropriate age range for suggested games and activities to stimulate your child's vision.

Given the importance of efficient visual function in our modern way of living, it is recommended that vision development not be left no chance. Ideally all children should be examined at the age of 6 months, 3 years, and yearly thereafter.

0-3 Months General motor and Bilateral development
Playfully move your baby's arms and legs, separately then in various combinations.
Raise and lower your baby while you look into each other's eyes.
Bounce your baby gently on the bed or on your knee.
Gently and playfully massage the baby's body with baby lotion or powder.


Visual Focusing
Place a picture of a face 20-40 cms from the baby's eyes. The face should be about 18 cms in diameter and the eyes in the face should be about 2 cms in diameter. Place the face on one side of the bassinet and change sides regularly until the age of about two months. Then hang it form the middle to the bassinet. Make sure you place the face so that the baby has the opportunity of looking towards each side of their body.

Provide multi-colored objects for your baby to look at. Place them in various positions within baby's view, giving opportunities to look in different directions. Make sure your baby doesn't face on side of the bassinet or a wall, using one eye all the time. Change the position of your baby or that of the bassinet occasionally.


Visual Tracking
Take a large patterned object (eg. A doll or balloon) with a bell attached, and move it in front of your baby's face, 20-30 cms from the eyes. Move the object slowly from side to side.
Visual-auditory co-ordination

Place noisy rattles with different textures in your baby's hands so that they can be shaken and placed in the mouth. Remember to talk and sing to your baby.

Eye-hand co-ordination
Make a bridge between the two sides of the crib and hang objects that will invite swatting. Make sure that the objects change pattern or make a noise as they move.

 

4-8 Months
General Motor and Bilateral development
Place a kickable mobile at the end of the bassinet.
Visual Focusing
Place a plastic mirror (without sharp edges) in a place where your baby will catch a view of themselves.
Roll a patterned ball towards your baby while sitting on the floor.
Play peek-a-boo with your baby.
Visual Tracking
Walk in front of your baby, pulling a desirable pull-toy, eg. A dog on a string.
Jingle a set of toy keys approximately 30 cms in front of your baby's eyes to stimulate eye-following abilities. Do this from left to right and back, then up and down and so forth.
Tie objects onto the side of the highchair so your baby will throw them to the floor and you can retrieve them more easily. Make sure they make different sounds as they reach the end of the string.
Two-eye Teaming
At bath time, provide toys that can float towards and away from baby.
Play a 'choo-choo' game with food as it is spooned into the 'tunnel' (mouth). Have baby watch the 'train' all the way into the tunnel.
Provide wind-up toys that walk towards and away form your baby while they are watching.

 

9-18 Months
General Motor and Bilateral Development
Creep through, around, over and under a family furniture obstacle course.
Hold your baby's hand and encourage jumping off a small step. Try to do it over a very low object.
Play nursery games like Patty-Cake and Ten Little Indians.
Allow your baby to climb a safe set of stairs.
Identify objects in large baby books.
Sort pictures of different family members. Ask your baby to identify which picture is of which family member.
Visual Focusing
Provide a grab-bag of objects to identify by reaching in, guessing what it is, and then pulling it out to see if it is right.


Visual Tracking
Play ball on the floor.
Occasionally use balls that have unpredictable movements.
Eye-hand co-ordination
Stacking and Nesting toys.
Fill-able objects and pouring toys
Toy Xylophone/Telephone
Binocular co-ordination: Two-eye Teaming
When your baby is on a swing, stay in front of the swing and maintain eye contact.
Have your baby use a large plastic hammer with large pegs.
Have your baby pour water into a container. As this skill improves, provide containers with smaller openings.
Ball or beanbag throwing onto an area of the floor or into a basket.
Try a balloon catch.
Size, shape and spatial concepts
Have your baby place objects together that belong together, like all cups, all spoons, plates, cars, or dolls.
Hide an object and have your baby find it.
Scramble a stack of Lego blocks and then have your baby pick out only one type of block. For example, pick out all the blue ones, although there are red and blue scattered together. Or pick out all the blocks that look alike.

 

18 Months - 3 Years
General Motor and Bilateral Movement
Kiddy car
Incline boards or varying widths
Wheelbarrow game. Hold the child's legs (at the thigh or knees if necessary) and have your child walk on their hands.
Playing jump on the trampoline
Visual Focusing and Identification
Puzzles with geometric shapes, animals and community figures.
On a trip to the supermarket, let your child find objects you are looking for. Make sure they only have a narrow field to search.


Visual Tracking
Large wooden beads for stringing.
Sort three different shapes. Place 3 cups in a horizontal row before your child. Ask your child to place the buttons into the first, marbles in the second and pegs into the third, etc.
Living room bowling: roll a ball to knock down milk cartons.
Visual-Motor Co-ordination (eye-hand, eye-foot and eye-body)
Wind up toys
Tricycle
Slap a floating balloon (try to keep it from touching the ground)
Finger paints and modeling clay
Binocular Co-ordination
Place a magnet on a string and hang it from the end of a stick. Have your child 'fish' for metal objects.
Help feed Daddy. Put food into Daddy's mouth.
Place coins in a coin box or piggy bank.
Size, shape and spatial concepts
String beads or buttons according to size and shape.
Learn to help set the table.

 

3 - 4 Years
From this age on, most games stimulate an intricate combination of the necessary developing motor and visual skills (visual tracking and binocularity). The following games are recommended at this stage:
Hopping
Climbing equipment
Tricycle
Wagons and wheel-barrows
Blunt scissors
Crayons and paints
Blowing bubbles
Clay
Construction toys
Puzzles
Musical Instruments
Water play and sand play
Dressing dolls and lacing shoes
Toys with large nuts, bolts and wrench

During this stage, it is time to help with the development of visual memory. Toys and games for this purpose include:
Match photographs to a past holiday or place visited.
Hide and object and explain where it is, then have your child find it.
Build a simple pattern with blocks and hide it. See if your child can remember and build one like it.

Continue to describe all the things and qualities your child sees in their environment. This will include descriptions of sizes, of color, of weight, of relative positions, of time sequence, etc. When you read to your child, have them point to the pictures to show you what you are reading about.

This is also a good time to let them draw, finger paint, or sculpt the things from the stories you have read to them. All creative expression should be appreciated for what it is - their own inner imagery of a fertile, childlike world.

As a parent, you should watch for signs that may indicate a vision development problem, including a short attention span for the child's age; difficulty with eye-hand-body coordination in ball play and bike riding; avoidance of coloring and puzzles and other detailed activities.

 
4 - 5 Years The following toys and games are recommended at this stage:
Trapeze and swinging rings
Roller skates
Cars, dump trucks, bulldozers
Doll house
Jump rope
Easel and paint
Cutting and pasting materials
Connecting dots
Coloring books
Scooters (bicycles with trainer wheels)
Construction toys such as Tinker Toys or Lego
Tracing within a maze
Frisbee throwing

This is the time to encourage and help foster visualization abilities. Dressing up and role playing are excellent ways for your child to develop the ability to see and feels if he or she were another person in another place. Provide play material and costumes for acting out the parts of Mommy and Daddy at work or at a favorite pastime, a community figure such as a fireman or policewoman, or someone you have read about or seen on a visit together. Start off the game by asking What if you were _______? What do you think you would do? What would you feel? What do you see?

 


Astoria Vision Center 36-20 Broadway Astoria, NY 11106 Phone: (718) 204-2007 Fax: (718) 207-2008
Jackson Heights Vision Center 83-25 37th Ave. Jackson Heights, NY 11372 Phone: (718) 426-2725 Fax: (718) 426-9748

Jackson Heights Vision Center and Astoria Vision Center proudly serve the metropolitan area and surrounding cities, Jackson Heights, Astoria, Flushing, Woodside, Sunnyside, Maspeth, North Corona, East Elmhurst, Rego Park, Middle Village and Willets Point.

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