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Toys and Play for the Handicapped Child

Toys and Play for the Handicapped Child
Author: Barbara Riddick
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2005-08-04
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1134951620

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First published in 1982. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.


Play Helps

Play Helps
Author: Roma Lear
Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books
Total Pages: 188
Release: 1977
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN:

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Ideeën voor spelletjes en bezigheden voor kinderen (met een beperking) gerangschikt naar de zintuigen: zien, horen, voelen, proeven en ruiken


Toys and Play for the Handicapped Child

Toys and Play for the Handicapped Child
Author: Barbara Riddick
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2005-08-04
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1134951612

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Toys and Play for the Handicapped Child is written by a psychologist who ran the first professionally staffed Toy Library in the UK. Her experience enables her to write in practical detail about the role of toys and play, both in normal development and in the development of handicapped children. It will be found equally useful by parents, teachers and other professionals, and by those concerned to promote productive play in handicapped and non handicapped children.


Toys for Toy Libraries

Toys for Toy Libraries
Author: National Society for Mentally Handicapped Children (Great Britain)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 39
Release: 197?
Genre: Toy lending libraries
ISBN: 9780016362866

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Toys and Playthings

Toys and Playthings
Author: John Newson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2017-12-06
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1351378600

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John and Elizabeth Newson were well known for their studies of child rearing, which have combined a rigorous research methodology with sympathetic insights into family life and a lively approach to scientific reporting. ‘Path-breaking’, ‘brilliant’, ‘seminal’, ‘outstanding’, ‘fascinating’, ‘enthralling’ and ‘enchanting’ are some of the adjectives used by critics to describe their previous books. They now turn their attention to toys, the ‘pegs on which children hang their play’, a study for which they are uniquely qualified. Not only had they long experience in normal child development: they had been actively involved for many years in research and training in remedial play for disabled children, their research unit was a major influence in the phenomenal development of the toy libraries self-help movement, they designed for and advised the toy industry, and they had their own family-run specialist toyshop. With this background, it is not surprising that their book on toys and playthings is both informative and entertaining on many different fronts. Richly observant, it follows the child’s development in play from using the mother or father as the ‘first and best toy’, through the exploratory and manipulative sequences, to the use of toys in ritual, symbolic or contemplative ways. Against this detailed understanding of ‘ordinary’ children’s growth points in play, the Newsons and their collaborators examine the special needs of disabled children, with a firm emphasis on how parents can help. What is more, in providing an intensely practical guide for the parents and teachers of the disabled child, they draw out comparative insights which are enlightening and absorbing for those whose children do not have such urgent problems. Once again the Newsons share with the reader the viewpoints and preoccupations of research workers in the field. There is indeed a continual sense of ‘work in progress’, and nowhere more than in the chapter on using toys for developmental assessment, where the reader is given a hot line to a laboratory (i.e. playroom) notes used in their own research unit at the time in a welcome move away from the rigid test-bound assessment of ‘special’ children. The book is enriched by the authors’ sharp awareness that the history of playthings has a far longer perspective than the history of child psychology. They are not basically interested in educational toys as such, but in all the objects, made or found, on which the child hones his skill, his reasoning powers, his imagination, his emotions or his sense of humour. Fairground baubles, joke toys and poppy-head dolls are as much a part of this book as bricks, sorting boxes and teddy bears. In the Newsons’ own words: ‘We hope that people who simply like toys as objects will find something in this book to interest them; we suspect, indeed, that liking toys will be what all readers, whatever their reason for opening the book, have in common’.