Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
AIPL · Asperger Intervention and Program List (AIPL).
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want your group to be featured on the Yahoo! Groups website? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Toy Guide Focuses on Special Needs Kids - Available Now   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #8146 of 8554 |

Toy Guide Focuses on Special Needs Kids
 
By JEFFREY GOLD (AP Business Writer)
September 24, 2006 1:27 PM EDT

NEWARK, N.J. - Like most 5-year-olds, Nicholas loves to play. But not every toy is fun

for Nicholas, who is autistic.

"It's hard to find something just for him. It's pretty aggravating shopping for toys for him,

at times," said his mother, Jennifer Navarro. "Some toys that are meant for his age

group are too complicated, but some are too simple."

Two years ago, Navarro got some help in finding good choices for Nicholas by

consulting a guide compiled by experts at the nonprofit National Lekotek Center

and distributed by the New Jersey-based retailer, Toys R Us Inc.

"I thought it was wonderful. I've never seen anything like that before," said Navarro, 32.

The latest version of the free guide will be available Monday at Toys R Us stores and online.

The family, which lives in Naplate, Ill., did not have good luck with items from catalogs 

aimed at special needs children.

"He's advanced over a lot of those and they don't hold his interest," Navarro said. And

Nicholas also wanted to play with toys like those used by his brother, Peyton, 3.

Navarro said the right toys help with the development of Nicholas, an active boy who

loves to play outside as well as with laptop computer learning toys such as LeapPad.

"If I gave him a set of blocks, instead of making a building or making a castle, he will line

them up from one end of the room to the other," Navarro said, adding that this is typical

of many autistic children. Nicholas will also line up other toys, such as miniature cars.

"He doesn't play with them (toys) like other kids," Navarro said, so she has found toys that

help him learn to read and speak, including those that play rhyming Dr. Seuss stories.

The 85 toys in the guide are sold nationally, with just six available only at Toys R Us

stores, said company spokesman Kelly Cullen.

The company is printing 600,000 copies of the "Toy Guide for Differently-Abled Kids,"

about 100,000 more than last year, and absorbing all costs, which will not be disclosed,

Cullen said. Wayne-based Toys R Us started the guide in 1994.

The guide arrives as the struggling toy industry prepares for the holiday shopping season,

when most sales are recorded. Children are increasingly turning to video games and other

gadgets. Sales of traditional toys fell 4 percent to $21.3 billion in 2005, from $22.1 billion in

2004, according to NPD Group, Inc., a market research firm in Port Washington, N.Y.

Each toy in the 52-page guide includes a detailed description of how it can be used, along

with icons indicating whether the toy can stimulate development in such areas as creativity,

self esteem, vision or hearing.

The guide can be useful to people buying toys for many of the more than 6 million children

in the United States who have disabilities, said Diana Nielander, executive director of the

Chicago-based National Lekotek Center.

The group, which operates 38 therapeutic play centers in eight states, evaluated some

200 toys over the past nine months to select those included in the guide, Nielander said.

Certified play specialists observe families and children with the toys, and determine which

would work, for example, for a child who is blind, or for a child who can't close their hand,

she said.

"A lot of times, people look at play as being very simplistic. And it is simplistic, unless it's

your child that has trouble with play," Nielander said.

Lekotek chose a variety of toys, including some new toys "because those are the ones

that their friends and neighbors are playing with ... and everyone wants to fit in," Nielander

said. "We try to get all the fun ones that are going to be on TV and will be hot for the holidays."

The criteria include toys that are easy to handle or manipulate, and don't have a "right way"

of being used.

"These are things that are good for all children, but especially good for children with challenges,"

Nielander said.

"We want to see toys that are great for the most amount of children. And sometimes the smallest

thing can make the biggest difference," she said, such as knobs that allow puzzle pieces to be

lifted easily from their board.

Nielander noted that the guide features photographs of disabled children playing with the toys,

adding, "One mother told me that her daughter sleeps with this guide because it's the first time

she saw children who look like her."

---

On the Net:

National Lekotek Center: http://www.lekotek.org/

Toys R Us: http://www.toysrus.com/differentlyabled

 
 
 
 



Mon Sep 25, 2006 12:27 pm

sandiharrington
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #8146 of 8554 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

Toy Guide Focuses on Special Needs Kids By JEFFREY GOLD (AP Business Writer) September 24, 2006 1:27 PM EDT NEWARK, N.J. - Like most 5-year-olds, Nicholas...
Sandra Harrington
sandiharrington
Offline Send Email
Sep 25, 2006
12:32 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help