T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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555.1 | can't go to the beach? Bring the beach to your hosue | TLE::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Dec 11 1990 09:00 | 12 |
| The playschool Steven went to for a while before he started
regular preschool had one of these -- the kids loved it but it was
kind of messy. We got notes to dress them in "grubbies" for the
days when the sand table was on the agenda.
It's sort of like having a beach in your kitchen.
I'd say if you don't have a fairly large place that you don't mind
getting wet, or a place for it outside in a warm climate, it
probably isn't a good idea.
--bonnie
|
555.2 | | DATABS::TAYLOR | | Tue Dec 11 1990 10:07 | 5 |
| Yeh, my son's school has a big one. The kids just put big bibs on when
they're playing. They also have one at Little Tyke Town in Hudson, NH.
But, you can't buy it there, just play with it.
G
|
555.3 | Mixing sand and water?? | CARTUN::MANDALINCI | | Tue Dec 11 1990 10:46 | 12 |
| My son's previous daycare had them as 2 seperate tables. The water one
was only for outside so it could be drained after each use. The sand on
was inside and they always had to sweep around it. My son loved the
water one!!
Having one of these seems like a good warm weather idea. I personally
would not want one inside my house.
The only thing I would question is whether you think your kids would
mix the sand and water together. That's yet another "mess".
Andrea
|
555.4 | I just bought one! | DAIKON::CUPTS | | Tue Dec 11 1990 11:54 | 15 |
|
Funny you should mention it... but I just bought one of these for my guys
for the holidays. I set it up in our back hall which is tiled and
which is considered the "mud room" anyway. However, for the wintertime
I am curtailing the playing to involve only water, no sand. They can
have sand when they move it outside next spring. It's quite sturdy,
doubles as a picnic table (they ate their dinner on it the first night
out of sheer excitement).
I bought it at Toys R Us in Framingham. Child World has it too, all
year round - I asked.
So, for a 3 day update, it seems to be working GREAT!
-dorothy
|
555.5 | Have you seen the Globe this week? | BUFFER::WARREN | | Tue Dec 11 1990 13:33 | 18 |
| My kids haven't used the Playskool table (though I've seen it and it
looks great to me), but they do both _love_ the "industrial-strength"
water tables used at daycare/preschool. For indoor play, you can also
substitute rice or anything else that "feels neat" and sweeps up more
easily.
In the Boston Globe Sunday, one store had a flier that advertised 20
percent off all Playskool toys this week. Did anyone else notice what
store that was? I think it even pictured the S&W table. (It wasn't
Caldor, but they have the same deal on Fisher-Price infant and preschool
toys and on Barbie toys this week.)
-Tracy
|
555.6 | Good for dinners, too, I bet | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Dec 11 1990 17:27 | 9 |
| Story about those tables:
At Bright Horizons (local day care near the Spit Brook Road plant
to which my son goes), they have such a table in the young toddler
room (12..18 months). One day the teacher filled it with cold cooked
pasta. She expected them to "experience the texture" as they do
with water and so on, but instead the kids started eating it.
-John Bishop
|
555.7 | tongue in cheek, with the psta | TLE::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Dec 12 1990 08:42 | 8 |
| This teacher obviously doesn't have a young toddler of her own or
she'd realize most young toddlers play with cold cooked pasta
intended as food at least three or four times a week when they're
supposed to be eating their dinner. Why wouldn't they eat it when
they're supposed to be playing with it? Sounds like perfectly
predictable toddler behavior to me!
--bonnie
|
555.8 | Uncooked, too! | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Dec 12 1990 12:22 | 7 |
| re: .7
And in the same vein, she may have found out that if she had used UNcooked
pasta, that they would have eaten it. When we cook pasta, my kids will
invariably get a small bowlful of the uncooked stuff and eat it.
Clay
|
555.9 | Beware! | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Dec 12 1990 15:58 | 37 |
| As you may confirm in any child development book, extensive play with
sand and water tables is an absolute requirement for satisfactory
mental and physical development. That is why civilization was so
backward before Thomas Edison came along and invented these devices,
along with Seseme Street and some other useful things I can't remember.
Unfortunately, it is also a well established fact that no parents will
retain their sanity if forced to deal with the complete havoc that
reigns around a sand or water table maintained in the home. It used be
be thought that having a very large house and an extensive set of servents
and nannies cleverly avoided this problem. But this idea is false,
which has led to much heartbreak as well as the decline of the British
Empire, as documented on Upstairs Downstairs (which is named after the
general direction of flow of water spilled from a water table).
Americans have fared much better (to the discomforture of certain
ruffians in distant parts of the world), having addressed this dilemma
through the invention of daycare centers and pre-schools, which exist
to maintain stimulating environments, and contain their otherwise
dangerous and pernicious side effects. Some parents, in our sadly too
competitive world, entertain the harebrained idea that they ought to
have sand and water tables at home, too! To spare them the tragic
consequences of acting on this dillusion, pre-schools have been made
sufficiently expensive so that almost no family can afford such
extravegant home equipment after paying their tuition. So, all is for
the best in this best of all possible worlds! And there is too a free
lunch! Note also that, although not realized yet by the mass media, the
sand and water table dilemma is thus also responsible for the two
career family pattern required to maintain the daycare industry, and
thus also for women's liberation.
So, if there be listening any parents so innocent as to be tempted down
this slippery path (both ethically and physically), I say: Resist! Do
not put in peril, on this eve of the third millenium, the very
foundations of our national economy and of the American Way of Life!
- Bruce
|
555.10 | | DATABS::TAYLOR | | Thu Dec 13 1990 16:33 | 17 |
| RE: .9
Bruce, thanks for the humor, or should I say truth of the day! Thanks
to the notes here, I was able to locate it. The table costs $69.00 in
Toys R Us! Ouch!
Now I need to decide if I really want to subject myself to the mess i
in addition to the cost. My
son is contantly pulling kitchen chairs over to the sink to play there.
It is dangerous and messy. I've even resorted to tying the chairs to
the kitchen table so he couldn't do it. What a temper tantrum he threw!
And for the sand, it it just getting too cold to do that outside. Maybe
I could use rice, or birdseed or something else that might vacuum up a
little easier than sand. Any ideas here?
Gale
|
555.11 | GI-GO!! | DECXPS::KEAVENEY | | Fri Dec 14 1990 10:11 | 14 |
| Gale,
As others have noted, be careful what you put into the table, as you
may see it later coming out of your child!! At my son's daycare, they
put kidney beans in the table once, do you know what a fistful of
undigested raw kidney beans look like in a messy diaper?!?!?
Maybe this is the cure for all of us frustrated parents of toddlers who
won't eat their meals (sound familiar, Kate Nelson?!) - put their food
in a sand and water table and tell them they can only play with it!!!
Happy Holidays whatever you decide!!!
Meg
|
555.12 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Dec 14 1990 10:25 | 17 |
| As an alternative to sand, the cooked pasta suggested earlier might be
good if you have a large enough dog, though I wouldn't particularly
trust it to the vacuum cleaner (or vice versa).
Respecting water, don't suppose that a water table is going to
eliminate interest in dishwashing. Eric's 3s class at pre-school was
equiped with a fine water/sand/substance-of-the-day table, that got
lots of use. But he (and a couple of other kids) still insisted on
spending another hour each morning and again in the afternoon "washing
dishes" at the classroom sink. It was a medium-low sink, which he
could access from a small step-stool. I thought it would be great
training for KP duty at home when he got a bit bigger. But I should
have known better. Like all other fascinations of early youth (middle
youth, too???), this talent was guarenteed to fade away before it became
possible to channel it in actually useful directions!
- Bruce
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