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      Bridging the Age Gap: How Using CONNETIX has Enhanced Playtime and Developed Skills

      Bridging the Age Gap: How Using CONNETIX has Enhanced Playtime and Developed Skills
      Bridging the Age Gap: How Using CONNETIX has Enhanced Playtime and Developed Skills

      Bridging the Age Gap: How Using CONNETIX has Enhanced Playtime and Developed Skills

      By Laura Powell-Corbett

      Having my first two children close in age, with a two-and-a-half-year difference, meant that all of their toys tended to be joint toys. Toys they could play with together and learn from, with the eldest showing the other one what to do. A bonding experience if you like. Then my third baby arrived, six years after his big brother, and nearly four after his middle brother. 

      I knew it was going to be different, but what I failed to realise as that small boy was following round his two elder brothers, was the jump from toys to electronics was happening sooner than I thought. These days, for the bigger two, it’s all about playing on the screens whenever they can get away with it. Leaving my playroom looking derelict with only the smallest playing with the toys trying to convince his big brothers to join him.

      Enter CONNETIX

      It quickly dawned on me that toys which encourage open-ended play were the toys that all three of them could play with together. Toys that grow with the child and it doesn’t matter if you’re four or 40, the pleasure you get from the toy remains the same. CONNETIX fits that bill and more – due to their versatility and open-ended nature, these magnetic tiles can engage and entertain individuals of various ages simultaneously. Younger children can benefit from the tactile experience of connecting the tiles and experimenting with different shapes and structures, enhancing their fine motor skills and spatial awareness. Meanwhile, older children and teenagers can employ more complex designs, incorporating engineering principles and problem-solving skills.

       
      The open-ended play the magnetic tiles provided has allowed for play specific to each of my boys. It’s imaginative play for my four-year-old, my ten-year-old builds creations that defy gravity, while my eight-year-old has found the tiles a fun tool to work on his fine motor skills, as we continue to work on his handwriting and pencil grip resulting from those formative years of school missed during COVID lockdown. These tiles have allowed for peace and harmony within my household – at least long enough for a cup of tea!

      What are CONNETIX?

      My boys received the 212 Rainbow Range Mega Pack, the ultimate starter set in a range of primary colours, allowing for them to go crazy building straight away.

      And build they did.

      Rainbow Mega Pack 212 pc by Connetix
      Rainbow Creative Pack 102 pc by Connetix

      Five lessons my children have learned used CONNETIX

      Not only are CONNETIX an excellent STEAM toy helping children develop their gross and fine motor skills, but they are also a wonderful tool to enhance imaginative play.

      Between them, the boys built a train out of the CONNETIX using the two purple car bases, and on this train came toy cars – a car transporter taking the cars to a race! They discussed how the train would need to get to it’s destination, concluding that they needed to build both a track and a station.

      Winding the fence tile pieces around my living room as a track, building a structure that would fit the train inside as a station and adding further tiles to the track and working out how to keep the train on the track were all addressed. All the while keeping up a running commentary about what was happening on the train.

      An expression of imagination while they worked on their problem-solving and building skills.

      Inside each set comes a booklet with ideas to spark what you can build, my eldest child thrives on rules, regulations and following instructions. My youngest child thrives on telling his big brothers exactly what to do.

      Cue a team-work effort of the biggest one directing the smallest one as to what shapes were required, a learning episode in itself with square, hexagon, big triangle, small triangle and even right-angle triangle appearing in the vocabulary, the small one picking the colours. And when they realised that they didn’t have enough square tiles to make every single suggestion in the booklet without destroying their hard work, the ten-year-old patiently sat, showed and explained how the four-year-old was able to create the same shape out of two right-angle triangles or two rectangles. 

      Due to the easy nature of the tiles clicking together with magnets, the four-year-old immediately grasped this concept, as he was able to see the shapes were the same.

      The more complex the structure, the grander the idea, it’s inevitable that at some point there is a crash and everything will come toppling down. It was also inevitable that the tantrum would follow.

      My four-year-old got it into his head that he wanted to build a bridge, that could carry his cars across. He started building, it fell down, and as predicted the tantrum came. Yet once the tantrum was over, even my four-year-old picked himself up and tried again. And again. And again. Until eventually he had worked out how to move the building of the structure to our solid floor rather than the fluffy rug, had changed his structure to have a base plate, and had added more tiles to hold up the bridge portion.

      My eight-year-old came to me with a very specific idea of what he wanted to build, a ramp to rival the hot wheels camp. He had searched through the instruction book but couldn’t find anything that was matching what was in his head.

      A search through Google, YouTube and the structure was set.

      What followed was an exercise in planning, with a side of maths. Having a list of the tiles that they needed – 36 squares to be precise – we then worked out how to divide this to make it easier to count. Originally, we were counting out the squares in piles of fives, until he established that 36 was actually divisible by six. Checking the maths afterwards by counting up in sixes we had 36 square tiles and he was ready to build.

      One ramp later, and he found that he was able to use the purple car base to travel down, yet once he built that up into a truck it was too heavy.

      As I mentioned earlier, my eight-year-old has struggled since COVID lockdown in terms of his handwriting. He missed the formative years at school in reception, year one and a portion of year two, where he was in a cycle of blended learning, 50% at home, 50% at school, and at various points full lockdown and online learning. He essentially learned to write during this home-schooling period, and as a child who would rather run, jump, leap and work on gross motor skills, he has found the transition to writing harder than most.

      We have always tried to find ways that will engage and interest him while building those muscles up. CONNETIX have started to help do just that. These colourful, manipulative tiles require precision and dexterity to assemble and connect, promoting the development of hand-eye coordination and fine motor control. By grasping and placing the tiles, he has been engaged in a tactile experience that helps strengthen the muscles in his fingers, hands, and wrists. These movements and actions are crucial for refining the motor skills necessary for precise and controlled handwriting.

      Rainbow Mega Pack 212 pc by Connetix

      If you would like to encourage even more learning with your CONNETIX, check out our free resources available here!

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