Skills 1, toy area division
First of all, parents are advised to divide a fixed toy storage area in the living room or children's room, which is a key step to store toys well. This fixed location can be a separate room for storing toys. If there is no extra space at home, you can also divide a fixed toy storage space in the living room, balcony or even a corner of the room through reasonable planning and design.
Tip 2: Storage of children's picture books
There will be more picture books and children's books if there are more children at home. Reasonable book storage is convenient for children to read and help them enter the reading state. The children at home are younger. Parents are advised to put picture books at the bottom of the bookshelf or buy a short bookshelf, or buy a storage box suitable for children's height to put all kinds of picture books. The home is neat and beautiful, and it can also exercise the children's opponent ability.
Tip 3: Choose transparent storage items.
If children like painting, there will be all kinds of brushes at home: crayons, colored pencils, oil painting pens, watercolor pens and so on. These brushes are suitable for sorting in transparent containers, such as transparent drawer boxes or transparent storage cans, which are convenient for children to take and sort quickly.
Tip 4, plush toys on the wall
Considering the use frequency and compressibility of plush toys, several cloth storage bags can be hung on the wall or behind the door to assemble a plush toy storage rack, which saves more space than storage boxes and is convenient for children to hold, just like visiting the zoo at home.
Tip 5: Label
There are many toys for children, and classification and labeling are the key. Take photos or paste corresponding cartoon pictures on the storage box, so that children can know the location of toys at a glance when looking for them.
Tip 6: Hold a dustpan.
Children prefer to "scoop" things instead of holding them one by one. Children often play with all kinds of building blocks and Lego toys. When they play, they always throw a piece here and a piece there. The next time I play, I find a pile of building blocks inconvenient to store. Parents had better buy a portable dustpan with a toy shovel, so that children can scoop up toys for collection, which will stimulate children's interest in tidying up.
It is difficult for children to remember where they put things, which requires a process of habit formation. Therefore, parents can draw an interesting instruction diagram with their favorite crayons and watercolor pens, telling ta what toys to put, just as pirates accept the captain's orders, and children will be more interested in carrying them out.
When storing toys, we should not only guide children to find "home", but also train their sorting ability. After each play, you can play more classification games with your children, such as the same type, the same color, the same shape and other classification skills, which can make your children have a clearer understanding of classification in the process of finishing, and also help them establish simple logical thinking.