Thu Nov 29, 2007 5:03PM EST
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My kids love to play with the usual plastic junk as much as any child obsessed with colorful, shiny objects, but like many a parent, I've grown weary of giving them stuff that won't teach them anything and will just end up at Goodwill (or a landfill) in six months' time.
This year I set out to find some gifts that would at best teach them something about science or technology or, at worst, at least get them inspired and interested in learning a little more about science.
I used my 5-year-old and nearly-2-year-old as guinea pigs with hands-on testing of all these toys; here's what they liked best.
Roboquad - This quadruped robot from Wowwee (which offers a number of fun robo-companions) was the biggest hit with both kids. You can use a remote to order him around the house, step by step (or dance, which the kids like to see at least 10 times a day), or put him in a semi-autonomous mode to blip and beep and explore on his own. He even has LED eyes to light up dark closets. Older kids can program the robot to follow a sequence of instructions. Yeah, he gets stuck in the corner sometimes, but don't we all? $90
Bladerunner III - It's a pint-sized helicopter which you can fly in your house. Nothing was better at quieting a screaming toddler than picking up the Bladerunner and having it land on his mom's head, then lecturing him about Leonardo da Vinci. Be warned: Kids will have to be content to watch, as the controls are extremely difficult to master. I'm also sure it will break in relatively short order, as crashes are all too common. $50
Ice Shattering Mammoth Dig - A huge hit with the kids. You freeze a miniature mammoth skeleton in the included tray, then they whack at it with plastic chisels and warm water to "excavate" the bones. Once the work is done, it goes together like a puzzle. If you want to get kids excited about archeology, it's this, or Indiana Jones. Be prepared for a wet mess, though. $20
Rainbow In My Room - No, it doesn't do much: It puts a rainbow in your room. My daughter loves it nonetheless, and even though it doesn't use a real prism to create its colors (colored LEDs mimic a rainbow instead), it has let me discuss light with her more scientifically. Like she cares... she just wants a rainbow in her room! $30
Digital Speed Sensing Baseball - Why play ball with a normal baseball when you can use this one, which hasĀ a speed sensor built in. I have no way of knowing if it's very accurate (other people's reviews are mixed), but it does at least offer something new instead of the usual game of catch. $25
R2-D2 Interactive Droid - I was hoping this miniature R2 unit would get higher marks, but adults liked him more than the kids. Unlike Roboquad, R2-D2 is voice activated, responding and reacting to 30 phrases. My 5-year-old just didn't have the patience to master the required phrasing, though, and R2 didn't like it when two kids just sat there yelling at him. Better for older tykes. $120
Got other shopping suggestions for science-minded kids? Post them here! (And Spirograph doesn't count!)
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
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The roboquad is awesome! Only discoverystore.com carries it in that grey and green color in the article.
A great place to find truly scientific, exploring, educational type toys is MindWare.com, and Scientastic.com. Both of these websites can send you a catalog filled with both age appropriate and skill appropriate toys. My boys, ages 7 and 11 use the catalogs to fill out their wish lists every year. dewpeewee
Thank y;ou. I have a boy 15 years old who is staying with me from Korea and this gives me ideas for his Christmas gift.
you forgot the Eyeclops! A microscope wand that magnifies anything you place it on 200x right on your tv! I can't wait til my daughter opens it!
The $12.99 Roboquad is the mini version
Nine of these are exactly the sort of toys that would become landfill in six months. None of these teaches anything. The quadroped robot teaches what - how expensive batteries are? I've got a thousand like that already. Robotics? I'm not sure I'm ready for that, never mind the kids. You report that you had to intervene with scientific explanations about how things work. There are cheaper and less landfilll-y paths to such teaching moments, and most parents won't have your insight or staying power. You clearly rock as a dad, but most of us don't do this for a living, and are just looking for things that kids can do that won't turn their brains to porridge or the house to a demolition zone. The mammoth ice skeleton puzzle sounds like the clear winner, but we don't have a room with a drain in the floor, so it would be stored till the warm weather. I think I'll give my 7 year old a trip to the hardware store to pick out some carpentry tools of his own, and the 3 year old something Legoish that helps him build up small motor and hand-eye skills to prepare him for real challenges. None of these will require batteries (sorry, Justin - no power tools!), and they'll be developmentally appropriate.
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cnull and rogueist, Are their any other possibly larger R2D2's out their? Im sure we could get creative and screw some drink holders to the sides of poor R2. Now we just need him to project princess lei porn and he'd be the best!
I have indoor helicopters @ $30 that are easy to fly and control.
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For a slightly older child (12+), consider NerdKits (www.nerdkits.com), which are educational electronics kits centered around a microcontroller and LCD.
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26 Posted by poshpeacock on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:16PM EDT Report Abuse
Does Roboquad work on carpet?