Jump to content

Recommended Posts

OK, so my parents want to buy my toddler some 'educational' DVDs for Christmas. They don't find Peppa Pig as amusing as we do! I looked at baby einstein but that seems to be all songs and I think they were looking for DVDs that would improve her speech and maybe lay some ground work for reading. We are not pushy parents but don't see any harm in this. By contrast we are getting her a scooter! Any ideas?


Has anyone tried this:


http://www.advancedchildacademy.co.uk/sale/

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/27378-toddler-learning-dvds/
Share on other sites

How about the Jolly Phonics DVD - it's 6 or 8 episodes and covers all the basic phonic sounds. My daughter used to really like it even though it is very basic production levels. Maybe depends exactly what age your toddler is.


Also my daughter loved the Tumble Tots dvd's too - lots of songs with actions.


I suspect a lot of this developmental stuff will depend on how much you put into it with them. I didn't buy any of the above with the intention of hot-housing my kids - I just responded to what she was showing an interest in. But I did notice that she seemed to pick up most from them in the times when I watched with her and commented / joined in etc. And you can do that with most of the cbeebies stuff that's on - I suspect the more focused educational programmes they have on around the 9am slot are probably as good as anything.

At this age our eldest basically started to enjoy all the cbeebies programmes - alphablocks/numberjacks/lingo show/show me show me - I think you can watch them on i player....numtums taught him to count!! I have the baby einstein dvd's - they are odd and I really wouldn't bother. Z now also likes umizumi (counting I think!), and there is Little einsteins on one of the sky channels that isn't too bad (still a bit cringy music-y but better than the baby version!).


The Sing and Sign dvd was also a hit at that age - so maybe just something with familiar songs?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I heard them & our two dogs were extremely upset by it..  bad enough during the evenings but at least can have music on to dilute the noise!   Some people have literally zero thoughts for others!! 
    • I have signed that petition.  Someone was letting off loud fireworks at about 3 am this morning. They woke me up.   I don’t know where they were exactly but it sounded like they were in the vicinity of Dog Kennel Hill.    
    • https://www.assistancedogs.org.uk/information-hub/assistance-dogs-emotional-support-dogs-and-therapy-dogs/   hello   i’d be interested to understand if anyone.has experience of Assistance Dogs especially for autistic children of different ages for emotional support and therapy   There was a prior thread on this topic on EDF 10 hrs ago but it had limited experiences and there was a (claimed) change in UK legislation in 2019. Whilst the industry appears unregulated/unlicensed, there are several providers (approx 15, perhaps more) who claim to have fully trained dogs or say that they can help families to train a puppy/young dog over the 18-24 months.  The latter obviously comes with a need for strong commitment to the challenge. Costs for a fully trained assistance dog are quoted at £13-15k albeit they claim £23k total cost to train the dog. On the one hand, this could potentially be a useful solution for some families if such a dog was truly trained as their websites claim and such a dog was accepted in public places and schools etc… On the other hand, I don’t think that I’ve ever seen an assistance dog of this type or in this context (only for a blind or partially sighted person) and hence a real risk of fraud or exploitation! The SEN challenge for families coupled with limited resources in schools or from local authorities or the NHS as well as the extremely challenging experience of many families with schools offering little or no support or making the situation worse leaves a big risk of lots of different types of fraud and or exploitation in this area.          
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...