
Visual Perceptual and Visual Motor

Visual Perceptual and Visual Motor
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Turn on your flashing lights and throw into the air. The 70mm ball expands to 140mm in the air and back down to it's original size when you catch it again. A fun way to engaging visual tracking and visual motor skills or try it in the dark to promote proprioceptive development.
WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD. Unsuitable for children under 3 years due to small parts.
An old classic visual perceptual game. Try to stop your partner from achieving four in a row while you try to make your own four. Vertical, horizontal, diagonal - try to make the four in a row anyway you can.
To add an additional fine motor development challenge try standing the pieces vertically in a theraputty and then play the game using tweezers or fish stix to place them in. Fun way to develop visual perceptual and thumb/index web space stability and as with any board game provides an opening for the development of social skills turn taking.
Many frogs are playing happily in the swampy pond. When the rain starts falling; its time to go home but to find their way they must go through many colourful lotus leaves and end up in their own home.
Made from environmentally friendly rubber wood from plantations no longer used.
Simple board games provide opportunity for early development of language, play skills, visual motor, motor planning and sequencing.
Manufacturer recommends for ages 36 months and above.
Size Closed Box 23 x 26 x 7 cm Instructions included - Play solo or up to 4 players.
Fun way to develop bilateral fine motor skills together with visual perceptual and visual motor skills. Children can create a great range of geometric based pictures through fun hammer and nails activities. Packs up small so is also great to take on holidays for those rainy days or use in kinder and photocopy the design for the children to take home to show the family.
Hang-sell pack consisting of corkboard (300mm x 255mm), wooden pieces, tacks and wooden hammer.
HEXACUS is an exploration in creativity and fun for the entire family.
Just sort by size and color, then stack, nest, and balance to create a wide variety of patterns and shapes. The variety of patterns provides kids with a longer term use of this puzzle - start with the simple ones or simply the action of stacking them in their pyramid when they are beginning and them allow them to move their way all the way through to the most difficult puzzles or to make up their own.
The ideas booklet shows over 100 examples of easy to challenging patterns and shapes to build.
STACKING: HEXACUS pieces are easy to hold and the unique hexagonal cross section and size progression from large to small allows for a variety of ways to stack the pieces.
NESTING: When a smaller HEXACUS piece, or pieces, can fit inside a larger HEXACUS piece, it's called nesting. Discover all the ways HEXACUS pieces can nest.
PATTERN MAKING: It's fun to place HEXACUS pieces side by side on a flat surface and create colorful patterns.
CONTENTS: 12 Hexagonal Pieces - 3 Red, 3 Orange, 2 Yellow, 2 Green, 1 Light Blue, 1 Dark Blue
Manufacturer recommends for ages 2 years plus.
Easier than Hide & Seek Safari, put back the 4 puzzle pieces and make sure all boats are hidden except the ones visible on the challenge card. Comes with 48 different challenges from easy to difficult!
Great fun for the whole family to do in small spaces such as the long holiday trips in the car or when stuck inside in the rain while also providing for development of cognitive thinking skills such as problem solving, organisational skills together with visual motor skills.
Manufacturer recommends for ages 5-99
The toy with family fun appeal. The challenge with this sturdy, travel inspired game is to arrange the four puzzle pieces on the game board so that only the animals that are on the challenge are visible on the board, and that all the others are hidden. Includes pull out draw containing a challenge book with 48 different challenges, ranging from easy to difficult. There are 4 puzzle pieces, 3072 possible combinations, but only 1 solution per challenge!
Great fun for the whole family to do in small spaces such as the long holiday trips in the car or when stuck inside in the rain while also providing for development of cognitive thinking skills such as problem solving, organisational skills together with visual motor skills.
Humpty Dumpty sits on top of his wall. Use the trowel with a steady hand to carefully push out a brick but be careful, don't make him fall! Working with the hand and arm away from the body, while requiring stable direction, can help children develop shoulder, forearm and wrist stability, while encouragement to grasp the trowel between thumb and first two fingers can help support the development of hand division and a tripod grasp. All this in readiness for handwriting.
Manufacturer recommends for 1-4 players aged 5 years upwards.
WARNING: Choking hazard. Manufacturer recommends unsuitable for children under 3 years due to small parts. Use under adult supervision.
Big Skills for Little Hands I Can Cut will help children build hand strength and dexterity by teaching them to use scissors to cut lines, curves, and shapes with these fun, colourful activity sheets. Children will create puppets, play games, and make puzzles while learning an essential skill for school success!
Publisher recommends suitable for 2 years plus.
I Spy Bingo Game is a great combination of memory game and bingo.
A card is drawn and if players bingo cards display the objects shown, they mark the space. The first player to match a row wins bingo!
I Spy Bingo builds manual dexterity, verbal and visual skills, particularly visual figure ground skills, as well as being a fun game to enable development of early board game and social skills.
Includes instructions for two levels of play for 2-6 players, ages 4 and up.
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