The latest survey, that was published by Ribena, polled 2,000 British parents, observed that parents spend generally L10,000 on toys for every single child 'till the end of adolescence. It seems that many parents are confronted by “pressure from all of angles to get up to date toys and gadgets”, and lavish their children with devices just like PCs, iPads, video game consoles and mobiles.
In reality, one out of six parents said they bought the modern gadgets to “look good facing other families” and a few even admitted denying their kids admission to “untrendy” toys.
Mrs Goddard Blythe, director on the Institute for Neuro-Physiological Psychology in Chester, said the buyer culture has “led to oldsters being seduced into thinking that the greater they feature for children concerning material, electrical goods and, consequently, greater money they spend, the higher quality parents they are”.
Missing out on playgrounds for kids
“Sadly these days we usually see parents facing pressure from all of the angles to order the most recent toys and gadgets and various forms of free, exploratory play dwindle a part of childhood in comparison to previous years,” Mrs Goddard Blythe added.
“Active play helps you to develop balance, coordination, motor skills and spatial awareness and outdoor play helps to maintain adequate amounts of vitamin D, might help to pun intended, the development of eyesight problems and enables children conserve a healthy weight.”
“When having fun with others they be able to mingle, collaborate and cooperate as well as developing language skills.
"Through firsthand experience, experimentation, high risk and discovery they find out how things work, and they've got efforts and space to take part in imaginative play, creative and innovative thinking.”
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