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Debate Club: Blocks Are The Best Toys Ever

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Resolved: That blocks are the best toys ever.

Every year around holiday time, lists of gift possibilities for children pop up here and there. Recently Barnes & Noble published its Best Toys of the Season roundup, and the Goddard School system unveiled its Top 10 Preschooler-Approved Toy List for 2013.

One toy that these two lists — and nearly all good-toy rosters year after year — have in common is some variation on an age-old favorite: the block. Amid all the Furby Booms, Nerf blasters and LeapPad kiddie tablets, the block abides — solid, stalwart, dependable.

Better than dolls or balls — too much gender baggage. Better than puzzles and yo-yos — too hard for tots or too easy for teens. Better than toy guns or video games — enough said.

From basic, straightforward unit blocks (introduced in America by educator Caroline Pratt a century ago this year) and the geometry-inspired (created for some of the earliest kindergarteners) to up-to-the-nanosecond smart blocks called ATOMS (supported by a Kickstarter campaign and introduced just last month), blocks are a constant in our lives.

Because. Well, blocks are the best toys ever.

Here's why:

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All shapes and sizes. Small children can build big things with oversize toddler baby blocks or colorful things with Hot Colors CitiBlocs. As their hands become more dexterous, kids can use more complicated blocks like , Tinker Toys and Legos, all of which were inducted into the in 1998 — the Hall's first year.

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Blocks are durable.Young people can stack 'em, whack 'em, kick 'em, lick 'em, chomp 'em, stomp 'em and pound 'em into the ground. Most blocks can withstand the punishment.

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Creativity. Blocks can teach us all kinds of things in the arts and the sciences. Writing in Some Thoughts Concerning Education, 17th century philosopher John Locke suggested putting letters of the alphabet on cubes so that children would learn to build words and read by playing games. A recent study in the journal Child Development, according to World Science, shows that playing with blocks may help young people "develop math and spatial skills, which support later learning in science, technology and engineering."

Tomorrow: The Future Of Blocks

The Protojournalist is an experiment in reporting. Abstract. Concrete. @NPRtpj

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Linton Weeks joined NPR in the summer of 2008, as its national correspondent for Digital News. He immediately hit the campaign trail, covering the Democratic and Republican National Conventions; fact-checking the debates; and exploring the candidates, the issues and the electorate.