Playonwords.com Presents Their Spring 2022 PAL Awards - Best Toys, Games and Media that Spark Language Development Through Play - Benzinga

2022-06-18 18:47:23 By : Ms. Sally Chen

Play On Words, led by highly respected speech-language pathologist Erika Cardamone , announces Spring 2022 PAL Award Winners, the toy industry's only recognition directed by a credentialed speech-language expert recognizing the language learning edge in exceptional toys, games and media. Erika's 16 years of child development experience working with kids empower her PAL Award selections, video reviews, popular blog, media appearances (FOX News Milwaukee and PHL17), and consulting practice, alongside PAL Award Founder Sherry Artemenko .

PHILADELPHIA , June 14, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Play is the foundation for a child's learning. When children play, they're experimenting, problem solving, conversing, and collaborating. These are the essential skills of the 21st century. We've seen the importance of play and adaptability especially in the last few pandemic years. Our children have endured virtual playdates, developmental setbacks, educational shifts, and academic crises. Through all of this, play continues to be the forerunner for our children to learn self-regulation, empathy, creativity, problem solving, and build a lifelong love for learning.

During uncertain pandemic years with less social opportunities for us all, social-emotional wellness became an important theme in schools and homes. Social-emotional learning (SEL) is an essential skill that helps children better understand their emotions, improve self-awareness and problem solving, and build empathy for others. Bringing SEL into the classroom improves academic performance and lifetime outcomes.

Play encourages self-regulation where a child builds a sense of self. During play, children use their imaginations, take risks, negotiate for turns with peers, and practice important language and conversation skills. It's these critical experiences that help our children build self-awareness, self-management, relationship skills and thus leads to responsible decision making.

The PAL Award continues to seek out the best toys and games that foster learning through play and encourage language development, flexible thinking, problem solving, and creativity. Playonwords.com helps toy brands and consumers alike see the strategic value of language learning in play through its helping to build vocabulary, foster cooperation, express emotion, kindle creativity and expand descriptive and problem solving capacities. The PAL Award on the internet, packaging and in print media differentiates brands who know the marketplace now demands products that are not only fun, but also infused with learning potential. The gold seal with three smiley faces tells customers that more than great entertainment is to be found on the box, book cover or app license.

EARLY DEVELOPMENT: Erika's experience in pediatric speech-language therapy has given her an eye for the best products to build attention, vocabulary and concepts through play, preparing children for their first sounds, words and sentences. While discovering themselves in a fun mirror, learning cause and effect during playtime, practicing pretend play through planting and counting and exploring their environment while scooting around on their first bike, kids learn essential early language skills.

READING AND WRITING: As children grow older, literacy becomes a focus in academics. Learning their first functional words and phrases, rhyming words, creating new words during gameplay, using a magic mat that allows for tons of writing practice, and learning fun facts on your favorite themes, all pick up essential skills to advance reading and writing.

LANGUAGE STRUCTURE, CRITICAL THINKING AND REASONING: These outstanding products can build language structure, critical thinking and reasoning, often teaching vocabulary, concepts or grammar while delivering fun. Following directions to complete complex designs, making observations in the dark, solving problems, drawing conclusions, designing and constructing your own floor plan and structures made of blocks to practice physics further language learning, flexible thinking and promote innovative thinking.

STORY-TELLING / PRETEND PLAY: Whether telling stories about a Wild Life Ranger who rescues animals and explores, checking off daily chores like ironing, reenacting a grocery store trip, or imagining your favorite pets in an igloo, treehouse, or spa, children enter the world of pretend, creating their own stories with plenty of flexible props to guide their imagination. Oral story-telling precedes writing as kids learn the steps to create a good narrative.

SOCIAL LANGUAGE: Complementary to pretend play, social language blossoms when children play with toys and games and interact with media that encourage extended social interactions. Naming, and recognizing emotions in oneself and others by taking on a puppet personality, taking turns during gameplay, or exploring the outdoors with a friend, children understand and manage their emotions, leading to stronger EQ's.

ABOUT PLAYONWORDS.COM Playonwords.com is fueled by well-respected speech-language pathologist, Erika Cardamone . Her 16 years championing language rich play, lead reviewer for the PAL Award, popular blog, and insightful tips to parents set her apart as the leading advocate for the language component in toys.

Over 10,000 hours working directly with children has shown her that a unique set of the best toys, games and books have the capability to develop language while delivering great play. Studies show:

Creative pretend play that sparks story-telling can advance future literacy

Erika hopes that parents will recognize the PAL Award to identify unique toys, games and books that through their design, quality and character, encourage play that advances language. PAL winners in the hands of kids, spark fun and creative play with lots of talk. Such toys, recognized on the basis of her child development expertise, are complemented by practical coaching in her blog, showing parents, caregivers and teachers how to get the most from toys, games and books to build language and underlying cognitive skills.

Erika Cardamone , Play On Words, 1 203-228-4438, erika@playonwords.com

© 2022 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.