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Children learn through play. As an occupational therapist who works with children and youth, I use games and toys almost every day to help develop important cognitive, visual perceptual, motor, sensory, social, play and leisure skills. While many different types of activities can be used in therapy, this blog focuses on off-the-shelf games and toys that are accessible to most. Whether you are a therapist, parent, teacher, or a game lover like me, I hope you discover something useful while you are here. Learn a different way to play a game you already own or discover a new game for your next family game night. Either way, just go play. It's good for you!

The OT Magazine named The Playful Otter one of the Top 5 Pediatric OT Blogs.


May 4, 2017

Mind Your Manners

Mind Your Manners

Mind You Manners is a simple game that reinforces good manners at home, school, community and at play. There is no role playing, no questions to answer. Simply read a manner card and move ahead for good manners or move backwards for bad manners.

The manner cards cover home, school, and community situations. There are many more good manner cards than bad manner cards so everyone can cross the finish line. There are also a few colored smiley face cards in the deck and matching smiley face pictures on the board. If you draw a smiley face, you may move ahead on the board to the next smiley face of that color. The board and cards are a little more lightweight than your average game, but the cards are coated with plastic.

Object:
Advance along the colored path, starting in the bottom left hand corner and be the first to cross the finish line at the top right hand corner.

Set up:
Place the board on a flat surface and deal five cards to each player. The rest of the cards become the draw pile and are placed face down by the board. Each player chooses a pawn and places it in the lower left hand corner of the board at START.

Play:
Players take turns. Place one card from your hand on the discard pile, follow the directions, and then draw a card to replace it. There is a number and symbol in the top left hand corner of each card that will tell you whether you will be moving forward (+) for good manners, or backward (-) for bad manners, and how many spaces. Here are a few card examples:
  • +9  You were a good sport about losing the game.
  • +4  You were kind to an animal.
  • +4  You were quiet during the movie. 
  • +4  You kept the sound from the radio soft so that only you could hear it.
  • -3  You forced your way to the front of the line.
  • -3  You tracked mud into the house.
  • -3  You bothered your neighbor.
  • -2  You tipped your chair back at the table.
You may instead play the - cards on another player. If the player has a card with a ribbon on it, he may cancel the action and your turn is over. If you draw a smiley card, advance to the next smiley face of that color and draw again.

Play until someone crosses the finish line and wins the game.

Try this:
  • Make a game out of just the cards. Read a card and ask the players if it is a good manner or a bad manner. Don't let incorrect answers pass with just a "wrong answer" response. Explain and correct.
  • Eliminate the smiley face cards so that your only way to advance is related to manners cards.
  • Ask the players to explain why bad manners are bad. For example - You tracked mud into the house is bad manners because someone could slip on the wet mud and hurt themselves and it is inconsiderate of the person who will have to spend time cleaning it up.
In the box: Game board, 100 manner cards, 6 pawn

If you are interested in purchasing this game or just want more information, click on the image below.

Apr 30, 2017

Pop Belly

Pop Belly - Feed the pigs till they pop

Pop Belly is a game that you won't stumble onto in many places. It is made by a company called Simply Fun who only sell their games through their website and through home parties (think Tupperware, but a lot more fun).

The people behind Simply Fun are very passionate about play. They understand the critical relationship between play and learning, and how spending time playing games with family and friends can strengthen bonds and build fond memories. They have a great website and have a section that links to multiple articles about play. While I understand their passion and applaud them for their commitment, I do wish that they would make their games more widely available to the public. They don't advertise or sell on Amazon, Walmart, Target, or in toy stores. To buy a game, you have to visit their website or go to one of their parties. And before you can visit their website, you have to hear of them! So hopefully by blogging about them, I can steer other folks their way. Simply Fun games, like Pop Belly, are whimsical, well-made, and often have unique and fun pieces.

The goal is to feed the pigs and then be the first one to leave the barnyard (move off the game board). All farmhands (players) participate in the feeding, and as the pigs eat more and more their bellies will eventually pop, helping the farmhands advance.

To set up the game, give each player one pawn and 20 of the same color feed chips (small bingo type chips). Snap the bellies on the pigs. The five different bellies each hold a different amount of feed chips and snap on underneath the pig. They can be a little tricky to snap on, so you may end up doing that part if kids have problems.



Players begin by feeding two chips to a pig of their choice. Mix the pigs up and place one on each colored blanket on the game board (pink, orange, green, black, purple). The pigs are hard plastic and they have a slot on their backs that make them look like small piggy banks. All players place their pawns at the barn door on the game board. The first player throws both dice. The number die will show how many feed chips to feed two different pigs. The color die will match a blanket color and that will be one of the two pigs you will feed. The other pig you feed is your choice. You cannot move the pigs in any way while you are dropping the chips in the slot on their backs to feed them. Players take turns throwing the dice and feeding the pigs until a pig pops his belly, meaning the belly falls off and all the chips inside spill out. All players collect any of their color chips that fall out and they advance around the game board one space for each chip. By advancing around the game board, you are getting closer to leaving the barnyard and winning. The player who popped the pig collects his chips, but does not advance on the board. Snap the belly back on the pig and keep playing until someone advances all the way around the board, leaves the barnyard, and is declared the winning farmhand. 

The purple and the black dot on the color die both look the same color to me. I can tell the difference because the black dot is centered just right and the purple dot is printed more to one side. The numbers on the number die are 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5. The game is based mostly on luck, with maybe a little strategy involved when remembering which pigs you have fed and choosing which pig to feed. As the game progresses you will have to try and remember which pigs hold a lot of chips and which holds a few, and which ones you have fed. There are only 18 spaces between the barn door and winning, so the game may not last long enough for you to apply strategy.

Try this:
  • Forget the game, just have fun with the pigs. Hold the pig in the non-dominant hand and count as you drop the feed chips in with the dominant hand. How many will the pig hold before it pops?
  • Place several feed chips at the base of the player's fingers and ask him to push them out to the fingertips, one at a time, and feed the pig.
  • Place the feed chips flat on the table top. After throwing the number die, pick up the chips, one at a time, and squirrel them into the hand. Then push them one at a time to the fingertips to feed the pigs.
  • Allow the player to hold the pig in the hand while feeding if he does not have the skills to place the small feed chip into the hole while the pig is freestanding. Remember not to hold the pig in such a way that you will block the belly from dropping out the bottom if he is fed too much.
  • Cup the hand before throwing the dice. If this is difficult, place a small ball in the players hand to form the cup. Remove the ball and add the dice.
  • Recite "This little piggy..." while the player is shaking the dice to keep the palm cupped in that position a little longer.
  • Model and encourage a well rounded web space as the individual feeds each chip into the pig.
  • Work on visual discrimination, visual memory, eye-hand coordination, coordinated use of both hands, manual dexterity, in-hand manipulation, palmar arch development, separation of two sides of the hand, executive functioning skills, socialization skills, process skills, play and leisure exploration and participation
In the box: Barnyard game board, five pigs with 5 snap on bellies, 4 pawns, 80 feeding chips (20 for each color pawn), number die, color die

If you are interested in purchasing this game, you will need to go to the SimplyFun web site by clicking the link below (or check ebay).