Playful Living: Simple Strategies for Setting Up a Productive Playtime in Your Living Room

We all want to help our little ones grow into solid, well-rounded adults ready to take on the world and everything life holds. But your little one’s mind doesn’t need formal instruction to get there just yet. She needs playtime.
Playtime is crucial for babies, toddlers, and young children to develop cognitively, socially, emotionally, and physically. However, finding the time and space for playtime can be challenging while juggling work, chores, and parenting. By making playtime a part of your family lifestyle, you are more likely to create room for productive playtimes.
The living room is often the heart of the home, and with a few simple strategies, you can turn it into a productive play space for your little one.
Why Is Playtime Important for Babies and Toddlers?
Playtime is critical for a baby or toddler’s development as it helps them to learn new things, explore their surroundings, and develop their cognitive, language, and motor skills. Playtime also helps babies and toddlers develop social skills, creativity, and imagination.
Playing does all of this by allowing little ones to explore but also synthesize what they’ve learned. In other words, your child makes sense of what he’s learned so far in life by playing. So, encouraging playtime is akin to encouraging research!
7 Strategies for Setting Up a Productive Playtime
Preparing a space in your home and schedule for a productive playtime will make room for what really matters: time together. Thoughtfully planning ahead of time will provide some structure, keep things safe, and foster learning.
Even better, planning ahead each week will help you stay one step ahead of your little one’s mood swings and developmental shifts in interest and ability. Whether “planning ahead” means swapping toys out, doing a sensory bin activity on a day with less busyness, or going outside on a sunny day, doing so can lift the stress off your shoulders and help you avoid resorting to screen time.
1. Choose the Right Toys
The first step in setting up a productive playtime in your living room is to choose the right toys. When it comes to selecting baby and toddler toys, less is often more. So, you need to choose toys that are age-appropriate and engaging but avoid toys that are too complicated or require a lot of setup time, as these can be frustrating. You can manage this a bit by investing in toys that suit multiple early development stages, like toys here at Moonkie.
2. Create a Play Area
Once you’ve chosen toys that will delight and engage your little explorer, it’s time to create a play area in your living room. This can be as straightforward as laying a blanket or play mat on the floor. Just ensure it’s away from potential hazards and health risks, like electrical outlets, sharp corners, hairy dog beds, and small toys from older siblings.
However, if you have the space and desire to create a dedicated play area, go for it! Providing a safe and sound environment that stimulates learning and exploring will ease your worries about your little explorer getting into all the wrong things.
3. Use Storage Bins
I know this one seems obvious, but putting off investing in some solid storage bins for your little ones’ play area will only drive you mad. Buying storage bins that are easy for little hands to access will corral those toys and set a visible limit to how many toys your family has.
An example that works for my family is the storage bin rule: if toys begin to overflow and can’t all be put away properly in storage bins, then it’s time to give some away and reorganize. Thanks to Christmas and birthdays, this happens every three months in my house, but it gives me a chance to pass on the toys they no longer play with as they grow while teaching my littles how to manage space and donate. It’s a hard rule to establish, but after a year, you may be surprised at how thoughtfully your little ones participate. Storage bins also make rotating toys trouble-free. Just put two or three away and rotate them out every few weeks. Watching your little one rediscover old favorites is fun and keeps the urge to buy new toys at bay.
4. Incorporate Learning Activities
Playtime is a superb time to incorporate learning opportunities that suit your little learner’s age and development level.
Think things like sensory mats, balls, blocks, and teethers for three to six-month-olds, and tasting a variety of baby-safe foods, shape sorters, stacking rings, simple activity boards, and sensory books for six to twelve-month-olds. For toddlers, sensory bins, musical instrument toys, activity tables, coloring, playdough, toddler books, and wooden puzzles are dandy options.
Setting activities like this up gives your little learner opportunities to grow in a loosely structured way. These activities and others like them can help build your child’s problem-solving skills, creativity, social skills, and imagination. You can heighten these benefits by playing with your little one!
5. Set a Routine
Setting a routine for playtime can help your little one develop a sense of structure and routine. Choose a time of day that works best for your family, and try to stick to it as much as possible. For example, a few common timing options are right after breakfast, before lunch, or after an afternoon nap.
It’s not going to be perfect, but intentionally making time in your family’s schedule for your wee one to play will help you prioritize her development and build a sense of being loved and respected in her over time. Of course, she won’t pick up on everything you do now to ensure she has time and space to learn, but she will one day.
The desire to play with other kids will grow along with your little one’s ability to communicate, empathize, problem-solve, compromise, and share. You can evolve playtime with your child’s socialization by meeting with friends once or twice a week or embarking on a field trip of some kind with friends or family members once a month.
6. Get Involved
By far, the most inspiring thing you can do for your little one’s playtime learning is to get involved. Parents are a young child’s world, so when they set aside what they are doing to play with them, it makes their day.
Young kids are always asking for or demanding things, and should you play with them, they will ask for more time from you. But time is what they need. Spending time with your little one gives assurance that you love her. And this honestly doesn’t go away as they become teenagers; they just ask in different ways.
7. Make It Fun
Remember that playtime should be fun! Don’t put too much pressure on yourself or your little one to accomplish specific goals during playtime. Instead, focus on the time together and watching your child learn and grow.
It’s one of the most amazing processes to behold in life. Though I haven’t made it to grandparent or great-grandparenthood yet, I hear from the wisest among us that this parenting time is by far the best and one of the quickest in life. Enjoy this time together; it’s worth it!