Edushape Learning & Development Toys
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School Grade
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Learning & Development Focus
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Price is $16.99, Regular price was $20.49, You save 17%
Unit of measure 100/Box Price per unit $0.17/File Folder
Delivery by Wed, Apr 23
1-hr pickup
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7% off of Staples QuickStrip EasyClose Self Seal Security Tinted #10 Business Envelopes, 4 1/8" x 9 1/2", White, 500/Box (ST50312-CC)
Price is $25.99, Regular price was $27.99, You save 7%
Unit of measure 500/Box Price per unit $0.05/Envelope
Delivery by Wed, Apr 23
1-hr pickup
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Edushape designs top-quality teaching resources for babies and toddlers and those that support students with various developmental abilities. Their toys are both safe and durable, making them equally ideal for special education environments and classrooms. Their products improve basic verbal and physical skills so that homes and schoolrooms are both productive and fun for little ones who are just learning the basics as well as older children who face various physical and emotional challenges. The company focuses on toys for newborns to 5-year-olds, making early childhood development joyful, safe and instructive. Add new Edushape toys to your children's school supplies list.
Teach Basic Motor Skills with Edushape
Daycares and occupational therapy facilities need tools and learning games to help infants and developmentally challenged children to increase strength, muscle awareness and coordination. Gross motor skill toys get the arms, legs, tummy and back ready for sitting, crawling and walking. Interlocking puzzle mats create a soft, textured surface for playing and rolling around, and tiles with numbers and images provide subtle challenges during playtime. Textured bricks are oversized, so they're easy to grip and assemble in creative and unique shapes. Rattles and teething toys are safe for newborns who must have something to chew on when those brand-new teeth are coming in.
Special Education Tools for Teachers and Therapists
Some special needs students require safe environments to learn about appropriate and rational responses to stimuli. Both occupational therapists and special education teachers have to keep toys and tools on hand that are soothing and stimulating. Round balls with nubby surfaces help tiny hands keep a sturdy grip. Textured balls introduce sensory awareness in a structured and soothing way to children with sensory processing disorders.
Blocks Build Hand-Eye Coordination
Toddlers with tiny hands love soft wood and plastic blocks when creating structures during playtime. Pyramid-shaped nubs on the surfaces provide a secure grip for smaller fingers. Zigzag, right-angle and T-shaped blocks help special needs children conceptualize special relations and math skills. Tangram sets fit neatly into a carry-on or backpack to keep little imaginations busy anywhere. Large tangrams are ideal for younger toddlers who require the safety of oversize foam pieces. Create shapes and activities with kids of all abilities with giant blocks.
Music and Noisemaking Toys for All Kids
Distract teething babies with newborn-safe rattles. Animal shakers make a variety of sounds, and shakers with bells turn the living room floor into an instant music studio. Children can pound away safely and confidently for hours on sturdy baby-safe bongos, while slightly older kids can start experimenting with xylophones and plastic drums. Colorful slide flutes create amusing and entertaining sounds in bold, colorful shapes. Transparent rubber balls contain smaller balls and are safe to throw around inside the house or school, and they help babies as young as 6 months improve their listening skills. Electronic teaching aids become more engaging for children as they grow, with textured exteriors safe for babies and colored buttons that teach them to make melodies as their imaginations become more sophisticated. Foster rhythmic and musical skills early with tiny instruments that have easy-grip handles.
Teach Basic Motor Skills with Edushape
Daycares and occupational therapy facilities need tools and learning games to help infants and developmentally challenged children to increase strength, muscle awareness and coordination. Gross motor skill toys get the arms, legs, tummy and back ready for sitting, crawling and walking. Interlocking puzzle mats create a soft, textured surface for playing and rolling around, and tiles with numbers and images provide subtle challenges during playtime. Textured bricks are oversized, so they're easy to grip and assemble in creative and unique shapes. Rattles and teething toys are safe for newborns who must have something to chew on when those brand-new teeth are coming in.
Special Education Tools for Teachers and Therapists
Some special needs students require safe environments to learn about appropriate and rational responses to stimuli. Both occupational therapists and special education teachers have to keep toys and tools on hand that are soothing and stimulating. Round balls with nubby surfaces help tiny hands keep a sturdy grip. Textured balls introduce sensory awareness in a structured and soothing way to children with sensory processing disorders.
Blocks Build Hand-Eye Coordination
Toddlers with tiny hands love soft wood and plastic blocks when creating structures during playtime. Pyramid-shaped nubs on the surfaces provide a secure grip for smaller fingers. Zigzag, right-angle and T-shaped blocks help special needs children conceptualize special relations and math skills. Tangram sets fit neatly into a carry-on or backpack to keep little imaginations busy anywhere. Large tangrams are ideal for younger toddlers who require the safety of oversize foam pieces. Create shapes and activities with kids of all abilities with giant blocks.
Music and Noisemaking Toys for All Kids
Distract teething babies with newborn-safe rattles. Animal shakers make a variety of sounds, and shakers with bells turn the living room floor into an instant music studio. Children can pound away safely and confidently for hours on sturdy baby-safe bongos, while slightly older kids can start experimenting with xylophones and plastic drums. Colorful slide flutes create amusing and entertaining sounds in bold, colorful shapes. Transparent rubber balls contain smaller balls and are safe to throw around inside the house or school, and they help babies as young as 6 months improve their listening skills. Electronic teaching aids become more engaging for children as they grow, with textured exteriors safe for babies and colored buttons that teach them to make melodies as their imaginations become more sophisticated. Foster rhythmic and musical skills early with tiny instruments that have easy-grip handles.