Lauri Tall-Stacker Pegs & Pegboard Set

September 13, 2014 - Comment

Children will think they’re just having fun with this versatile teaching toy, but they’re actually building fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination as they fit the Tall-Stacker™ Pegs into the Lauri® crepe rubber pegboard. They will learn early math skills like counting, adding, and subtracting while working on their building projects. Playing with the colorful

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(as of April 20, 2020 2:15 am UTC - Details)

Children will think they’re just having fun with this versatile teaching toy, but they’re actually building fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination as they fit the Tall-Stacker™ Pegs into the Lauri® crepe rubber pegboard. They will learn early math skills like counting, adding, and subtracting while working on their building projects. Playing with the colorful pegs also helps children build useful sorting and matching skills as they make designs. Lauri crepe rubber is bright, durable, soft, latex-free and washable!This is a no-nonsense, down-to-earth pegboard set with big, colorful pegs that are ideally sized for small fingers but too big to swallow. Designed to build eye/hand coordination, fine-motor skills, math skills, and color recognition in 2-to-5-year-olds, the Tall-Stacker Pegs & Pegboard Set includes 25 colorful pegs, a crepe rubber pegboard, and suggested activities for parents to help get children started. –Chris Livesay

Product Features

  • Use your imagination to build colorful designs!
  • Place pegs in the 36-hole pegboard and build up and out!
  • Play & Learn: color sorting and matching, adding and subtracting, counting, fine motor skills
  • Perfect beginning construction set for little hands because it’s fun and educational; for ages 2 and up
  • Includes 25 Tall-Stacker Pegs, Lauri Crepe Rubber 8″ Pegboard, Activity Guide

Comments

Lori L. German "firefightermom" says:

Not just for two year olds 0

Mommy2twins says:

Educate a wide range of ages The 1st time my 19-month old son was introduced to this toy, he could insert the pegs into the holes with no problem (and he was sitting in the car seat). I strongly believe that parents should ignore the age recommendation and let the younger-than-2s try this toy out (pegs are too big to swallow, board is too thick to chew off). They can start by inserting the pegs, then stacking them (off or on the board). When they reach two, they can group by color, and later by pattern. The money is…

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