Parent guide
Wooden Structures
Help children move from closed magnetic boxes into open wooden building: walls, roofs, bridges, roads, fences, rooms, barns, shops, and story worlds.
The shift
A structure does not have to be a box.
Magnet tiles reward closed shapes. Wooden blocks teach balance, suggestion, space, and story. The parent job is to name the partial structure until the child can see it.
Name what is there.
"Two walls and a roof. That is a little house."
Start smaller.
Make one wall, one road, one bridge, one table, one gate.
Add a purpose.
"Who lives here? What crosses this bridge? What goes inside this fence?"
Keep it open.
Do not finish every side. The empty space is part of the play.
First lesson
Build beside them for ten quiet minutes.
Do not ask them to invent immediately. Build one tiny example, name it, then let them copy, alter, or ignore it.
The parent script
- Place two blocks upright: "These are posts."
- Lay one block across the top: "Now it is a bridge."
- Move a peg doll, animal, car, or acorn across it: "The traveler crosses."
- Add one road: "The road comes to the bridge."
- Stop before it is complete: "I wonder what else this place needs."
Build bank
Simple wooden structures to teach first.
Each one is intentionally small. Children who are used to magnet tiles need quick wins before they trust open-ended blocks.
Room
Pieces: 3 blocks
Make a U-shape. Say: "This is a room. The open side is the door."
Bridge
Pieces: 3 blocks
Two towers and a plank. Add a road, river, animal, or car.
House
Pieces: 3-4 blocks
Two walls and a roof are enough. Say: "The front is open so we can see inside."
Fence
Pieces: 4 blocks
Make a line or corner. Put animals, flowers, or a garden behind it.
Table
Pieces: 3 blocks
Two legs and a top. Add shells, beans, cups, or pretend food.
Road
Pieces: any number
A line of blocks is a road, path, riverbank, train track, or garden row.
Barn
Pieces: 4-6 blocks
Two sides, a back wall, and a roof. Leave the front open for animals.
Steps
Pieces: 3 blocks
Stack blocks like stairs. Let a peg doll climb to a bed, hill, porch, or castle.
Parent moves
What to say while they build.
Use fewer questions. Toddlers and young children often build longer when adults narrate simply instead of directing every decision.
Instead of "What are you making?"
Say: "I see a tall wall." "That looks like a road." "This space could be the door."
Instead of "Let's build a castle."
Say: "I'll make one tower." Then add one piece and wait.
Instead of fixing it
Say: "It fell. That tells us it needs a wider bottom." Then build the base bigger.
Instead of finishing it for them
Say: "This is enough for a barn. The animals can still go in."
Seven-day practice
One tiny build each day.
Keep it rhythmic. Repeat the same forms until they become part of the child's play vocabulary.