How Do Children Play with Toy Trains and for What Benefits? A Scoping Review

Author:

Hashmi Salim1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, London SE1 1Ul, UK

Abstract

Children play with different toys in different ways which may be associated with different developmental outcomes. While existing work has investigated different categories of toys, differences may also be present within specific toy categories. Therefore, understanding how specific toys promote play behaviours and their associated developmental outcomes has important implications for teachers, parents, caregivers, and researchers. To better understand how children play with toy trains, whether groups of children show a particular preference for toy trains and what (if any) associated benefits there are for playing with toy trains, 36 studies published in psychology and educational databases up to December 2022 were reviewed. A key finding emerged regarding the importance of the structured, realistic, and familiar nature of toy trains being important for facilitating pretend play as well as social collaboration behaviours during social play. Whilst findings in relation to gender-stereotyped preferences for playing with toy trains were mixed and no gender differences were found in research investigating play styles, neurodivergent children were found to have a preference for toy trains. These findings are important given that certain play styles, pretend play in particular, have been associated with benefits in children’s executive function, language, creativity, and social understanding.

Funder

Mattel UK Ltd.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology,Developmental and Educational Psychology

Reference81 articles.

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5. Hashmi, S. (2018). Seven-Year-Olds’ Imaginative Engagement with Play in Non-Virtual and Virtual Contexts. [Doctoral Dissertation, Cardiff University].

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