Thinking Outside of the Toy Box: 4 Children’s Gizmos That Inspired Scientific Breakthroughs:
Advances in science and technology can launch from unassuming springboards. In 1609 Galileo tweaked a toylike spyglass, pointed it at the moon and Jupiter (not the neighbors), and astronomy took a quantum leap. About 150 years later, Benjamin Franklin reportedly used a kite to experiment with one of the earliest-known electrical capacitors. Continuing that tradition, these researchers prove toys inspire more than child’s play.
“The laboratory is basically a glorified playroom,” says Jeremy Levy, physics professor at the University of Pittsburgh. “When we do experiments, it is a highly advanced form of play…we’re exploring new things.”
The researchers were inspired by and used toys for developing new technologies:
Play researchers talk about an interconnection of play and cognitive flexibility (almost always as related to the neurological development of children). A couple thoughts here: