Quote Originally Posted by playfelt View Post
With that wide an age span you would do well to separate your room so that the mouthers and crawlers are limited only to the toys it is safe to do that with. No one wants to reach into a bin of duplo and find a soggy mouthed toy. The babies will knock over towers, move the parked cars and disrupt the imaginative play of the older kids. It isn't their fault but that is just what babies do. And it isn't fair to the older kids to always have to make allowances. If the big kids have an area sectioned off where they are free to use the big kid toys that babies aren't allowed to go is another idea.

Open ended is fine but you also need to have some designing elements to inspire the play. Scarves are just scarves but if you add music they dance. Blocks are just blocks but if you ad a few people figures the blocks become boats and houses and barns for animals. Some playfood in the kitchen, bin of small stuffed animals that can double as story telling figures. An assortment of plastic containers or boxes that can be stacked or nested. Mine love the pile of empty yogurt tubs.
Great idea; I have lots of little people & animals! Babies (or, in my case, 1 little one) into everything...that is my challenge. The older ones will be mid-activity & guaranteed my 18 month old DCG is pulling it apart or taking the things...I am constantly redirecting this child. Blocks, magnets, puzzle pieces are everywhere, because she picks one thing, wanders with it (doesn't even play with it) and throws it down. I now have most things with pieces up (I pull down an activity at a time for a child to play) because of this one child. So, I really don't see how I can possibly restrict access to this one very persistent child (who can really wail like a banchee may I add). Fortunately my team are excellent cleaner uppers, so it all gets picked up & reorganized at tidy time...so, I try to relax a little on everything everywhere.