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How to keep your kids busy while you work from home

How to keep your kids busy while you work from home

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Some ideas from the parents on our staff

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Illustration by Samar Haddad / The Verge | Photography by Halfpoint Images / Getty Images

Working from home can be a balancing act between your business and personal life — especially if you’ve got kids. If your children are toddlers, then you must depend on partners, family, or childcare providers to keep them away from your Zoom sessions. If they are school age, you may have some time for yourself and your job during school hours — until the school day is done.

Below are some toys, videos, and ideas that some of our staffers with kids have come up with to help keep things a little saner while you’re finishing up your work day.

Keep the kids busy

Marbrasse Acrylic Pen Holder

Marbrasse Acrylic Pen Holder
Marbrasse Acrylic Pen Holder.
Image: Marbrasse

Esther Cohen, associate director of audience development for The Verge, says, “I got one of these rotating desk organizer things and filled it up with crayons, markers, colored pencils, scissors, glue, etc. I also got two trays, one for white paper / construction paper and one to put things in once completed. I stuck it all on the empty dining room table. The kids would come home, shower, and — without me nudging them — gravitate toward it because it is laid out for them and so easy. That usually keeps them busy for an hour.” 

$31

This clear plastic organizer rotates 360 degrees and can hold pens, pencils, crayons, and all sorts of other stuff.


Toniebox

For ages three and up

Toniebox
Toniebox.
Image: Tonies

Emma Merlis, senior director of newsroom analytics for Vox Media, has been thinking about investing in a Toniebox. This display-free audio player will tell stories and sing songs to your kids when they place one of dozens of different figures — cartoon characters, fairy-tale princesses, favorite protagonists from books — on top of the child-sized speaker. It’s a good idea for keeping your child busy without also keeping them glued to a screen.  

Toniebox

$10020% off
$80

A screenless box that, with the help of figurines, tells stories, sings songs, and entertains the preschool set.


Osmo 

For ages four to 10

Osmo
Osmo.
Image: Tangible Play

Jory Ruscio, who was an engineering manager at Vox and is now senior data platform engineer at Better, said, “We’re a big fan of Osmo games for preschool-plus. Playing Osmo is a much-loved activity for my three kids. The physical pieces allow for a much more interactive and tactile experience. The games are entertaining and educational. From exploring physics and coding to making pizzas and calculating change, the kids are occupied for hours.

$66

This innovative device lets you put your tablet in the base so that your kids can combine innovative learning games with physical game pieces.


On-screen education and entertainment

ABCmouse Early Learning Academy

For ages two to eight

ABCmouse.com Early Learning Academy
ABCmouse.com Early Learning Academy.
Image: Age of Learning

Abigail Aronofsky, who is the executive director of corporate marketing at Vox Media, reported two years ago that they “got on board the ABCmouse train” for their five-year-old, and it was surprisingly great. “The graphics are very 2002, but it kept her entertained for about an hour a day.” 

$45

A library of activities for children ages two through eight that works through an annual subscription.


Bluey

For preschool-aged children and up

Bluey
Bluey.
Image: BBC Studios & ABC

When one parent at Vox Media lauded the Disney Plus show Bluey, several others chimed in to offer their plaudits. This show is about a family of dogs who live in Australia: a mother, a father, a four-year-old, and a six-year-old. According to Nathan Edwards, senior reviews editor at The Verge, one reason the show is so popular is that kids love it and it’s fun for parents as well. “Bluey is currently our No. 1 solution,” adds Christopher Grant, group publisher of The Verge and Polygon. “Bless you, Bluey.”


Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood

For preschoolers

Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood
Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood.
Image: PBS

Another parental favorite (suggested by Nikolas Wise, Vox Media engineering manager) is Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, a modern offshoot of the venerable Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. The animated series centers around Daniel Tiger, who lives in the Neighborhood of Make Believe along with his parents, his friends, and their parents and uses Strategy Songs — little ditties that explore various feelings and experiences — to help children learn and develop.


Fire HD 8 Kids Pro

For ages six through 12

Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro
Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro.
Image: Amazon

Dan Seifert, deputy editor of reviews for The Verge, reports, “On paper, there are a lot of things that make the Kids Edition Fire tablets attractive to parents. They all come with a bulky rubber case that makes it easy to hold and hard to break. Should your kid break it, Amazon provides two years of worry-free protection. And each Kids Edition tablet comes with a subscription to Amazon’s Kids Plus service, which lets parents control what content is available on it and set time limits for how long kids can use the tablet each day.”

“In practice, the tablets are objectively terrible. The interface is confusing, the performance is slow and laggy, and the battery life leaves a lot to be desired. Those things all matter to me, a professional product reviewer, but for my children, the Fire tablets we got them a couple of holidays back are their favorite toys. They use them to play games, watch SpongeBob SquarePants, and maybe occasionally read a book.”

$140

Amazon’s Fire tablet created specifically for kids ages six through 12.


For the adults

Rug pads to keep the neighbors happy

RugpadUSA Protective Cushioning Rug Pad
RugpadUSA Protective Cushioning Rug Pad.
Image: RugpadUSA

Amelia Holowaty Krales, senior photo editor at The Verge, suggested that (at least for her) it might be a good idea to order “the thickest rug pads available so my downstairs neighbors don’t murder me because the children are doing laps.” I have a good friend who is in just that position, and while he loves the kids upstairs, he does sometimes wish they’d run their laps a little later in the morning.

$57

Thick rug pads that protect floors from damage and muffle the sound of small feet. (Price cited is for an 8 x 10-foot, half-inch-thick pad; other sizes are available.)


Time management tools

The overflow pile includes review devices, sensors, and an Echo Show 8.
Time management tools — software or notebooks — can help control work and home chaos.
Photo by Dan Seifert / The Verge

Brooke Lipner, VP of client services at Vox Media, would very much appreciate “calendar management to handle everything life throws at you — school stuff, work stuff, sports stuff, family stuff, sleep stuff.” Unfortunately, while no one organizer works for everyone, we can at least provide some help with The Verge’s favorite tools to stay organized.