What is a NogginStik?
What is a NogginStik?
The NogginStik® was designed to help parents, caregivers and early intervention therapists begin encouraging early milestones in infants. The NogginStik head lights up red, blue and green to stimulate a baby’s eyes and to encourage visual tracking.
How do you clean NogginStik?
How do I care for my NogginStik? We recommend using baby-safe wipes to clean your NogginStik. The NogginStik should not be immersed in water or placed in a dishwasher or sterilizing device – such exposures may permanently damage the product.
When can babies hold rattles?
Between 3 and 4 months, most infants can squeal with delight and laugh out loud. Babies will start to open and shut their fists, opening up new possibilities. They can hold a rattle placed in their hands. They’ll soon discover that they’re the one that made the rattle make noise!
What does the nogginstik do for a baby?
It’s an educational tool that will guide you through activities and interactions that will help encourage your baby’s milestones, beginning at birth! The NogginStik helps promote visual tracking, auditory orientation, grasping, reaching and language skills. (Ages 0+)
What does the nogginstik Light Up Rattle do?
The NogginStik Light Up Rattle encourages baby’s early milestones and guides parents & caregivers through activities and interactions that will help promote healthy brain development and bonding beginning day one.
How much does it cost to get Noggin for free?
Starting with a 7-day free trial, your $7.99/month subscription includes 1,000+ ad-free episodes of preschool favorites, a library of learning videos, new content weekly, multi-device access, and customer service seven days a week. Where can I access Noggin?
How old do kids have to be to play Noggin?
Noggin is designed with kids ages 2 to 6+ in mind. Our content is developed by educational experts and is crafted to meet kids wherever they are in their learning journey. With Noggin, kids can develop their skills in social and emotional learning, math, literacy, focus and problem-solving, physical development, and wellness.