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Watering
Your Young Child's Mind |
by:
Emma
Rath |
Mary,
Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With silver bells and cockle shells
And pretty maids all in a row.
It's an everyday nursery rhyme, it's simple
to sing with your small child, and apparently
this nursery rhyme about a little child
watering her garden is watering your little
child's mind!
Early childhood educators have identified
pre-reading skills that are necessary for
the learning of reading and the mastery
of language. They include phonological awareness,
or the awareness of speech sounds and rhyme
similarities, vocabulary or knowing lots
of words, and the more a child loves the
enjoyment and pleasure of using language,
the more success they will have in reading
and writing and academic studies. Nursery
rhymes, with their words of imagery, rhymes
and rhythm that children find so fun, have
all these qualities!
Let's look at other ways that you are probably
already simply, instinctively and effectively
watering your child's mind, and what the
researchers are now saying about it.
Let's look at songs and music, activities
that lots of caregivers instinctively share
with their children. The National Network
for Child Care at http://www.nncc.org/Series/good.time.music.html
explains why songs, action songs, music
and rhythm are important for children. They
allow children to express their emotions,
channel their energy creatively, gain confidence
in themselves as they coordinate their minds
and their bodies together, learn new words
and ideas, and learn about themselves as
they explore what they like, what they like
when and what they can do. Learning these
physical and emotional controls, ways of
expression and self-knowledge are necessary
for a happy life now in childhood and in
their future adulthood. This is the real
reason why we let our toddlers take out
the pots, pans and wooden spoons and bang
them, making a terrible ruckus.
How about even simpler, even more unassuming
activities, such as having fun blowing a
dandelion's seeds into the air. The child
development psychologists Linda Acredolo
and Susan Goodwyn in their book "Baby Minds:
Brain-Building Games Your Baby Will Love"
explain that such a simple yet fun and stimulating
activity will stimulate your baby's brain
development. The practical conclusion that
these researchers draw from the latest research
is that "If your baby is not having fun,
it's probably not worth doing".
Thus, the conclusion we can draw is "If
your small child is having fun, then it's
probably stimulating your child's physical
and mental development". We already instinctively
knew that, and so it's wonderful to have
researchers and experts confirming and encouraging
this. Whenever my toddler pulls the toilet
paper still on its roll and runs around
the house redecorating it in toilet paper,
I just tell myself that this is a fantastic
activity for his brain, body and creative
imagination.
Actually, small children are programmed
to learn and to engage in activities that
will develop their minds and bodies. It
probably has not escaped your attention
that kids will naturally invent a fun and
interesting game (fun and interesting to
the child) out of absolutely anything. The
brain plasticity scientist Lise Eliot explains
in "What's Going On In There? How the Brain
and Mind Develop in the First Five Years
of Life" that there are way too many connections
in the brain and communications with the
rest of the body - billions of neurons and
a quadrillion synapses at last count - for
it to be preprogrammed in genetic DNA material.
Thus, babies and children are programmed
to try things out and to repetitively practise
them for days and weeks and months, so that
brain circuitry will sprout in the first
place and then solidify to become permanent.
Actually, this is my own layperson's description.
Lise Eliot refers to it as neurogenesis,
synaptogenesis and myelination. It's the
reason why babies kick in the womb, so that
the connection between the leg-kicking part
of the brain and the actual leg can be developed.
It's the reason why my newly mobile son
never tires of playing with the toilet brush
in the toilet bowl, developing and practising
his hand-eye coordination and his understanding
of the physical world, in this visual, audio
and tactile activity of splashing water.
We all know that cuddling our babies and
children is important for their emotional
and psychological development. Lise Eliot
gives examples in the chapter "The Importance
of Touch" of how touch and physical contact
increases physical and brain development.
Studies show that premature babies that
receive cuddling and massages thrive measurably
more and do better on visual baby tests.
Children with various medical problems had
better clinical outcomes after receiving
massage therapy. Perhaps you have seen the
famous "Rescuing Hug" (such as at http://www.daurelia.com/spirit/rescue.htm
or http://www.snopes.com/glurge/hug.htm),
where the physical touch of her baby twin
sister was responsible for the very survival
of a premature baby.
Let's talk about talking. The very experienced
authority on early childhood development
Dr Burton White gives the following advice.
Allow your newly mobile child to explore
your home. He'll bring things back to show
you and will have a need to be fulfilled
when doing that. Stop, quickly look and
see what that need is, and then respond
to the need. Dr Burton White says that the
secret to teaching language, whether it
be verbal language or sign language, is
to respond to that need with language and
play on that need. Dr White is the author
of "First Three Years of Life" and "Raising
a Happy Unspoiled Child", and you can see
and hear him giving this advice in Joseph
Garcia's "Sign with your Baby" video. And
in my house, you can see me having a conversation
with a toddler about a wet toilet brush
he has just brought me.
How to increase your child's mathematics
ability? Studies have shown that studying
music statistically significantly increases
children's math skills and spatial-temporal
reasoning abilities. The question now is
why. A "Today's Parent" article at http://www.todaysparent.com/education/general/article.jsp?content=20030903_124111_1696&page=1
cites a brain-imaging "Mozart Effect" type
of study that showed that the same parts
of the brain were active when listening
to Mozart as when doing puzzles and playing
chess, suggesting that music is like warm-up
exercises for the brain. Another study cited
in that article goes much further, suggesting
that music is more than just a cultural
artifact; that our brains are actually structured
for music, just like our brains are structured
for speech and walking. Brain patterns were
mapped and assigned musical tones to mark
changes in neural activity. When played
back, instead of sounding like a random
sequence of notes, it almost sounded like
a melody of a recognizable style of music!
"No!" - We hear it from those terrible-twos
toddlers. Well, Lise Eliot in "What's Going
On In There?" presents a study about the
effects of parents saying "No", "Don't"
and "Stop it" on the development of their
children. Research established that children
that heard a larger proportion of this type
of negative feedback had poorer language
skills than children whose parents kept
their negative responses to a minimum and
instead gave encouraging, positive and dialog-inducing
responses. The online games at www.KiddiesGames.com
provide a fun model of this positive pattern
of interaction. When the child playing a
game gets something right, the friendly
child character on the screen says "That's
right!" or congratulates the player. When
the child playing a game clicks on the wrong
thing, the upbeat child on the screen doesn't
actually say "No" or "Wrong". Instead, it
explains in the same positive tone what
the child playing just did and what another
possible (and correct) answer could have
been. The feedback is accurate and positively
and cheeringly encouraging. As far as I
know, there have been no studies done on
the effects that toddlers saying "No" to
their parents have on those parents...
Can you remember all this information next
time you're interacting with your small
child? Let's summarize it all like the current
Canadian CBS Television campaign slogan
- "1) Comfort, 2) play with and 3) teach
your child", in that order. This is how
you water your child's mind, and you're
probably already doing it. So follow your
instinct, let your child lead the way to
play, go with the flow and enjoy playing
with your small child. While the results
of recent studies may be news to you, the
recommended actions are just a reminder!
About the author:
The author, Emma Rath, is the creator of
free, fun, educational online computer games
for babies and preschoolers at http://www.KiddiesGames.comThese
games encourage caregivers to cuddle their
children on their lap while participating
in games of open-ended exploration that
never say "No", except for one fun game
whose serious mission is to undo the instinctive
child behavior of hiding in the case of
a house fire.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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