Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Share Early Literacy Time to Increase Needed Learning Skills

Parents need to understand, the neural pathways needed for literacy and lifelong learning skills are ideally created by positive experiences from active-infant stage through early pre-K stage. This is a narrow four-year period before kindergarten. Later remedial literacy efforts are difficult because the needed neural network is not present in the child's brain.

This underscores the point that education starts in the home. Even parents who do not consider themselves to be qualified to be their child's first teacher can learn basic picture-book-reading techniques in time . Years of early reading experience before kindergarten make for reading and school readiness.

Dana Foundation researched Neuroeducation: Learning, Arts and the Brain (120 pages), an intersection of cognitive neuroscience, the arts and learning. http://bit.ly/4ovu3r (1.47MB HTML). This study supports early picture book reading and other arts exposure to develop essential neural pathways for lifelong learning skills. Mariale Hardiman, Janet Eilber, Susan Magsamery, Guy McKhann all looked into the effects of early arts education on aspects of cognition and learning.

The children without earlier lap reading time with parents, have been the study at least one Kindergarten remedial project. A kindly visiting adult reader can help establish some social skills and learning skills in children who have been acting out in frustration. The premise of this study was the children were acting out because they never had the nurture relating to positive learning "reading can be fun".

These children had felt left out of the fun that other children seemed to have with books, and assumed the school experience was hostile for them. This project did help smooth out the frustration. Though they may never catch up with the 50% of agemates with the earlier fun/reading start, they felt better about themselves. Someone was finally showing them what they were missing. This project is exceptionally enlightened and not the norm across the board.

This second window of remedial adult/child reading interaction is closed by age 8 years. If an at-risk child does not experience some kind of intervention by then, the child remains 2 years behind agemates throughout school and is 3 to 4 times more likely to drop out of high school before graduation. In the vernacular, they feel like "the cards are stacked against them".

The social fallout of the currently escalating drop out rate is increased crime, increased unemployment rates, increased population in prisons, increased public expenses, increased need for taxes, decreased national productivity and quality of life. For these reasons economists are saying the best investment anyone can make to strengthen our society is in early literacy, arts and health intervention in ages birth through age 5 years.

In one such program currently done in Minnesota, home visitors coach parents on effective early literacy techniques and health issues for the first 3 years. Then for parents who co-operated with that phase, funding is made available sufficient to provide highest possible pre-kindergarten education. This program creates children with kindergarten readiness equal to the most privileged child.

There are several online mom groups who encourage the value of moms work loving and raising their children and create mom interest groups . Picture book reading and family charity to disadvantaged families are two topics of these groups. We salute www.themotherhood.com and www.extraordinarymommy.com.

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