Posts Tagged formal education

How Early Childhood Education Can Shape a Child’s World

It is no secret that education is the key to a successful feature. Parents clearly know this which is why selecting the right school with excellent grades is so important.

A child’s first impression of schooling and education can and will shape your child’s view on whether or not they enjoy learning.

It is strange to think that your child, who is learning and showing you their achievements on a daily basis, is scared of learning, or rather failing at school.

First impressions really do last a lifetime. If in early childhood, your child has had undo pressure applied to their learning, or tasted the bitterness of failing – or being told that they have failed – this leaves lasting impression on their young minds.

So what can we do to ensure that our children have a positive experience within the education system?
Consider the type of education you are enlisting your child into. Some parents do not always realise that there is a choice when it comes to education. And to clarify, I am not talking private versus state.

In certain areas of Europe (notably Switzerland) young children do not begin school until the age of seven. This is two years later than most schooling systems. The reasoning behind this is that children learn through play, this giving them an additional two years to “play”.

The children, who start their education later, on average, exceed those who began aged five when tested at the beginning of secondary schooling.

Research has shown that this actually hurts children (especially boys) to hold a pen or pencil in the “correct” way when aged below seven.

There is no surprise then that in recent years boys have been underachieving in written based subjects. It hurt them to write when they were younger, and as teenagers they still associate this pain with writing. This then turns them off of English, which is the one subject that will help them unlock the others.

Schools that begin a “formal” education at the tender age of five have begun to address these issues however. Before writing they now do warm up exercises to help relieve cramp. This is a step in the right direction.

When going through homework or if you have some educational material to go through at home, ensure you do so in short bursts. The human brain struggles to concentrate on any one thing for longer than twenty minutes at a time – and this is adults.

Make sure you only use positive praising words when helping them with their understanding and have in place a reward system like stickers and stamps.

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Early Childhood Education

Early Childhood Education and Tracking Changes In Social and Emotional Maturation

Early childhood education is so important because it makes use of a child’s natural learning ability. This is the time when their brains are exploding with growth and responding to the millions of pieces of information that are coming their way. Everything that comes their way is a new thing to learn about and make sense of so you can see just how powerful this time is for making sure that children are given the opportunity to learn things which will be constructive and positive for them. The brain is working overtime at this stage to organise, process and make sense of whatever is surrounding it. The richer and more consciously planned those environments are the better their chance of learning really useful things about everything. There are so many new links to make between things and so much neural activity needed to make connections and form new networks that a child’s brain never stops while they are awake – and probably not while they are asleep either!

When the young child enters nursery and their more formal education begins – albeit in a far more unstructured, playful and fun way than they will have at ‘big’ school – they come with a certain amount of social and personal skills but nursery will be the place where they really start to hone these two skills in particular. Up to that point they have been interacting with a limited number of people like family and a few children of the same age but now they find themselves in a larger group and they have to transfer the skills they have learnt to this new situation. Friendship making and maintaining skills are amongst the most important they will learn for the rest of their lives so nurseries are strongly advised to help children experience and succeed in this friendship area as a big priority The child’s brain is still soaking up information at a great rate at this stage in their lives and they will quickly learn how to manage well if they are supported well in this area. Coaching, encouragement and plenty of pleasant opportunities to find out what to do are what will make the biggest difference to them. That, and you modelling good friendship skills with other adults. They will copy what they see. All of this will help them refine their socialising skills, learn to share, develop their sense of humour and discover great coping strategies.

So where does tracking their changes come in? Having some kind of system in the nursery to make notes on a child’s social and personal strengths is a very useful start. Children come in with very different temperaments and very different backgrounds – thus their ability to form friendships and manage their own emotional states will vary enormously. They more you tune into the areas where particular children shine and then use them as models for the others in the group to copy the better. It is even easier for them to copy a peer than to copy you so take advantage of the social ‘stars’ and intra-personally strong children who do manage their emotions well. If you have made preliminary notes on each child you can start to arrange games and teams/group activities so that children who are strong in these areas are teamed with children who are less strong. You can select certain non-competitive games to play which foster friendship making and make these a focus for the first two terms at least. In the third term you can revisit your initial notes and see just how many ways the children have matured socially and emotionally.

There are many checklists of social and emotional behaviours available in books on early childhood development and a special report on these behaviours has been compiled by the team at Assess Baseline and Track. Any of these would give you a starting point for your early notes which will then act as your baseline measure from which you will track progress.

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