Child Development - Child Care - Pre-School Education
Education begins at
birth and starts with the
mother
or
guardian. A baby
starts learning
even before it's born. Everything a baby sees, hears,
touches, tastes, smells and feels,
shapes the
development of that child. In order to maximize a
child's learning abilities, a
parent must be fully
involved in the
education process. It's very
important to know how humans
develop and what influences effect your
child's development, and that
human development continues throughout our entire lifetime.
Pregnancy and Nutrition
-
New Born Nutrition -
Breastfeeding -
Nutrition (food smart)
Early Development (birth) -
Parenting
Learning to Read -
Milestones
The Human
Brain -
Gifted -
Advanced Learners
Special Needs (disabilities)
Educational Toys -
Learning
Games
Child Development and Brain Development Films
Everyone should learn
Child Development and Child Psychology
and learn about the inner workings of a child’s
brain, which in turn will help you understand your own
Brain.
Especially knowing that the
prefrontal cortex, which controls
focus, planning, and efficient action, takes almost 20 years to
mature. Humans are
Altricial and have
a much longer childhood then any other
animal species.
Child Development knowledge
can also help people be prepared for interactions with children
and also teach people about some of the difficulties of
Parenting and
Teaching.
Altricial means that a new born baby is born in an undeveloped state
and requires care and feeding by the parents. New born babies are helpless
and are incapable of feeding themselves or moving around on their own and
need to be taken care of for several years until they are mature enough to
take care of themselves.
Precociality are new born species who are relatively mature and mobile
from the moment of birth or hatching.
Everyone Stands on the Shoulders of
Giants.
Childhood is the most critical time in every human’s life for
learning. The human brain is built and designed to learn and
built to be creative. So having learning strategies and
Inquiry Based Curriculum for conceptual understanding is
essential.
Infant or
Baby is a very young child from birth to 1
year who has not yet begun to walk or talk. Infant in law is someone too
young to have full legal responsibility.
Child is a human offspring of either sex of any age. An immature
childish person.
Independent Learning
-
Cognitive Science
It's what you teach, how you teach it, when you
teach it, and why you teach it?
There is a lot of material to
cover in Child Development so here are just a few things that
will be covered: Understanding Brain and Neurological
Mechanisms; Concepts of
Cause and Effect; Understanding Sensory Data;
Motor Skills;
Understanding and Analyzing Statistical
Patterns and Abstract Grammatical Patterns; Computations;
Forming Intuitive Theories of the Physical, Biological and Psychological Realms;
Object Permanence.
Theory of Mind;
Secondary Theory of Mind; Avoiding
Egocentric and
Amoral Behavior. Imagining the experiences of other people.
Appreciating the difference between
Reality and
Fantasy.
TV
and Media Dangers (media literacy)
Why we need to end the era of Orphanages (video and interactive text)
- The negative effects of
Institutions.
Development Definitions
-
Parenting
The most important thing that every human must learn is
How to Learn on your Own and how to teach
yourself. Continually learning is extremely important.
Milestones of Learning - Development Stages
Child Development Stages are milestones of child development.
Child Development Stages (PDF) -
Development Stages
(PDF)
Developmental Stage Theories divide child
development into distinct
Stages which are characterized by qualitative differences in
behavior.
Learning
in Stages -
Personal DevelopmentMilestone is a
significant event in your life or an action marking a significant
change or
stage in
development, or in
a
project.
Progress -
Goals.
Milestones
(PDF) -
Milestones (cdc) -
Grades -
Structure
Milestones Info-Graph (image) -
Milestones
Chart (image)
Critical Period states that if a child does not receive the
appropriate
stimulus
during this "critical period" to learn a given skill or trait, it may be
difficult and ultimately less successful later in life. Functions that are
indispensable to an organism's survival, such as vision, are particularly
likely to develop during critical periods.
Critical Period Hypothesis states that the first few years of life is
the crucial time in which an individual can acquire a first
language if presented with adequate stimuli.
If language input does not occur until after this time, the individual
will find it more difficult to achieve a full command of
language—especially
grammatical systems.
Imprinting in psychology is any kind of
phase-sensitive learning
(learning occurring at a particular age or a particular life stage) that
is rapid and apparently independent of the consequences of behavior. Young
children often acquire several of their behavioral characteristics from
their parents early in life.
Being a good example.
Behavioral Cusp is a special type of
behavior change that provides the
learner with opportunities to access new reinforcers, new contingencies,
new environments, new related behaviors (generativeness) and competition
with archaic or problem behaviors. It affects the people around the
learner, and these people agree to the behavior change and support its
development after the intervention is removed. The concept has far
reaching implications for every individual, and for the field of
developmental psychology, because it provides a behavioral alternative to
the concept of maturation and change due to the simple passage of time,
such as developmental milestones. The cusp is a behavior change that
presents special features when compared to other behavior changes.
0–1 months: Reflex schema stage – Babies
learn how the body can move and work. Vision is blurred and attention
spans remain short through infancy. They are not particularly aware of
objects to know they have disappeared from sight. However, babies as young
as seven minutes old prefer to look at faces. The three primary
achievements of this stage are: sucking, visual tracking, and hand
closure.
1–4 months: Primary circular
reactions – Babies notice objects and start following their movements.
They continue to look where an object was, but for only a few moments.
They 'discover' their eyes, arms, hands and feet in the course of acting
on objects. This stage is marked by responses to familiar images and
sounds (including parent's face) and anticipatory responses to familiar
events (such as opening the mouth for a spoon). The infant's actions
become less reflexive and intentionality emerges.
4–8 months: Secondary circular reactions –
Babies will reach for an object that is partially hidden, indicating
knowledge that the whole object is still there. If an object is completely
hidden, however, the baby makes no attempt to retrieve it. The infant
learns to coordinate vision and comprehension. Actions are intentional,
but the child tends to repeat similar actions on the same object. Novel
behaviors are not yet imitated.
8–12 months:
Coordination of secondary circular reactions – This is deemed the most
important for the cognitive development of the child. At this stage the
child understands causality and is goal-directed. The very earliest
understanding of object permanence emerges, as the child is now able to
retrieve an object when its concealment is observed. This stage is
associated with the classic A-not-B error. After successfully retrieving a
hidden object at one location (A), the child fails to retrieve it at a
second location (B).
12–18 months:
Tertiary circular reaction – The child gains means-end knowledge and is
able to solve new problems. The child is now able to retrieve an object
when it is hidden several times within their view, but cannot locate it
when it is outside their perceptual field.
18–24 months: Invention of new means through mental combination –
The child fully understands object permanence. They will not fall for
A-not-B errors. Also, a baby is able to understand the concept of items
that are hidden in containers. If a toy is hidden in a matchbox then the
matchbox put under a pillow and then, without the child seeing, the toy is
slipped out of the matchbox and the matchbox then given to the child, the
child will look under the pillow upon discovery that it is not in the
matchbox. The child is able to develop a mental image, hold it in mind,
and manipulate it to solve problems, including object permanence problems
that are not based solely on perception. The child can now reason about
where the object may be when invisible displacement occurs.
Speech and Language.
Object Permanence is the understanding that objects continue to exist
even when they cannot be seen, heard, touched, smelled or sensed in any
way. Infant studies suggest that much younger infants like 3-month-olds
can have a clear sense that objects exist even when out of sight.
Ten Percent Of U.S.
High School Students Graduating Without Basic Object Permanence Skills
(youtube)
Ten-week-old babies can learn from practicing walking months before they
begin walking themselves say researchers. They gave the infants
experience at “
reflex
walking” which is a primitive instinct in babies which disappears
around 12 weeks of age. When held by an adult at a slightly forward angle,
and with the soles of their feet touching a flat surface, the infants will
reflexively walk by placing one foot in front of the other. Psychologists
at Lancaster University gave this “reflex walking” experience to one half
of a group of 10 week old infants, who took an average of 23 steps in 3
minutes. The other half of the group did not share in the experience of walking.
Some research suggests a child's moral self
starts to develop around age three. These early years of
socialization may be the underpinnings of
moral development in later
childhood. Proponents of this theory suggest that children whose view of
self is "good and moral" tend to have a developmental trajectory toward
pro-social behavior and few
signs of anti-social behavior. In one child developmental study,
researchers examined two key dimensions of early
conscience –
internalization of rules of conduct and empathic affects to others – as
factors that may predict future social, adaptive and competent behavior.
Children's internalization of each parent's rules and empathy toward each
parent's simulated distress were observed at 25, 38 and 52 months. Parents
and teachers rated their adaptive, competent, pro-social behavior and
anti-social behavior at 80 months. The researchers found that first, both
the history of the child's early
internalization of
parental rules and the history of their empathy predicted the children's
competent and adaptive functioning at 80 months, as rated by parents and
teachers. Second, children with stronger histories of internalization of
parental rules from 25 to 52 months perceived themselves as more moral at
67 months. Third, the children that showed stronger internalization from
25 to 52 months came to see themselves as more moral and "good". These
self-perceptions, in turn, predicted the way parents and teachers would
rate their competent and adaptive functioning at 80 months.
Passive Learning Vulnerabilities.
Family Rules work well when everyone
knows the
rules and understands why the rules are important. By doing
this, children will be less likely to get mixed messages about what is
okay and what is not okay, and thus be more likely to follow the rules.
Family rules help children understand what behaviors are okay and not
okay. As children grow, they will be in places where the rules may not be
so obvious and there may be rules that they have not yet learned. So
following rules at home can help children learn how to follow rules in
other places. It's normal for children to break rules and test their
limits. So consistent follow through is a must. Explaining the
consequences when rules are broken will help your child to have a clear
understanding about the importance of certain rules. Remember, young kids
sometimes break rules because they simply forget. And not all broken rules
occur because kids are testing their limits. So learning why the rules
were ignored must be discussed. Try not to
punish a child
indiscriminately or in a random manner that does not show
good judgment or
care.
Praise vs.
Punishment -
Interpersonal intelligence (people smart)
Potty Training for both boys and girls
Piaget's theory of Cognitive Development
(wiki)
Developmental Stage Theories (wiki)
First we
learn to walk and then we learn to talk. Now its time to learn how to
think and learn how to do.
Babies understand counting years earlier than believed.
The Foundation for Child Development
Society for Research in
Child Development
12 Principles of Child Development and Learning that Inform Practice.
Child Development Info
Evaluations and Screenings (PDF)
Child Development Documentaries (films)
Child Development refers to the biological,
psychological and
emotional changes that occur in human beings between
birth and the end of adolescence, as the individual
Progresses from
Dependency to increasing
Autonomy.
Human Development Biology is the process of growing
to
Maturity. In biological terms, this entails growth from a one-celled
zygote to an adult human being.
Neoteny
is when the physiological (or somatic) development of an organism
(typically an animal) is slowed or delayed.
Developmental Psychology is the scientific study of
how and why human beings
change over the course of their life.
Developmental Psychology Categories (wiki)
Developmental Psychopathology is the study of the
development of psychological disorders, such as psychopathy, autism,
schizophrenia and depression, with a life course perspective. Best
understood as normal development gone awry.
Child Psychopathology refers to the scientific study
of
mental disorders in children
and adolescents.
Developmental Biology is the study of the process by
which animals and plants grow and develop, and is synonymous with
ontogeny,
which is the origination and development of an organism, usually from the
time of fertilization of the egg to the organism's mature form.
Brain
Development Knowledge
Zero to Three
Newborns and Toddlers Resources
Temple University
Infant & Child Laboratory
Baby Centre
Books on Child Development
Child Birth
(birth and reproduction)
Whole Child (PBS)
Nursery is a bedroom within a house or other dwelling set aside for an
infant or toddler. A typical nursery would contain a crib (or similar type
of bed), a table or platform for the purpose of changing diapers (also
known as a changing table), as well as various items required for the care
of the child (such as baby powder and medicine). A nursery is generally
designated for the smallest bedroom in the house, as a baby requires very
little space until at least walking age; the premise being that the room
is used almost exclusively for sleep. However, the room in many cases
could remain the bedroom of the child well into his or her teenage
years, or until a younger sibling is born, and the parents decide to move
the older child into another larger bedroom, if one should be available.
Plant Nursery.
Teaching your Child to Speak
Babies
begin to learn words and what they mean well before they begin talking.
Babies communicate in
non-verbal ways and learn to
communicate verbally before they read or
write. Baby
sign language is the
use of hand and
body
gestures to help babies communicate
before
they learn to speak, which typically happens around their first
birthday. Baby won't say their
first meaningful
words until they are about a year old. But even if they can’t form
words yet, baby is still trying to communicate with you through cries,
coos, facial expressions, and body language!. From birth, babies begin to
develop
two sets of communication skills:
receptive skills and expressive skills.
Receptive
communication is the ability to receive and understand a message
from another person. Babies demonstrate this skill by turning their head
towards your voice and responding to simple directions, often with
vocalizations. Early on, these vocalizations will just be sounds, but as
baby approaches their first birthday, they will begin to use meaningful
language.
Expressive communication is the
ability to convey a message to another person through sounds, speech,
signs, or writing. Crying, babbling, and using
body language are examples
of your baby’s early expressive skills.
Babies learn by watching the
people around them. Even if baby doesn’t have the vocabulary to have a
conversation with you, it’s very helpful for their communication
development if you talk to them! Here are some other ways to encourage
communication development: Use a high-pitched, sing-song voice. This helps
get and keep your baby’s attention. Play with sounds. Don’t be afraid to
get silly! Use facial expressions and gestures to communicate the meaning
of words. Describe your actions as you dress, feed, and bathe your child.
Encourage two-way communication. When your child communicates with you
using sounds, words, or gestures, be sure to respond and take turns in the
“conversation”. Read with your child. “
Reading” can simply mean describing
pictures without following the written words. Choose books with large,
colorful pictures, and encourage your child to point to and name familiar
objects. Expand your child’s vocabulary by building on the words they
already know. For example if your child says “dog” you could say “Yes,
that’s a big dog!”. Reword your child’s phrases. If your child makes a
speech or language error, respond with the phrase in the correct form.
This helps them learn proper pronunciation and grammar. For example, if
your child says “Doggy big” you can respond with “Yes, the doggy is big.”
What does communication help with? Communication plays such an important
role in our lives. It is the cornerstone of healthy relationships. It is
the vehicle for sharing our joy, fear, and other emotions. It is how we
learn new things at school and work, and teach others those same skills.
The benefits of communication long outlast childhood. When will my baby
start talking? Baby will begin making consonant sounds, such as “da, da,
da”, at around 4-6 months. They will also begin to imitate sounds around
7-9 months. But they typically don’t say meaningful language, such as
calling the right people “mama” and “dada”, until around their first
birthday.
Learning ABC's.
Communication
-
Speech -
Language Pathology
Talking Directly to Toddlers Strengthens their Language Skills
Normal Speech and Language Development
Toddler Language Gap
The Power of
Talk (pdf)
Teacher Child Conversations (pdf)
Word Gap -
Thirty Million Words
The Genius
of Babies (5 videos with text) - Deb Roy:
The Birth of a Word.
Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics
Belle Project
LENA Research
Foundation
Pragmatics
Reading
-
Memory -
Learning Methods
Effective Teacher Student Interactions (pdf)
Early Education Research (pdf)
Bilingual Families -
Learning Language
Baby Talk is when babies try to talk but can not speak words
clearly enough, usually delivered with a "cooing" pattern of intonation
different from that of normal adult speech: high in pitch, with many
glissando variations that are more pronounced than those of normal speech.
It frequently displays hyperarticulation, which is an increase in the
distances between peripheral vowels (such as [i], [u], and [a]). Baby talk
is also characterized by the shortening and simplifying of words. Baby
talk is similar to what is used by people when talking to their pets
(pet-directed speech). When adults talk to each other using baby talk it
is generally to either show affection by emulating the fondness shown by
adults for children, or as a form of bullying or condescension as children
are generally considered much less cognitively developed than adults,
implying that the adult receiving the baby talk is less intelligent than
the adult talking to them.
Telegraphic Speech is speech during the two-word stage of
language acquisition in children, which is laconic or brief and to the
point; effectively cut short and efficient.
The Top 10 Assumptions about Early Speech and Language
Development
Language Delay is a failure in children to develop language
abilities on the usual age appropriate for their developmental timetable.
Language delay is distinct from speech delay, in which the development of
the mechanical and motor aspects of speech production is delayed.
Hearing Problems -
Choose the Right Vocabulary
"What do you want to be when you grow up?" That
is a stupid question to ask a kid. This is how the question
should be asked, "When you grow up and you become fully educated and intelligent,
what kind of things do you think you will do that will benefit
the world?" And don't forget to tell them that they don't have
to answer the question right now, and that the answers that they
give will most likely not be the same answers they will give
years from now. Everyone experiences change, and this is just
one of many ways that people use that helps them to reflect on
their lives as they get older. So it's not, "who do you want to
be?" Or "what do you want to be when you grow up?" or "What do you want to major in when your
in College?" Because that question explains very little about all the other possibilities
that a person will have their life. Plus, the more you learn
about yourself and the more you learn about world, the more you
will understand that most all of your decisions are based on
what you know, and how experienced you are. And if you are a
young person you most likely don't know a lot, or have you
experienced enough things in life in order to fully understand
them. So that's why it's a silly question.
Kids should give this answer "How the heck do I know, I'm just a
kid, when did you know?" Remember, Kids should definitely have
dreams and understand why
dreams are necessary, but kids
should also know the facts, because after all, the more they know about
themselves and the world, the better. Learn together.
Potential
-
Purpose of Education -
Classroom Management
"All dreams come from some form of information, so the more you know, the better your dreams will be."
Life Readiness - Head Start - Preschool - Early Education
Head Start Program provides comprehensive
early childhood education,
health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to children and their
families. The program's services and resources are designed to foster
stable family relationships, enhance children's physical and emotional
well-being, and establish an environment to develop strong cognitive
skills. The transition from preschool to elementary school imposes diverse
developmental challenges that include requiring the children to engage
successfully with their peers outside the family network, adjust to the
space of a classroom, and meet the expectations the school setting
provides.
Early Childhood Education relates to the teaching of
young children formally and informally up until the age of about eight.
.
Preschool Education is children between the ages of
three and five.
Upstart
provides four-year-old children access to the highest form of academic
support in their early education at no cost to participants: personalized
family education and coaching, a new computer and Internet if needed, and
adaptive educational software.
Learning
Specialist -
School Types -
Education Purpose
Early Childhood includes toddlerhood and some time
afterwards.
Pre-kindergarten is a classroom-based preschool program for children at or below the age of five.
Kindergarten is a preschool educational approach
traditionally based on playing, singing, practical activities such as
drawing, and social interaction as part of the transition from home to
school. "Garden for the children"
Kindergarten Ready Exam -
Kindergarten Readiness -
Pre K Smarties
Pre-School Education Resources
Everything Preschool -
Early Intervention -
Early Care & Education
Early Childhood -
Early Childhood News
Early Learning -
Early Learning (PBS)
Learning for Life -
Ounce of Prevention
Edu Care Schools -
Child Health Booklets
National
Institute for Early Education Research
The Baby College
Early Childhood Preschool Education
Beyond Daycare | The Goddard School
Parents as Teachers
-
Parent Teacher Association
Parent Involvement Education
-
Family Education
Fun Education
-
Miss Maggie
Fun Brain
-
Kaboose
-
Children Now
Love and Logic
-
Talk With Kids
Abecedarian Early Intervention Project was a comprehensive early
education program for young children at risk for developmental delays and
school failure. It studied the potential benefits of early childhood
education for poor children to enhance school readiness. It has been found
that in their earliest school years, poor children lag behind others,
suggesting the fact that they were ill-prepared for schooling. The
Abecedarian project was inspired by the fact that few other early
childhood programs could provide a sufficiently well-controlled
environment to determine the effectiveness of early childhood training.
Being fair: The Benefits of Early Childhood Education.
During
the first few years of life, the human brain grows with incredible speed,
from about a quarter of the size of an adult’s at birth to 90 percent by
age six. At age five, more than two-thirds of the preschoolers scored 90
or better on an IQ test, compared with 28 percent of the non-preschoolers.
Three-quarters of the preschoolers graduated from high school, versus 60
percent of the others. At 27, more than a quarter owned homes, compared
with just 5 percent of the non-preschoolers. And by 40, nearly half of the
non-preschool group had been arrested at some point for violent crimes,
while less than one-third of the
preschool group had.
Parenting - Guardian
Parenting is the process of
promoting and
supporting
the physical,
emotional, social, financial, and
intellectual development
of a child from infancy to adulthood. Parenting refers to the aspects of
raising a child aside from the biological relationship.
Family.
Parent is a
caregiver of the offspring in their own
species. In humans, a parent is the caretaker of a child (where "child"
refers to offspring, not necessarily age). A biological parent consists of
a person whose gamete resulted in a child, a male through the sperm, and a
female through the ovum. Parents are
first-degree relatives and have
50%
genetic meet. A female can also become a parent through surrogacy. Some
parents may be adoptive parents, who nurture and raise an
offspring, but
are not actually biologically related to the child. Orphans without
adoptive parents can be raised by their grandparents or other
family
members.
Single Parent is an uncoupled individual who shoulders most or all of
the day-to-day responsibilities for raising a child or children. A mother
is more often the primary caregiver in a
single-parent family
structure that has arisen due to death of the partner, divorce or
unplanned pregnancy.
Financial Aid.
Orphans -
Mentoring -
Adoption -
Foster Care
Being a parent is one of the
most difficult jobs
to do and it's also an enormous
responsibility. When you have a child, you immediately become the
second most important person in the world, second only to the most
important person in the world, your child.
Nurturing,
listening,
talking and
teaching are just some
of the
necessary skills that you
will need.
Nurture vs. Nature.
Mother is the female parent of a child. Mothers are
women who inhabit or perform the role of bearing some relation to their
children, who may or may not be their biological offspring. Children who
were raised with
fathers
perceive themselves to be more cognitively and physically competent than
their peers without a father. Mothers raising children together with a
father reported less severe disputes with their child.
Housewife is a woman
whose work is running or managing her family's home—caring for her
children; buying, cooking, and storing food for the family; buying goods
that the family needs for everyday life; housekeeping, cleaning and
maintaining the home; and making, buying and/or mending clothes for the
family—and who is not employed outside the home (a career woman). A
housewife who has children may be called a stay-at-home mother or mom.
Marriage.
Father is the
male
parent of a child. Besides the
paternal bonds of a father to his children,
the father may have a parental legal and
social relationship with the child that carries with it certain rights
and obligations. An
adoptive father is a
male who has become the child's parent through the legal process of
adoption. A biological father is the male genetic contributor to the
creation of the baby, through sexual intercourse or sperm donation. A
biological father may have legal
obligations to a child not raised by him, such as an obligation of
monetary support. A putative father is a man whose biological relationship
to a child is alleged but has not been established. A
stepfather is a male who is the husband of
a child's mother and they may form a family unit, but who generally does
not have the legal rights and responsibilities of a parent in relation to
the child.
Be More than just a Biological
Parent. Be a Loving Father. Be a Loving Mother. Be engaged and
supportive of your children.
Listen attentively to your child. Spend time
with your child and make time for your kids. Plan trips and adventures
with your kids. Be your child's role model and lead by example. Don't
teach hate or show disrespect for other people. Respect your children and
earn their trust. Understand and share their interests and be there for
the milestones. Develop strong communication. Teach discipline instead of
punishing your children for their
mistakes, don't yell or
judge, learn. Learn together, read together, investigate and do some
research as a team. Teach your children how you learned important lessons
in your life. Eat together as a family and learn about healthy food
choices and proper eating habits. Admit your mistakes and your own
imperfections. Accept that your children aren't you.
Reward your children
appropriately. Don't place unreasonable expectations on your children.
Understand when your children are struggling. Be aware of the changing
times. Help out around the house. Realize that a father's job is never
done. And learning how to be a good person is always learning new ways how
to be good. But how do you
learn
how to be a good father when your own father never taught you? You
learn, and never stop learning.
Interpersonal intelligence (people smart).
Parenting is the most important
job in the world. And every
parent or
guardian must understand that
they cannot
transfer the
responsibility of educating a
child to a school. Schools only teach basic skills. Everything else that a
person needs to learn is not found in schools. The worlds most valuable
knowledge and information can only be acquired by reading the worlds most
valuable knowledge and information. That is why the
skill of reading is one of the most important skills that you will
need to have in life. And when you hear that students are graduating high school
with 5th grade reading levels, that is nothing more than criminal. If
schools could fix these reading deficiencies, then we would
simultaneously fix a lot of other problems too.
Grandparent are the parents of a person's father or mother – paternal
or maternal. Every sexually-reproducing living organism who is not a
genetic chimera has a maximum of
four
genetic grandparents, eight genetic great-grandparents, sixteen
genetic great-great-grandparents, thirty-two genetic
great-great-great-grandparents, etc. In the history of modern humanity,
around 30,000 years ago, the number of modern humans who lived to be a
grandparent increased. It is not known for certain what spurred this
increase in longevity but largely results in the improved medical
technology and living standard, but it is generally believed that a key
consequence of three
generations
being alive together was the preservation of information which could
otherwise have been lost; an example of this important information might
have been where to find water in times of drought. In cases where parents
are unwilling or unable to provide adequate care for their children (e.g.,
death of the parents, financial obstacles, marriage problems),
grandparents often take on the role of primary caregivers. Even when this
is not the case, and particularly in traditional cultures, grandparents
often have a direct and clear role in relation to the raising, care and
nurture of children. Grandparents are second-degree relatives and share
25% genetic overlap. A step-grandparent can be the step-parent of the
parent or the step-parent's parent or the step-parent's step-parent
(though technically this might be called a step-step-grandparent). The
various words for grandparents at times may also be used to refer to any
elderly person, especially the terms gramps, granny, grandfather,
grandmother, nan, maw-maw, paw-paw and others which families make up
themselves.
Coparenting describes a parenting situation where
two parents
work together to raise a child even though they are not
married, divorced, separated or no longer living together. An enterprise
undertaken by two or more adults who together take on the socialization,
care, and upbringing of children for whom they share responsibility.
Co-parents may include a variety of configurations, including a mother and
a father, two mothers, two fathers, a parent with an adult sibling or
grandparent, or a parent and another adult relative. The coparent
relationship differs from an intimate relationship between adults in that
it focuses solely on the child. The equivalent term in evolutionary
biology is biparental care, where parental investment is provided by both
the mother and father. The original meaning of co-parenting was mostly
related to nuclear families. However, since the United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the Child, 20 November 1989, the principle that a child
has to continue to maintain a strong relationship with both parents, even
if separated, has become a more recognized right. Thus, the concept of
coparenting was extended to divorced and separated parents and to parents
who have never lived together
Parental Investment in evolutionary biology and evolutionary
psychology, is any parental expenditure (e.g. time, energy, resources)
that benefits offspring. Parental investment may be performed by both
males and females (biparental care), females alone (exclusive maternal
care) or males alone (exclusive paternal care). Care can be provided at
any stage of the offspring's life, from pre-natal (e.g. egg guarding and
incubation in birds, and placental nourishment in mammals) to post-natal
(e.g. food provisioning and protection of offspring). Parental investment
theory, a term coined by Robert Trivers in 1972, predicts that the sex
that invests more in its offspring will be more selective when choosing a
mate, and the less-investing sex will have intra-sexual competition for
access to mates. This theory has been influential in explaining sex
differences in sexual selection and mate preferences, throughout the
animal kingdom and in humans.
Godparent in many denominations of Christianity, is someone who bears
witness to a child's christening and later is willing to help in their
catechesis, as well as their lifelong spiritual formation. In the past, in
some countries, the role carried some legal obligations as well as
religious responsibilities. In both religious and civil views, a godparent
tends to be an individual chosen by the parents to take an interest in the
child's upbringing and personal development, to offer mentorship or claim
legal guardianship of the child if anything should happen to the parents.
A male godparent is a
godfather, and a
female godparent is a
godmother. The child
is a godchild (i.e. godson for boys and goddaughter for girls).
It takes a Village to Raise a Child is an African proverb that means
that an entire
community of people
must interact with children for those children to experience and grow in a
safe and healthy environment. The villagers look out for the children.
This does not mean an entire village is responsible for raising a child or
the children of a crowd.
Adoption
is a process whereby a person assumes the parenting of another, usually a
child, from that person's biological or legal parent or parents. Legal
adoptions permanently transfer all rights and responsibilities, along with
filiation, from the biological parent or parents.
Adoption.
Guardian is a person who is
responsible for taking
care of someone and
protecting them.
Representative -
Protector -
Mentoring
Legal Guardian
is a person who has the
legal authority and the corresponding
duty to
care for the personal
and property interests of another person, called a ward. Guardians are
typically used in three situations: guardianship for an incapacitated
senior (due to old age or infirmity), guardianship for a minor, and
guardianship for developmentally disabled adults.
Surrogate is someone who provides or
receives nurture or parental care though not related by blood or legal
ties. Someone who takes the place of another person.
A person appointed to represent or act on behalf of others.
Surrogacy is an arrangement, often supported by a legal agreement,
whereby a woman agrees to become pregnant, carry the pregnancy to due
term, and give birth to a child or children, all of this for another
person or persons, who are or will ultimately become the parent(s) of the
child or children.
Foster
Care is a
Institutional System in which a minor has been placed into a ward, group
home (residential child care community, treatment center, etc.), or
private home of a
state-certified
caregiver, referred to as a "foster parent" or with a family member
approved by the state. The placement of the child is normally arranged
through the government or a social service agency. The institution, group
home or foster parent is compensated for expenses unless with a family
member.
Child Abuse.
Foster is to
promote the growth of someone and help develop by providing or receiving
nurture or parental care though
not
related by blood or legal ties.
Orphan
is a child whose parents have died or are unknown, or have permanently
abandoned them.
Oliver Twist was a story that centers on orphan Oliver Twist, born in
a workhouse and sold into apprenticeship with an undertaker. After
escaping, Oliver travels to London, where he meets the "Artful Dodger", a
member of a gang of juvenile pickpockets led by the elderly criminal
Fagin. Oliver Twist is notable for its unromantic portrayal of criminals
and their sordid lives, as well as for exposing the cruel treatment of the
many orphans in London in the mid-19th century. The book was first
published as a serial from 1837 to 1839. Dickens satirises the hypocrisies
of his time, including child labour, the recruitment of children as
criminals, and the presence of street children. The novel may have been
inspired by the story of Robert Blincoe, an orphan whose account of
working as a child labourer in a cotton mill was widely read in the 1830s.
It is likely that Dickens's own experiences as a youth contributed as
well. ''
Please,
sir, may I have some more?''
High Quality Interactions - Communication
A Good Rapport is a close and
harmonious
relationship in which the people or groups concerned understand each
other's feelings or ideas and communicate well. A relationship of mutual
understanding or
trust and agreement between people.
Diplomacy -
Rapport (wiki).
Knowing how to talk to your child is extremely important.
Be
available for your children. Notice times when your kids are most
likely to talk — for example, at bedtime, before dinner, in the car — and
be available. Start the conversation; it lets your kids know you care
about what's happening in their lives. Find time each week for a
one-on-one activity with each child, and avoid scheduling other activities
during that time. Learn about your children's interests — for example,
favorite music and activities — and show interest in them. Initiate
conversations by sharing what you have been thinking about rather than
beginning a conversation with a question.
Let your
kids know that you're listening. When your children are talking about
concerns, stop whatever you are doing and listen. Express interest in what
they are saying without being intrusive.
Listen to their point of view,
even if it's difficult to hear. Let them complete their point before you
respond. Repeat what you heard them say to ensure that you understand them
correctly.
Respond in a way that your children will
hear. Soften strong reactions; kids will tune you out if you appear
angry or defensive. Express your opinion without putting down theirs;
acknowledge that it's okay to disagree. Resist arguing about who is right.
Instead say, "I know you disagree with me, but this is what I think."
Focus on your child's feelings rather than your own during your
conversation.
Remember: Ask your children
what they may want or need from you in a conversation, such as advice,
simply listening, help in dealing with feelings or help solving a problem.
Kids learn by imitating. Most often, they will follow your lead in how
they deal with anger, solve problems and work through difficult feelings.
Talk to your children — don't lecture, criticize, threaten or say hurtful
things. Kids learn from their own choices. As long as the consequences are
not dangerous, don't feel you have to step in. Realize your children may
test you by telling you a small part of what is bothering them. Listen
carefully to what they say, encourage them to talk and they may share the
rest of the story.
How to Talk to Your
Child: The Best Strategies for Effective Communication (youtube)
Communicating with
Your Child (youtube)
You need to keep the Lines of Communication Open
with your children,
and you must Maintain these Communication Channels, if not, then you will never truly know your child,
or educate them fully enough. If a child never
Learns how to communicate, or never
feels comfortable communicating, then information and knowledge will be
impeded, which could have
devastating
consequences. One of the most devastating things that can happen to a
child is when they stop
asking questions and stop learning things that are important.
Empathy -
Mirroring.
Research has found that toddlers with
fewer spoken words have more frequent and severe temper tantrums than
their peers with typical language skills. About 40% of delayed talkers
will go on to have persistent language problems that can affect their
academic performance.
Knowledge Guide for the Formative years is the
period of physical and psychological development from the onset of puberty to maturity.
Coaching.
Resources for Moms and
Parents
Mums Net Parenting Tips
Channel Mum
community for mums.
Parent Further -
Mothering
Pediatrician shows how to calm a crying baby
(youtube)
Parenting -
Parenting -
I
Parenting
Cafe
Mom -
Mom 365
Parents Connect -
Positive Parenting Program
Free Range Parenting -
Every Child Succeeds
Parental Guide -
Behavior Techniques and Strategies
Tools for Getting Along Curriculum
Grand Rapids Parent University
The Learning Community
Baby Center -
Sixty Second Parent
Punishment -
Discipline -
Praise -
Good Examples -
Behavior
Parents want their kids to have more than they
did. But what kids need most is knowledge and information that would help
them to understand themselves and the world around them. Kids need to high
quality education that still does not exist, so it's still not available.
There is no amount of
material things or
money that would benefit a person more than a high quality education and a
loving and understanding parent.
Child Care - Caring for New Born Children
Pediatrician is a
specialist in the care of babies.
Pediatrics is the branch of medicine that involves the medical care of
infants, children, and adolescents. The American Academy of Pediatrics
recommends people be under pediatric care up to the age of 21 (though
usually only minors are required to be under pediatric care). A
medical doctor who specializes in
this area is known as a pediatrician, or paediatrician. The word
pediatrics and its cognates mean "healer of children". Pediatricians work
in hospitals, particularly those working in its subspecialties (e.g.
neonatology), and as outpatient primary care physicians.
Child Care is the
caring for and
supervision of a
child or children, usually from age six weeks to age thirteen. Child care
is the action or skill of looking after children by a day-care center,
babysitter, or other providers.
Day Care is the care of a child during the day by a
person other than the child's legal guardians, typically performed by
someone outside the child's immediate family.
Child Care Info
Creative Play -
Creative Play Plus
Whole Child Center -
Childtime Learning Centers
Educational Play Care -
Kindercare
Educare -
Educational Daycare
National
Network for Child Care
Little
Hands Day Care $900 a month for four days a week.
Study of Early Child Care and Development (PDF) - PLEASE NOTE: This
information in the PDF above was current at the time the document was
published in 2006. The information is not being updated and may no longer
be accurate. It is provided for historical purposes only.
Second Pillar Care Quality
National Association for
Family Child Care
National Association for the Education of Young Children - Promoting
excellence in early childhood education.
Pediatrics is the branch of medicine that deals with
the medical care of infants, children, and adolescents, and the age limit
usually ranges from birth up to 18 years of age.
American Academy of Pediatrics.
Dangers of Television and Computers
Teaching at Home
-
Tutoring
Lesson Ideas -
Worksheets
Reading -
Writing -
Literacy
Teaching Resources
Activity Ideas
Kaiser Family Foundation
Mothers Over 35
The
Girl Project
Parents 4 Public Schools
Families and Schools
Teachers and Families
School Family MediaKids Growth
Perceptual Skills
Discover This
Montessori
Family Fun
Classical Academic Press
Birth -
Reproduction
-
Health Surveys
Human Brain
-
Educational Toys and Games
Trauma -
Stress -
Crimes
International Survey of Children’s Well-Being
Growing Pains are recurring pain symptoms that are relatively common
in children ages 3 to 12. The pains normally appear at night and affect
the calf or thigh muscles of both legs. The pain stops on its own before
morning. Growing pains are one of the most common causes of recurring pain
in children. Although these pains reliably stop when the child has
completely finished growing, it likely has nothing to do with growth. Kids
get growing pains in their legs. Most of the time they hurt in the front
of the thighs (the upper part of your legs), in the calves (the back part
of your legs below your knees), or behind the knees. Usually, both legs
hurt. Growing pains often start to ache right before bedtime.
Interactive music device that reduces night-time crying
and
helps develop your baby's brain in one simple product
Laws to Protect Children and Parents
Poverty Law
/
Low-Income People
/
Center for Law & Education
Boston
Student Rights helps students, teachers and parents understand their
rights, suspension and expulsion policies, and stay connected to other
students in the district.
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
Crimes against
Children (abuse) -
Child Protective Services
Refugees -
Migration
-
Parental Rights
Law Knowledge
-
Legal Information
Children's Aid Society
-
Children's Advocate
Harvard Family Research Project
Nat. Assoc. Education of Young Children
International Children's Education
Operation Respect
-
Happy Child
Teacher Quick Source
CDC Child
Integral Education
Child Development Media
National Geographic for Kids
Protecting the Rights of Parents and Prospective Parents with Disabilities
The most basic of child protection laws are those preventing
child abuse and neglect.
Children need emotional support from their parents, and most children are
heavily reliant on love from their parents.
Lack of empathy from
parents can be extremely abusive and very traumatic for children.
Compassion needs to
be taught in every school, and every child needs to learn how to defend
themselves against emotionally abusive parents.
Being a Good Example - Things that can have an effect on Children
It's really hard to know exactly what things can effect a
child's development. It's also hard to know
exactly how and why certain
effects happen and how
children personally
react to things in their life.
And more importantly, how would you tell when certain
thought processes have been
adversely effected in a
child? And
what steps
would you have to take to
correct these particular thought
processes, or
behaviors? What are these key moments in a Childs
life that can have a profound effect on how they understand the
world?
You would have to be totally aware of everything in the
Childs life that they are exposed to, like everything that they see,
touch, hear, taste and smell in their
environment, and all the different
things that they
Eat, and so on and so on.
You would have to be totally aware of the people
they're in contact with, and the amount of
TV, and the types of
shows and other media that they are exposed to. You would need
to be aware of what types of
music they listened to? You would also have to understand
the effects of
education quality.
You would have to
follow a
child around all day and correctly examine how they interact
with the environment and other people. And then when the child
is old
enough to be able to speak in sentences, you would have to follow
a child around all day and constantly ask them "So what are you thinking now?" But even then, how would you be sure that a child could actually
understand the question in order to answer it accurately? I know
we have the abilities to understand how important child
development is, but the question is, when will we start teaching
this in schools to everyone? We should
teach by example. Every child is an
investment in the
future.
The Hand that Rocks the
Cradle Rules the World means that the person who raises a child
can determine the character of that child and can also influence the type of
society that the
next generation will create.
Terrible Twos not inevitable: With engaged parenting, happy babies can
become happy toddlers. Parents should not feel pressured to make their
young children undertake structured learning or achieve specific tasks. A
new study of children under the age of two has found that parents who take
a more flexible approach to their child's learning can - for children who
were easy babies - minimize behavioral problems during toddlerhood. The
study, published in the
journal Developmental Science, found a link between parental autonomy
support in 14-month-old children, and reduced behavioural problems ten
months later. But this link only applied to children who had been rated as
'easy babies'- those in a generally happy mood, who adapted easily to new
experiences and quickly established routines. Children who demonstrated
high levels of self-control at 14 months were less likely than their peers
to have behaviour problems at 24 months.
Early Life Experiences Biologically and Functionally Mature the Brain and
also have an Impact on Learning and Memory. Because the biological
maturation changes no longer occurred with episodic learning at later
ages, it's clear that the infant brain employs distinct biological
mechanisms to form and store
episodic memories.
Memory formation is important for thinking, future learning, planning,
decision-making, problem-solving, reflecting, imagining, and the overall
capacity to form a sense of self. This means that what infants learn and
experience is crucial for their later development.
Preschoolers
living in impoverished communities who have
access to a nurturing home environment have significantly higher
intelligence quotient (IQ) scores in adolescence compared to those
raised without
nurturing care.
Role Model is a
person whose behavior or example can be emulated by others, especially by
younger people.
Example is a task
performed or a problem solved in order to develop skill or understanding.
Something to be imitated that is representative of a form or pattern. A
thing characteristic of its kind or illustrating a general rule.
Real Life Examples -
Engineering Models.
Children are like sponges. They soak up
information from the world around them and learn things at a fast pace.
From birth, infants pick up on emotional cues from others.
Precedent is an example that is used to
justify similar occurrences at a later time. A subject mentioned earlier
preceding in time, order, or significance. A law established by following
earlier
judicial decisions. A system of
jurisprudence based on judicial precedents rather than statutory laws.
Teens who have a warm and loving relationship with their mother are
less likely to enter abusive relationships, even if her own marriage is
full of conflict. Positive parenting behaviors help children form positive
models of themselves as lovable and worthy of respect.
Children of abused mothers 50% more likely to have low IQ. Children of
women who reported domestic violence in pregnancy or during the first six
years of the child's life are almost 50% more likely to have a low IQ at
age 8, research finds.
Mothers and Babies Brains are more In Tune when mother is Happy.
Mothers' and babies' brains can work together as a 'mega-network' by
synchronising brain waves when they interact. The level of connectivity of
the brain waves varies according to the mum's emotional state: when
mothers express more positive emotions their brain becomes much more
strongly connected with their baby's brain. This may help the baby to
learn and its brain to develop.
Baby and Adult Brains 'Sync Up' during play.
You and your baby are on the same wavelength.
Researchers developed a new dual-brain
neuroimaging system that uses functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS),
which is highly safe and records oxygenation in the blood as a proxy for
neural activity. The setup allowed the researchers to record the neural
coordination between babies and an adult while they
played with toys,
sang songs and read a book.
Playtime with Dad may improve Children's Self-Control. Children whose
fathers make time to play with them from a very young age may find it
easier to
control their behavior
and emotions as they grow up, research suggests. The study also found some
evidence that father-child play gradually increases through early
childhood, then decreases during 'middle childhood' (ages 6 to 12). This,
again, may be because physical play is particularly important for helping
younger children to negotiate the challenges they encounter when they
start to explore the world beyond their own home, in particular at school.
Despite the benefits of father-child play, the authors stress that
children who only live with their mother need not be at a disadvantage.
"One of the things that our research points to time and again is the need
to vary the types of play children have access to, and mothers can, of
course, support physical play with young children as well," Ramchandani
added. "Different parents may have slightly different inclinations when it
comes to playing with children, but part of being a parent is stepping
outside your comfort zone. Children are likely to benefit most if they are
given different ways to play and interact."
Bonding is the intense attachment that develops between parents and
their baby. A parents responsiveness to an infant's signals can affect the
child's social and cognitive development.
The importance of early bonding on the long-term mental health and
resilience of children. Human babies are born very dependent on their
parents. They undergo huge brain development, growth and neuron pruning in
the first two years of life. The brain development of infants (as well as
their social, emotional and cognitive development) depends on a loving
bond or
attachment relationship with a primary caregiver, usually a
parent.
Attachment Theory attempts to describe the dynamics of
long-term and short-term
interpersonal relationships between humans.
Attachment Parenting
is a parenting philosophy that proposes methods which
aim to promote the
attachment of mother and infant not only by maximal
maternal
empathy and
responsiveness but also by continuous bodily
closeness and touch. The
relationship between infants and their primary
caregivers is responsible for shaping the success or failure of future
intimate
relationships. The ability to maintain emotional balance. The
ability to enjoy being ourselves and to find satisfaction in being with
others.
The Attachment Clinic
Adolescent Parent Attachment: Bonds that Support Healthy
Development
Attachment and Adult Relationships
Five ways to create a secure attachment with your baby without
sharing your bed
What is Secure Attachment and Bonding
Unhealthy Attachments (money
and the material world)
The Dark Matter of Love (film)
Imprinting is any kind of
phase-sensitive learning or learning occurring at a particular age or a
particular life stage, that is rapid and apparently independent of the
consequences of behavior. It was first used to describe situations in
which an animal or person learns the characteristics of some
stimulus, which is
therefore said to be "imprinted" onto the subject. Imprinting is
hypothesized to have a critical period. Imprinting is a natural process in
many animals with extended parental care, including birds and mammals. In
the animal behavior and human psychology literatures, imprinting and
attachment refer to the social connection that develops between a young
animal and its caregiver.
Belonging -
Conformity -
Follow the Leader.
Parents teach their
children to walk and talk. Then parents send their children to school
where the teachers tell the to shut up and sit-down.
This does not end
well.
Emulate is to strive to equal
or match, especially by imitating.
Be the kind of parent you wish you
had when you were a child.
Young children prefer to learn from confident people.
Children need
Attention, but the ability to give someone your attention needs to
be fully understood.
Attention is
more than just
listening to someone.
Children communicate on many different levels, just like most adults do.
And you need to be aware of all these communication channels in order to
effectively understand the entire message. This is difficult for most
people because that would mean a person would have to stop thinking about
themselves and their world, and instead, start
thinking about someone
else's world and what they are thinking. You need to be actively
involved in your child's
milestones and
Progress. Avoid
spoiling a child.
Second-Born Kids are more likely to behave badly,
even into adulthood. A study from 2017 claims that second-born
children are more likely to misbehave, sometimes with severe consequences.
For example, first-born kids often receive undivided attention from
parents, while younger siblings have to
compete for attention. And, as the
family grows, dynamics change.
Pygmalion Effect is the phenomenon whereby others'
expectations of a
target person
affect the target person's performance. High expectations
lead to better performance and low expectations lead to worse performance.
"Instead of buying your children all the things you never had, you should
teach your children all the things you were never taught. Material wears
out, but knowledge stays." -
Bruce Lee (wiki).
Routines are Necessary for children and adults, as long as the child
and the adult understands why routine is important and understands the
benefits and responsibilities of following a routine. This way the child
or the adult can improve or modify the routine in order to make it better.
Developmental
and biological disruptions occurring during the early years of
life. Structural connections between frontal and parietal
areas in children's brains can predict their ability to reason later in
life.
How your parenting style affects your child's future.
Family Relationships Effect Children's Emotional Development (PDF)
Dads play key role in Child Development.
Early Life Experiences influence DNA in the Adult Brain -
In-Utero
Family environment affects adolescent brain development. Childhood
environment and socioeconomic status affect cognitive ability and brain
development during adolescence independently of genetic factors,
researchers report. The study demonstrates how important the family
environment is, not just during early infancy but also throughout
adolescence.
Children who see movie characters use guns more likely to use them.
Children who watched a PG-rated movie clip containing guns played with a
disabled real gun longer and pulled the trigger more often than children
who saw the same movie not containing guns.
Effects of TV.
Children told Lies by Parents subsequently Lie More as Adults, face
adjustment difficulty.
Helicopter Parent is a parent who pays extremely close
attention to a child's or children's experiences and problems,
particularly at educational institutions. Helicopter parents are so named
because, like helicopters, they hover overhead, overseeing their child's
life.
Observation Flaws and Effects
Black
Sheep is lacking respectability in character or behavior or
appearance.
Praise -
Punishment -
Bullying -
Toxic Parents
Helping Kids to learn how to Relax and Breathe -
Breathing Exercises
Experiences
(benefits from adventures) -
Exercise Benefits
Babies can learn that hard work pays off. Study finds infants try
harder after seeing adults struggle to achieve a goal.
Does Noise Affect Learning? A short review on
noise effects on
cognitive performance in children.
Silence.
Babies are forming
700 new neural connections every
second.
When children hear their mothers
speak, many more brain areas are activated than when kids hear
other peoples’ voices.
Scientists say kids’ brains are engaged at a higher level when
they hear their mothers’ voices. The regions of the brain
that are stimulated by a mother’s voice include those linked to
emotion processing, reward processing, social functions,
detecting what is personally relevant, and
face recognition.
One-day-old infants sucked more vigorously on their pacifiers
when they heard the sound of their mother’s
voices.
Listening to Language Boosts Infant Cognition -
Mothers Tongue
Language Development and Literacy. Environmental factors affecting
language development.
Baby talk words with repeated sounds help infants learn language.
Babies find it easier to learn words with repetitive syllables
rather than mixed sounds. Assessments of language learning in
18-month-olds suggest that children are better at grasping the
names of objects with repeated syllables, over words with
non-identical syllables. Researchers say the study may help
explain why some words or phrases, such as 'train' and 'good
night', have given
rise to versions with repeated
syllables, such as mama, dada, choo-choo and night-night. Infants have a repetition bias in
learning new words.
Exploring links between infant vocabulary size and vocal interactions with
caregivers. Laboratory studies suggest that different types of infant
vocalizations and caregiver responses may have different effects on
vocabulary. infants tended to have a
larger vocabulary if they produced a greater number of
speech-like babbling sounds and,
in return, received a greater amount of adult responses that incorporated
sounds similar to their babbling. The authors speculate this may be
because adults find it easier to respond meaningfully to babbling that
sounds closer to real words; adult imitation of infant babbling (with
reuse and expansion into whole sentences on the part of the adult) may
also help infants develop a larger vocabulary.
Mothers Consistently Alter Their Unique Vocal Fingerprints When
Communicating with Infants -
vocal timbre.
Back-and-forth exchanges boost children's brain response to language.
Study finds engaging young children in conversation is more important for
brain development.
Chatterbox parents may boost tots' intelligence. Young children who
are exposed to large amounts of adult speech tend to have better cognitive
skills. Just as long as the
words used in
speech are intelligent and positive.
First Words.
Sleep makes it possible for babies to associate words with content, and
not with noise. Protowords which combine only
simultaneously occurring
visual and acoustic stimuli become real words that are connected to
content.
Protowords
are words that are similar to actual words, but not quite real words.
Protowords are an early word-like utterance produced by an infant
before it has acquired
true language. (linguistics) A word-like utterance
produced by early people who had
yet to develop full language capability; a word from a
proto-language.
Naming guides how 12-month-old infants encode and remember objects.
Encoding objects in memory and recalling them later is fundamental to
human cognition. Even for infants just beginning to speak their first
words, the way an object is named guides infants' encoding, representation
and memory for that object, according to new research. Encoding objects in
memory and recalling them later is fundamental to human cognition and
emerges in infancy. Evidence from a new recognition memory task reveals
that as they encode objects, infants are sensitive to a principled link
between naming and object representation by 12 months. the precision of
infants' responses reveal that naming objects, even a single naming
episode, can have a lasting impact on how infants encode that object,
represent it in memory and remember it later. The researchers said this
work sheds new light on the powerful and well-documented advantage of
naming on infant object categorization, leaving little doubt that naming a
set of distinct individual objects with the same noun invites infants to
form an object category. Hearing the same name for objects invites infants
to focus on the commonalities among the objects, but at the expense of
remembering the features that are unique to each individual.
Babies are exposed to a large amount of
stimulation. Since no two
situations are exactly the same, for babies every moment is a completely
new experience— until the infant brain
organizes the flood of
stimuli. It has to save new information in long-term memory, to aggregate
similar experiences and to
categorize them.
Only during sleep, when the infant brain is isolated from the surrounding
world, can it extract and save
relations
incorporated in this information. And only the interaction of an alert
state of experiencing the environment with the offline state of
sleep, in which experiences are organised and
stored, enables early cognitive and
language
development.”
Language
Processing Areas of the Brain
Brain lays foundation for reason in childhood. Structural connections
between frontal and parietal areas in children's brains can predict their
ability to reason later in life. strong structural connectivity between
rostrolateral prefrontal cortex (RLPFC) and inferior parietal lobe (IPL)
in younger children is associated with both increased functional
connectivity and improved reasoning in adolescence and adulthood.
Maternal language shapes infants' cry melodies. The very first cry of
neonates is marked by their maternal language. This seems to be especially
apparent in
tonal languages,
where pitch and pitch fluctuation determine the meaning of words.
Study shows Language Development starts in the Womb -
Language and Thought
Learning to Speak (speech
development and communication)
A study on Child Development found that the type of
emotional
support that a child receives during the first three and a half
years has an effect on education, social life and romantic
relationships even 20 or 30 years later.
Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation - Institute
of Child Development - UofMN
Decades after a good-behavior program in grade school, adults report
healthier, more successful lives. Researchers have found that the '
good
life' in adulthood can start in grade school, by teaching parents and
teachers to build stronger bonds with their children, and to help children
form greater attachments to family and school.
"Babies learn best through playful
interactions with people who love them, and also know what to
teach and when."
Vāsanā is a behavioural tendency or karmic imprint which
influences the present behaviour of a person.
The
Time Paradox
Eye Contact with your Baby helps Synchronize your Brainwaves
Holding Infants -- or not -- Can Leave Traces on their Genes. Amount
of close and comforting contact from caregivers changes children's
molecular profile. The amount of physical contact between infants and
their caregivers can affect children at the molecular level. The study of
DNA methylation patterns showed that children who had been more distressed
as infants and had received less physical contact had a molecular profile
that was underdeveloped for their age. This is the first study to show in
humans that the simple act of touching, early in life, has deeply-rooted
and potentially lifelong consequences on genetic expression.
Every Human born is
Altricial, which means that everyone needs to be totally taken care of
for the first few years of life. We need to be fed, moved, bathed,
educated,
taught a language and
kept free from danger, otherwise a new born baby would never survive, thus
human life would not exist.
Instincts are not enough -
Genetic Variations -
Adaptation.
Playing with your
child can many positive effects. When parents played with their
1-year-old children, they found that when a parent focused on a
toy, their child paid attention to the toy for longer,
continuing even after the parent had looked away. Monkey see
monkey do.
Mimicry is learning of a process without an understanding of
why it works. Another definition implies the act of
mimicry,
usually with limited knowledge and/or
concern of the consequences.
Object Permanence is the understanding that objects continue to exist
even when they cannot be observed (seen, heard, touched, smelled or sensed
in any way). This is a fundamental concept studied in the field of
developmental psychology, the subfield of psychology that addresses the
development of infants' and children's social and mental capacities. There
is not yet scientific consensus on when the understanding of object
permanence emerges in human development.
Language skills are not necessary for learning abstract relations.
Analogical ability — the ability to see common relations between objects,
events or ideas — is a key skill that underlies human intelligence and
differentiates humans from other apes.
Three-month-old infants can learn abstract relations before language
comprehension. Findings suggest humans' talent for relational learning
doesn't depend on language.
Imitating - Mirroring - Seeing is Believing
Observational Learning is
learning that occurs through
observing the
behavior of others. It is a form of
social learning which takes various
forms, based on various processes. In humans, this form of learning seems
to not need
reinforcement to occur, but instead, requires a
social model
such as a
parent, sibling, friend, or teacher.
Imitation is an advanced behavior whereby an individual
observes and
replicates another's behavior. Imitation is also a form of
social learning that leads to the "development of
traditions, and ultimately our
culture.
Bio-Mimicry.
Mirroring in
psychology is the
behavior in which one
person
subconsciously imitates the gesture,
speech pattern, or attitude of
another. Mirroring often occurs in
social situations, particularly in the
company of close friends or family. The concept often affects other
individual's notions about the individual that is exhibiting
mirroring behaviors, which can lead
to the individual building
rapport with others.
Broken Mirror Theory claims that a
dysfunction of the mirror neuron system may be a cause of
poor social
interaction and cognition in individuals with autism.
Mirror
Neuron is a
neuron that fires both when an animal acts and
when the animal
observes the
same action performed by another.
Theory of Mind -
Empathy -
Conscience
Contagious Yawning is triggered
involuntarily when we observe another person yawn -- it is a common form
of echophenomena -- the automatic imitation of another's words (echolalia)
or actions (echopraxia). And it's not just humans who have a propensity
for contagious yawning -- chimpanzees and dogs do it too.
Emotional Mirroring – Empathizing with
someone's emotional state by
being on their side. You must apply the
skill of being a
good listener in this situation so as you can listen for
key words and problems that arise when speaking with the person. This is
so you can talk about these issues and question them to better your
understanding of what they are saying and show your empathy towards them
(Arnold, E and Boggs, josh. 2007).
Posture
Mirroring – Matching the tone of a person's
body language not
through direct imitation, as this can appear as mockery, but through
mirroring the general message of their posture and energy.
Tone and Tempo Mirroring – Matching the
tone, tempo, inflection, and volume of a person's voice
when needed.
Our Brains Synchronize during a Conversation. The rhythms of
Brainwaves between two
people taking part in a conversation begin to match each other.
Mirror
Stage is based on the belief that infants
recognize
themselves in a
mirror (literal) or other symbolic contraption which
induces apperception (the turning of oneself into an object that can be
viewed by the child from outside themselves) from the age of about six
months.
Babies know when you imitate them -- and like it. Six-month old
infants recognize when adults imitate them, and perceive imitators as more
friendly, according to a new study. The babies looked and smiled longer at
an adult who imitated them, as opposed to when the adult responded in
other ways. Babies also approached them more, and engaged in imitating
games.
Echophenomenon is an automatic imitative action
without explicit awareness, or
pathological repetitions of external stimuli or activities, actions,
sounds, or phrases, indicative of an underlying disorder.
Echopraxia is the involuntary repetition or imitation of another
person's actions.
Echolalia is defined as the unsolicited repetition of
vocalizations made by another
person (by the same person is called palilalia). In its profound form it
is automatic and effortless. It is one of the echophenomena, closely
related to echopraxia, the
automatic repetition of movements made by another person; both are
"subsets of imitative behavior" whereby sounds or actions are imitated
"without explicit awareness". Echolalia may be an immediate reaction to a
stimulus or may be delayed.
How arousal impacts physiological synchrony in relationships. A team
of researchers has examined what type of social interaction is required
for people to display
physiological synchrony -- mutual changes in
autonomic nervous system activity.
Social Influence
-
Body Image
(comparisons) -
Observation
Affects -
Gaze Perception.
Fish
Appear to Recognize Themselves in the Mirror. The cleaner wrasse fish
(Labroides dimidiatus), responds to its
reflection and attempts
to remove marks on its body during the mirror test -- a method considered
the gold standard for
determining
self-awareness in animals. The finding suggests that fish might
possess far higher cognitive powers than previously thought, and ignites a
high-stakes debate over how we assess the intelligence of animals that are
so unlike ourselves.
Parents' brain activity 'echoes' their
infant's brain activity when they play together. When adults are
engaged in joint play together with their infant, the parents' brains show
bursts of high-frequency activity, which are linked to their baby's
attention patterns and not their own.
Infants are able to learn abstract rules visually. Babies are doing
really powerful abstraction from just their
observation of the world.
Three-month-old babies cannot sit up or roll over, yet they are already
capable of learning patterns from simply looking at the world around them,
according to a recent study. For the first time, the researchers show that
3- and 4-month-old infants can successfully detect visual patterns and
generalize them to new sequences. Abstract Rule Learning for Visual
Sequences in 8- and 11-Month-Olds. Infants were presented with simple
rule-governed patterned sequences of visual shapes (ABB, AAB, and ABA)
that could be discriminated from differences in the position of the
repeated element (late, early, or nonadjacent, respectively).
Eight-month-olds were found to distinguish patterns on the basis of the
repetition, but appeared insensitive to its position in the sequence;
11-month-olds distinguished patterns over the position of the repetition,
but appeared insensitive to the nonadjacent repetition. These results
suggest that abstract pattern detection may develop incrementally in a
process of constructing complex relations from more primitive components.
One common approach in investigations of early pattern perception is to
examine infants’ sensitivity to structured relations among stimulus
features in visual or auditory input. Experiments on statistical learning,
for example, have explored the extent to which infants detect and use
distributional information in auditory or visual sequences to combine
individual features into larger units. Typically in these experiments,
infants are presented with a stream of input consisting of repeating multielement units with randomized order, but fixed internal structure. A
Macintosh computer and
53-cm color monitor
were used to generate the stimuli. An observer, blind to the stimulus on
the screen at any given time, recorded looking times by pressing a key as
the infant looked and releasing when the infant looked away. The computer
presented stimuli, stored the observer’s data, calculated the habituation
criterion for each infant, and changed displays after the criterion had
been met.
Stimuli consisted of 12 colored shapes
(gray octagon, red square, green chevron, cyan diamond, blue bowtie,
magenta four-pointed star, orange triangle, yellow circle, white
five-pointed star, turquoise cross, pink clover, purple crescent)
presented one at a time against a black background. Each
shape was shown for 1 sec in the center of the monitor and loomed from 4
to 24 cm in height (2.4°–14.6° visual angle). The shapes were organized
into ABA, ABB, or AAB sequences, each followed by a 1-sec blank screen.
Six unique shapes were presented during habituation (e.g.,
octagon–square–octagon, chevron–diamond–chevron., bowtie–star–bowtie) and
six unique shapes were presented during test (e.g.,
triangle–circle–triangle, star–cross–star, clover–crescent–clover). In
both habituation and test trials, triplet sequences were randomly ordered
with the single constraint that no two sequences successively would be the
same.
How our brains track where we and others go. Findings suggest that our
brains generate a common code to mark where other people are in relation
to ourselves.
The importance of relating to others: why we only learn to understand
other people after the age of 4. The maturation of fibres of a brain
structure called the
Arcuate Fascicle between the ages of three and four years establishes
a connection between two critical brain regions: a region at the back of
the temporal lobe that supports adult thinking about others and their
thoughts, and a region in the frontal lobe that is involved in keeping
things at different levels of abstraction and, therefore, helps us to
understand what the real world is and what the thoughts of others are.
Only when these two brain regions are connected through the
arcuate
fascicle can children start to understand what other people think.
Deficits in development of the conscience and of
empathy. In developing
boys, the volume of the anterior insula or
gray matter volume — a brain region
implicated in recognising emotions in others and
empathy — is larger in
those with higher levels of
callous-unemotional traits. The volume explained 19% of the variance
in callous-unemotional traits seen only in, but not in girls with the same
personality traits. The researchers found that the relationship between
callous-unemotional traits and brain structure differs between boys
and girls. Differences in reports of increased or decreased gray matter in
anterior insula in community samples of
boys, or boys as compared to girls, with elevated
callous-unemotional-traits may reflect maturational effects (i.e. delayed
maturation of this region in males), the study noted.
Like Adults, Children Show Bias in Attributing Mental States to Others.
The data showed that 6 year-olds used more mental-state words overall and
a more diverse range of these words compared with children who were one
year younger, a finding that highlights the ongoing development of
theory of mind processes in early
childhood. Both 5- and 6-year-olds used more mental-state terms when they
believed the characters had the same gender or home town as opposed to
when they had a different one. Six-year-olds also used more diverse
mental-state words in describing characters from the same group relative
to those from a different group. This
group-based bias extended to direct ratings: Participants also
preferred individuals who belonged to their own gender and geographic
group. These findings hint at early origins for social phenomena including
bias between social groups and
dehumanization, the
researchers argue.
Noncomplementary Behavior vs
Complementary Behavior: If you are always warm to a cold person,
you can become a pushover. Meeting
dominance with dominance can result in
a fight, whereas being
submissive with a submissive person can lead to
inaction and boredom.
Overprotective Parents may cause kids to have a
Peter Pan Syndrome, which is an adult (usually male who is socially
immature. Men Who Have Never Grown Up. Body of an adult but the mind of a
child.
Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy involves creating a "playful,
accepting, curious, and empathic" environment in which the therapist
attunes to the child's "subjective experiences" and reflects this back to
the child by means of eye contact, facial expressions, gestures and
movements, voice tone, timing and touch, "co-regulates" emotional affect
and "co-constructs" an alternative autobiographical narrative with the
child. Dyadic developmental psychotherapy also makes use of
cognitive-behavioral strategies. The "dyad" referred to must eventually be
the parent-child dyad. The active presence of the primary caregiver is
preferred but not required. a psychotherapeutic treatment method for
families that have children with symptoms of emotional disorders,
including complex trauma and disorders of attachment.
The Specific Affect Coding System (SPAFF)
Momentary Patterns of Covariation Between Specific Affects and
Interpersonal Behavior: Linking
Relationship Science and
Personality Assessment.
Parenting Websites -
Child Care
-
Behavior
Alison Gopnik: What do Babies Think? (youtube)
Michael Merzenich: The Elastic Brain (video)
Reticulon 4 Receptor
What Is It Like to Be a Baby: The Development of Thought (youtube)
Yale Course (PSYC 110)
Plasticity (brain changes) -
Pre-Born Development
Interpersonal intelligence
-
People Smart
Witness -
Kay Kay: The Girl from Guangzhou China growing up in a one child
family (youtube) - Her final words are my favorite.
Influences of Sibling Relationships -
Sibling
influences on Childhood Development
Fear is not a good
teaching
method. There are other methods that can help make someone
aware of danger without using
scare tactics?
Children instinctively know there is a
lot they don’t know, so children have to ask questions. Some
children average more than a hundred questions every hour, but
not all of those questions are expressed verbally. Children
between the ages of 3 and 5 could ask up to 40,000 questions.
And how these questions are answered is extremely important,
extremely important.
The less we know, the worse we are at processing new
information, and the worse we are at asking the right questions.
Intellectual exploration is extremely important, and knowing
what questions to ask and how to ask them, are the keys to a
successful journey. Knowledge doesn’t just fill our brains up;
it makes our brains work better.
When
do you know enough?
Asking questions is a
extremely important process for learning, so never
discourage a child's need to learn.
Never discourage a child's need for answers.
Questioning is one
the most important skills to have, because a child needs to learn. But
sometimes, you have to be very careful when you give an answer to a child's question.
Sometimes you also need to know the reasons why the child is asking the
question, because the child may need more information then
originally thought. You also want to
teach a child how to find
answers on their own, and teach them that
the process of looking for answers may reveal even more
important questions, and also reveal even more answers then they
were originally seeking. When you're looking for answers on your
own you sometimes discover a lot more, a lot more then you would
if someone just gave you the answer. Having the ability to find
answers on your own gives you a lot more freedom, and a lot more
power. Though getting answers to your questions very quickly is
extremely valuable, sometimes when something is just given to
you, you run
the risk of not valuing that certain something. When you
have to work for something, you value that something a lot more,
because you worked for it. This is not to say that all work is
valuable, just the work that is
proven to be valuable. You also want to teach children about
when to get a
second opinion. There is a thin line between
Trust and
Gullible.
Infantilizing is to treat (someone) as a child or in a way that denies their
maturity in age or experience.
When growing up
there are 1,000's of things that make you the person that you
currently are. Things like the relationships with
family and friends, learning and reading, tragic moments,
inspiring moments, just to name a few. You have a behavior that
you can't fully explain, or, be fully aware at times.
Personal Childhood Experiences
Here are just some of the things I believed influenced me and
made me the person I am today. The significance of these moments
is hard to measure against all the different other things that
you are
exposed to during your entire
life. But it's good idea
to document as many
experiences as you can. This is a unique
type of learning.
When I was 3 years old, I was crying about one of my toys not
working, but my mother just sat by and just ignored me and kept reading her
book. So I eventually stopped crying. I guess that's when I learned that I
would have to figure out things on my own. So does sympathy
spoil
a child and effect their ability to
cope? When is the right time
and place to ignore a child in need?
Growing up in a
neighborhood is a great experience. But even neighborhood families can
still experience suffering.
I was sexually molested at the age of
10 years old. My 16 year old sister committed suicide when I was 12 years
old. I suffered from acne my whole life. My parents decided to get a
divorce when I was 16 years old. I dropped out of high school in my junior
year when I was 17 years old. I wandered for years until I was 48 years
old. That's when I started
BK101.
Another
break through moment in my life was when I was around 15. I
decided that I was not going to let my father upset me anymore,
or get under my skin with his
verbal abuse and
ignorant and
disrespectable behavior. I will never forget that moment, it was
the most
peaceful epiphany that I have ever experience, it was
like a religious moment with my soul. Not to say that I always
remembered what I learned, but most of the time I did, and it was
beautiful. But that was just with my father. I did not know how
to apply that same knowledge to other people in my life. So I still
became
angry and upset with other peoples ignorant behavior.
And just because you don't let peoples ignorance upset you, this
does not solve the problem or does it keep ignorant people from continuing
the abuse or from abusing other people. So you just can't ignore peoples
ignorance. You have to find ways to help educate people and you have to
find ways to
communicate more constructively
with people, which means you have to educate yourself as well. A parent is
supposed to give emotional support and provide a safe environment. If not,
relationships degrade. It was sad to see
that my father enjoyed
antagonizing me. And I knew that it was mostly from his upbringing in
the 30's, 40's and 50's, and also how he reacted to his relationship with
his parents. So I
forgave him
and I still do. I have no Father Wound to heal because I have
educated myself and now know that
knowledge sets you free. I no longer suffer
from my ignorance or
blame
others for their
ignorance, or
blame myself for my
own ignorance.
Live, Learn, Love
and Progress.
Estrange is to
arouse
hostility or show lack of
understanding towards someone,
when there should be
love,
affection,
compassion
and friendliness. A person who is
no longer close or affectionate to
someone. A stranger;
Alienated.
My father and mother were not unusual people or typical people.
They were just people doing their best with the information that they were
given and with their understanding of the personal experiences that they
had in life, which is everyone on the planet. Some people are unusual,
some people are typical, and most people are somewhere in between.
Freedom is great and absolutely
necessary, but without
guidance,
instructions and
knowledge, having freedom can be more
problematic because you will make a lot more mistakes that you don't need
to make, and you will also suffer and struggle a lot more.
When I was around 16, I was working on my car and became
extremely frustrated. But at that moment I decided not to get
angry anymore during these circumstances, and I never forgot that moment. Now when things were not
going my way, instead of having an angry outburst, or becoming
completely frustrated, I would just step back, pause and take a
break, and then calmly solve the problem. That's when I realize that anger doesn't help. You can
still be passionate about things, but
anger is a total waste of
time and energy.
And anger doesn't even benefit you in a fight, that's how
worthless anger is. What a relief to let that go. Strength is
not only physical, strength is mostly mental. But later in life
I realized that not all my anger and frustration was totally
gone. Some people were still the source of
anger and
frustration. But
when I became exposed to someone with
mental
illness, I realized that everyone has some degree of mental
illness, even myself. So one day when I was 53, I was exposed to
another mental breakdown from a friend who suffers from mental
health problems. But instead of getting angry or upset with that persons
outrageous behavior,
I calmly talked to the person, so I did not make the situation
worse, like I have done in the past. This was a break through. Not
only did my friend recover more quickly, I also was not traumatized or
full of anger. I was now calm, happy and free from any kind of
stress. An epiphany that I wish I had when I was younger. That
would have saved me from many sleepless nights, and also saved
me from wasting time feeling angry and miserable about other
people. Things don't have to turn ugly or violent.
I
grew up in a large family where everyone had to pretty much
fend for themselves.
That is where some of my selfishness comes from and still lingers in my
subconscious. That's one of the reasons why I'm not a good host. It's hard
to think of others when you have been conditioned to focus on survival,
and also, the fact that no one ever taught me how to be a good host and
why it's important. And even though many years have passed, that behavior still
surfaces now and then. But I am getting better, mostly because I'm a lot
more aware and a lot
more knowledgeable then I use
to be.
Love is
the next big moment. When I can finally have love rule my heart,
to me, that will be
success. But of course it's more then just Love. It's the
accumulated effect of good knowledge, good information, and the
perfect balance of both good and bad experiences. Love does not
mean that you are a pushover. Love is the guide. And that guide
is not alone in the decision making process. You still need good
knowledge, good information, and the perfect balance of both
good and bad experiences. Love is the guide, protect the guide.
"In order to recover and
preserve normal learning abilities, you have
to use other
Learning Methods that
allow information and knowledge to enter the brain where it can
be correctly processed."
Parents have to realize that they
are the most important teacher in their child's life, and
sometimes they are the only teacher that matters. Teaching by example is
incredibly difficult, especially with the numerous bad examples that are
surrounding kids today. You need to weed out the bad examples, even if
you're one of them. So where are the good examples? Find these good
examples together, and explain why they're good examples, and explain how
difficult being a good example is.
Teaching Methods.
Gifted - Precocious Advanced Learners
Giftedness is an
intellectual ability significantly
higher than average.
Gifted is to be
endowed with talent or talents or a
natural ability or quality. A person who possesses unusual innate
ability in some field or activity.
Child Prodigy is defined as a person under the age
of ten who produces meaningful output in some
domain to the level of an
adult
expert performer.
Prodigy is an unusually gifted or
intelligent young person or someone whose
talents excite wonder and admiration. An impressive or wonderful example
of a particular
quality.
Savant Syndrome is a condition in which a
person with a developmental disability, such as an autism spectrum
disorder, demonstrates profound and prodigious capacities or abilities far
in excess of what would be considered normal.
Acquired Savant Syndrome is when a person acquires prodigious
capabilities or skills following a
head injury or severe blow to the head,
or other disturbances like dementia. Dormant Potential.
The Acquired Savant
| A Really Great Big Story (youtube)
Precocity is when
Intelligence is achieved far
ahead of normal developmental schedules.
Overachievement are individuals who "perform better or achieve more
success than expected complete tasks above and beyond expectations and who
set very high career goals for themselves.
Underachiever is a person and especially a student who fails to
achieve his or her potential or does not do as well as expected. (Not
their fault)
Mature Minor Doctrine (wiki)
Gifted Education is education of children who have
been identified as gifted or talented.
Gifted Study.
Grade Skipping is a form of academic acceleration,
often used for academically talented students, that involves the student
entirely skipping the curriculum of one year of school. This is done when
a student is sufficiently advanced in all school subjects, so that he or
she can move forward in all subjects, rather than in only one or two
areas.
Personalized Education
Academic Acceleration is the advancement of gifted
students in subjects at a rate that places them ahead of where they would
be in the regular school curriculum. Because it provides students with
level-appropriate material, academic acceleration has been described as a
"fundamental need" for gifted students.
Education Reform
(improving education)
Gifted Children -
Gifted Children
Talented & Gifted -
Gifted Development
Stepping Stone School
Thinking to Learn
The
Association of the Gifted
Gifted and Talented
Rasch Model is a
psychometric model for
analyzing categorical data, such as answers to questions on a reading
assessment or questionnaire responses, as a function of the trade-off
between (a) the respondent's abilities, attitudes, or personality traits
and (b) the item difficulty.
Rasch Analysis.
Council
on Measurement in Education
Birmingham Grid of Learning
Robinson Center Transition School
for young Scholars
Beautiful Young Minds (youtube) -
BBC2 2007 -
You need to learn more then Math.
DOCS: The World's
Cleverest Child and Me (youtube)
Twice Exceptional, often abbreviated as 2e, has only
recently entered educators' lexicon and refers to intellectually gifted
children who have some form of disability. These children are considered
exceptional both because of their intellectual gifts and because of their
special needs.
Indigo Children are children who are believed to
possess special, unusual, and sometimes
supernatural traits or
abilities.
There is no standard global definition of what a gifted student is.
"You're not binary, you can be decent and gifted at the same time"
Standardized Tests for Gifted Programs
Testing Mom -
Testing Awareness
Gifted Education Teacher
-
Gifted Education
Gifted and Talented Education Program (GATE)
Education for the Gifted and Talented Certificate
National
Association for Gifted Children
Psychometrics
(wiki)
Kid Science Challenge
Posit Science
National Lab Day
National Academy of Sciences
Science Tools
The Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth
The Study of
Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY)
The
Munich Longitudinal Study of Giftedness
Duke Talent Program
identifying academically gifted students and providing them with
opportunities to support their development.
How to Raise a Genius: Lessons from a 45-year study of Super-Smart
Children A long-running investigation of exceptional children reveals
what it takes to produce the scientists who will lead the twenty-first
century.
Brainy Child
Human Brain Knowledge Brain Pop
Brain Metrix
Brain Storm USA
Unschooling
Connect a Million Minds Connect for Kids
Bright Kids NYC
Whole Child Education
Van Damme Academy
Harlem Children Zone
Belin-Blank Center - Gifted Education & Talent Development
Creativity
-
Educational Toys -
Bullying
Ability Grouping
places students of similar skills and abilities in the same classes.
Acceleration is most commonly known as
grade skipping, subject acceleration, or early admission into kindergarten
or college, gives students the chance access opportunities earlier or progress more rapidly.
Special Needs - Special Education - Disabilities
Special Needs describes individuals who require
assistance for disabilities that may be medical,
mental or
psychological.
Special Needs -
Challenged Child
-
Long
Term Care -
Occupational Therapist
Disability is an
impairment that may be cognitive, developmental, intellectual, mental,
physical, sensory, or some combination of these. It substantially affects
a person's life activities and may be present from birth or occur during a
person's lifetime. There are more than
one billion
people in the world experience some form of disability.
Disability (gov) -
Disability Benefits
-
Disability
Insurance
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 is a civil
rights law that prohibits discrimination based on disability. It affords
similar protections against discrimination to Americans with disabilities
as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which made discrimination based on race,
religion, sex, national origin, and other characteristics illegal. In
addition, unlike the Civil Rights Act, the ADA also requires covered
employers to provide reasonable accommodations to employees with
disabilities, and imposes accessibility requirements on public
accommodations.
ADA -
ADA.
List of Disabilities (wiki)
-
Disorders
What Are Learning Disabilities? (youtube)
Intellectual Disability is characterized by
significantly impaired intellectual and adaptive functioning. It is
defined by an
IQ under 70, in
addition to deficits in two or more
adaptive behaviors that affect everyday, general living. Intellectual
disability affects about 2–3% of the general population. Seventy-five to
ninety percent of the affected people have mild intellectual disability.
Non-syndromic, or idiopathic cases account for 30–50% of these cases.
About a quarter of cases are caused by a genetic disorder, and about 5% of
cases are inherited from a person's parents. Cases of unknown cause affect
about 95 million people as of 2013.
American
Association on Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities (AAIDD)
Genetic Study Identifies 14 new Developmental Disorders in Children.
Learning difficulties due to poor connectivity, not specific brain regions.
Fragile X syndrome neurons restored using CRISPR/Cas9-guided activation
strategy. Fragile X syndrome is the most frequent cause of
intellectual disability in males, affecting 1 out of 3600 boys born. For
the first time, researchers have restored activity to the
Fragile X Syndrome gene in affected neurons using a modified
CRISPR/Cas9 system that
removes the methylation -- the molecular tags that keep the mutant gene
shut off -- suggesting that this method may be useful for targeting
diseases caused by abnormal methylation. Fragile X syndrome is caused by
mutations in the FMR1 gene on the X chromosome, which prevent the gene's
expression. This absence of the FMR1-encoded protein during brain
development has been shown to cause the overexcitability in neurons
associated with the syndrome.
Savant-like skills exposed in normal people by suppressing the
left fronto-temporal lobe -
Brain
Plasticity
I believe that eventually people will have the ability to
Selectively De-Activate Parts of their Brain, or Turn Off Areas
of their Brain that interfere with the processing of certain
information, without using
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation or
Electrical Brain Stimulation. They would be able to
accomplish this by using
mediation, or a
cognitive exercise or a particular
brain
food. This way everyone will have the same
abilities of a
Savant
or of a
Gifted Person,
and become a
Prodigy in their chosen career.
Savant Skills (PDF) -
Absolute Pitch (PDF)
Maldevelopment is the state of an organism or an organization that did
not develop in the "normal" way.
Microcephaly (wiki)
The
Rat People of Pakistan (microcephalics)
Neurodevelopmental Disorder are impairments of the growth
and development of the brain or central nervous system. A narrower use of
the term refers to a disorder of brain function that affects emotion,
learning ability, self-control and memory and that unfolds as the
individual grows.
Zika
Virus (wiki)
DNA -
Genetics - 8 million children born
with genetic defects every year.
Special Olympics let me be myself, a champion (video & Text)
Special Needs Resources NYC
Roberto d Angelo Francesca Fedeli: Baby's illness (video)
Learning Disability is a classification that
includes several areas of functioning in which a person has
difficulty
learning in a typical manner, usually caused by an unknown factor or
factors. Given the "difficulty learning in a typical manner", this does
not exclude the ability to learn in a different manner. Therefore, some
people can be more accurately described as having a "Learning Difference",
thus avoiding any misconception of being disabled with a lack of ability
to learn and possible negative stereotyping.
National Center for Learning Disabilities
Learning Disabilities Association of America
Dibels Dynamic Measurement Group
Progress Monitoring Outcomes-Driven Model (PDF)
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (wiki)
Developmental Disability is a diverse group of
chronic conditions that are due to mental or physical impairments.
Developmental disabilities cause individuals living with them many
difficulties in certain areas of life, especially in "language, mobility,
learning, self-help, and independent living".
Developmentally Disabled (wiki)
Developmental Disorder is a group of psychiatric
conditions originating in childhood that involve serious impairment in
different areas. These disorders comprise language disorders, learning
disorders, motor disorders and autism spectrum disorders. In broader
definitions ADHD is included, and the term used is neurodevelopmental
disorders.
Williams Syndrome is a microdeletion syndrome caused by the
spontaneous deletion of genetic material from the region q11.23 of a
chromosome 7, so that the person is hemizygous for those genes. The
deleted region includes more than 25 genes, and
researchers believe that being hemizygous for these genes probably
contributes to the characteristic features of this disorder.
Microdeletion Syndrome is a syndrome caused by a chromosomal deletion
smaller than 5 million base pairs (5 Mb) spanning several genes that is
too small to be detected by conventional cytogenetic methods or high
resolution karyotyping (2–5 Mb). Detection is done by fluorescence
in situ hybridization (FISH). Larger chromosomal deletion syndromes are
detectable using
karyotyping techniques.
Karyotype is the number and appearance of
chromosomes in the
nucleus of a
eukaryotic cell.
The term is also used for the complete set of chromosomes in a species or
in an individual organism and for a test that detects this complement or
measures the number.
Alpha-thalassemia Mental Retardation Syndrome (wiki)
Arrested Development
is when mental development has slowed or stopped.
Assessment Flaws
(observer effects)
Sometimes the most perfect
person for the job is not the most perfect person, but for that particular
job, they're perfect. Sometimes we perceive imperfections as hindrances,
when in fact they are a perfect ability under some unique circumstances.
Individualized Education Program education that is
tailored to the individual student's needs to help the student learn more
effectively.
Rehabilitation Counseling is helping people who have
disabilities achieve their personal, career, and independent living goals
through a
counseling process.
Special Education is the practice of educating
students with special educational needs in a way that addresses their
individual differences and needs. Ideally, this process involves the
individually planned and systematically monitored arrangement of teaching
procedures, adapted equipment and materials, and accessible settings.
These interventions are designed to help learners with special needs
achieve a higher level of personal self-sufficiency and success in school
and their community, than may be available if the student were only given
access to a typical classroom education.
Compensatory Education
are supplementary programs or services designed to help
children at risk of cognitive impairment and low educational achievement
succeed.
Personalized Education
Psychology
Mental Health Care for Children
American
Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry
Mental Health Websites
Brain Balance Centers
Disadvantaged Youth
Eye Writer Invention (youtube)
Spinal Cord
Avaz
Children with Disabilities
Children with Disabilities
Disabled
Children’s Relief Fund
Sheltered Workshop refers to an organization or
environment that employs people with disabilities separately from others.
Production Unlimited
Handicapped Children Association
Learning Methods
Special Education Resources
Special Education Programs
Department of Developmental Services
Devereux
Special Education
Blind (sight problems and
testing)
Deaf
(hearing problems)
Special Needs Trust is a trust designed for
beneficiaries with disabilities, either physically or mentally challenged.
It is written so the beneficiary can enjoy the use of property that is
held in the trust for his or her benefit, while at the same time allowing
the beneficiary to receive essential needs-based government benefits.
Council for Exceptional Children
Learning Disabilities Online
Pacer
Technical Assistance Alliance
Special Needs Intervention and Customized Therapies
Applied Learning Processes
Physically Challenged Competitions
6.5 million now receiving some kind of special education
service at an estimated cost of $74 billion a year
Child Abandonment
is the practice of relinquishing interests and claims
over one's offspring in an extralegal way with the intent of never again
resuming or reasserting them. Causes include many social and cultural
factors as well as mental illness. An abandoned child is called a
foundling (as opposed to a runaway or an orphan).
Baby dumping refers to
parents abandoning or discarding a child younger than 12 months in a
public or private place with the intent of disposing of them. It is also
known as rehoming.
Ct Child Law
-
Child Abuse.
Intrapersonal intelligence
(self smart) -
Teaching Resources
-
Memory
-
Elderly Care
-
Disabled Care
Service Animal are working animals that have been trained to perform
tasks that assist disabled people. Service animals may also be referred to
as assistance animals, assist animals, or helper animals depending on the
country and the animal's function. Dogs are the most common service
animals, assisting people in many different ways since at least 1927.
Other animals such as horses are allowed per the ADA in the U.S. The
service animal is not required by the Americans with Disabilities Act to
wear a vest, ID tag or a specific harness.
Working Animal is an animal, usually domesticated, that is kept by
humans and trained to perform tasks. They may be pets or draft animals
trained to achieve certain tasks, such as guide dogs, assistance dogs,
draft horses, or logging elephants. Those whose tasks include pulling
loads are called draught animals or draft animals. Most working animals
are either service animals or draft animals. They may also be used for
milking or herding. Some, at the end of their working lives, may also be
used for meat or other products such as leather.
Autism
Autism characterized by impaired social interaction,
verbal and non-verbal communication, and restricted and repetitive behavior.
High-Functioning Autism is a term applied to people with autism who
are deemed to be cognitively "higher functioning" (with an IQ of 70 or
greater) than other people with autism.
Savant Syndrome
is a condition in which a person with a developmental disability, such as
an autism spectrum disorder, demonstrates profound and prodigious
capacities or abilities far in excess of what would be considered normal.
Ami Klin: New way to Diagnose Autism (video)
Autism study suggests connection between repetitive behaviors, gut
problems. The study found that increased severity of other autism
symptoms was also associated with more severe constipation, stomach pain
and other gut difficulties.
Gut Health
(microbial balance).
How the Gut
Microbiome affects the Brain and Mind (youtube)
Antibiotics -
Propionic Acid (wiki) -
Clostridia (wiki) -
Vancomycin (wiki)
How I use Minecraft to help kids with Autism: Stuart Duncan (video and
text).
Autism Spectrum is a range of conditions classified
as neurodevelopmental disorders. Individuals diagnosed with autism
spectrum disorder present with two types of symptoms: problems in social
communication and social interaction, and restricted, repetitive patterns
of behavior, interests or activities. Symptoms are typically recognized
between one and two years of age. Long term issue may include creating and
keeping relationships, maintaining a job, and performing daily tasks.
Delayed Processing in Autism.
Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule is an
instrument for diagnosing and assessing autism. The protocol consists of a
series of structured and semi-structured tasks that involve social
interaction between the examiner and the subject. The examiner observes
and identifies segments of the subject's behavior and assigns these to
predetermined observational categories. Categorized observations are
subsequently combined to produce quantitative scores for analysis.
Research-determined cut-offs identify the potential diagnosis of classic
autistic disorder or related autism spectrum disorders, allowing a
standardized assessment of autistic symptoms. The Autism Diagnostic
Interview-Revised (ADI-R), a companion instrument, is a structured
interview conducted with the parents of the referred individual and covers
the subject's full developmental history.
Bandit Robot
The Reason I Jump:
13-Year-Old Boy with Autism
(Book)
Life, Animated
learned how to communicate with the outside world through his
love of Disney
films.
Mind Spark
Autism Speaks
Autism Letter (image)
Autism and Dog Therapy -
Pet Therapy
Rock your Speech uses music to overcome a speech
disorder associated with autism spectrum
Applied Behavior Analysis
-
Teaching Methods
Kids Who Beat Autism (n.y.times)
Autism Therapy on Glass helps with identifying emotions.
Neurolex uses
speech-analysis software to detect signs of autism, schizophrenia, and
depression.
Affinity Therapy -
Processing (computers)
1 in 88 US Children are Afflicted with
Autism–an
increase of 25% between 2006-2008. On March 29, 2012,
the CDC reported
startling evidence: the number of children diagnosed
with autism
in the United States increased 25% between 2006
and 2008.
The autism rate jumped from 1 in 100 (2006) to 1 in 88
children (2008). The autism rate is even higher for
boys: one in 54
compared to girls, one in 252. Girls with autism have
different behaviors then boys with autism. Why?
Prenatal testing has halved the number of babies born with Down syndrome
in Europe, study finds. A new study finds that the growth of prenatal
screening in Europe has reduced the number of babies being born per year
with Down syndrome (DS) by an average of 54 percent. Southern Europe had
the highest reduction in DS births due to pregnancy terminations (71%),
followed by Northern Europe (51%) and Eastern Europe (38%). There were,
however, considerable differences among countries, ranging from no
reduction in the percentage of babies being born with DS in Malta, where
pregnancy termination is highly restricted, to an 83% reduction in Spain.
GABA Neurotransmitter
is the chief inhibitory neurotransmitter in the developmentally mature
mammalian central nervous system. Its principal role is reducing neuronal
excitability throughout the nervous system. In humans, GABA is also
directly responsible for the regulation of muscle tone.
Brain Stimulation.
Autism Update Report (PDF)
Autism Awareness Day 2016 - A Simple Test (youtube)
Weighted Blankets
Non-Speaking Autism
Gordy Baylinson Nonspeaking Autism Letter (image)
Neurotypical is a neologism widely used in the
autistic community as a label for people who are not on the autism
spectrum.
Some Children can 'Recover' from Autism, but problems often remain, study
finds.
Autism and the Smell of Fear. Odors that carry social cues seem to
affect volunteers on the autism spectrum differently. Autism typically
involves the inability to read social cues. But new research suggests that
the
sense of smell may
also play a central role in autism. The autistic volunteers did not
display an inability to read the
olfactory social cues in
smell,
but rather they
misread them.
Potential New Autism Drug Shows Promise in Mice. NitroSynapsin is
intended to restore an electrical signaling imbalance in the
brain found in virtually all forms of autism
spectrum disorder (ASD).
Exposure to Specific Toxic Metals and Nutrients During Late Pregnancy and
Early Life Correlated With Autism Risk. Mount Sinai found that
differences in the uptake of multiple toxic and essential elements over
the second and third trimesters and early postnatal periods are associated
with the risk of developing autism spectrum disorders (ASD), according to
a study published June 1 in the journal Nature Communications. The
critical developmental windows for the observed discrepancies varied for
each element, suggesting that systemic dysregulation of environmental
pollutants and dietary elements may serve an important role in ASD. In
addition to identifying specific environmental factors that influence
risk, the study also pinpointed developmental time periods when elemental
dysregulation poses the biggest risk for autism later in life. Previous
research indicates that fetal and early childhood exposure to
toxic metals and deficiencies
of
nutritional elements are
linked with several adverse developmental outcomes, including intellectual
disability and language, attentional, and behavioral problems. “We found
significant divergences in metal uptake between ASD-affected children and
their healthy siblings, but only during discrete developmental periods,”
“Specifically, the siblings with ASD had higher uptake of the neurotoxin
lead, and reduced uptake of the essential elements manganese and zinc,
during late pregnancy and the first few months after birth, as evidenced
through analysis of their baby teeth. During fetal and childhood
development, a new tooth layer is formed every week or so, leaving an
“imprint” of the micro chemical composition from each unique layer, which
provides a chronological record of exposure.
Brain
Maintenance
-
Brain Injuries
Researchers Link Autism To A System That Insulates Brain Wiring.
Brains affected by autism appear to share a difference in cells that make
myelin, the insulating coating
surrounding nerve fibers that controls the speed at which the fibers
convey electrical signals. A myelin-related transcriptomic profile is
shared by Pitt–Hopkins syndrome models and human autism spectrum disorder.
Cognitive Dysfunction
are a category of mental health disorders that primarily
affect learning, memory, perception, and problem solving, and include
amnesia, dementia, and delirium.
Cognitive Testing.
Abnormality Behavior
is something deviating from the normal or differing from the typical, is a
subjectively defined behavioral characteristic, assigned to those with
rare or dysfunctional conditions. Behavior is considered abnormal when it
is atypical, out of the ordinary, causes some kind of impairment, or
consists of undesirable behavior. Who is normal or abnormal is a
contentious issue in abnormal psychology.
Emotional and Behavioral Disorders refer to a disability
classification used in educational settings that allows educational
institutions to provide special education and related services to students
that have poor social or academic adjustment that cannot be better
explained by biological abnormalities or a developmental disability. The
classification is often given to students that need individualized
behavior supports to receive a free and appropriate public education, but
would not be eligible for an individualized education program under
another disability category of the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA).
Giving mums and
dads the skills to become "super parents" can dramatically improve their
child's autism, a long-term study has shown. In the training, parents
watched films of themselves playing with their child while a therapist
gave precise tips for helping their child communicate.
Parent-mediated social communication therapy for young children with
autism (PACT): long-term follow-up of a randomised controlled trial.
100-Year-Old Drug Produces Temporary Improved Learning Skills In Autistic
Children. Tests of suramin on mice that display behavior analogous to
autism have shown a reversal of some symptoms, inspiring Naviaux to test
on humans. In Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, Naviaux
reports the boys who received the infusion all showed significant changes,
developing better language and coping skills, with social behavior more
similar to neurotypical children of the same age. The boys given the
suramin were assessed as having a fall of 1.6 points on the Autism
Diagnostic Observation Schedule test, where a child is classified as
autistic with a score of 9 or above. The scores for the boys given the
placebos did not change. Some of the effects were remarkably rapid. The
parents of a 14-year-old-boy who had not spoken a complete sentence in 12
years said in a statement: "Within an hour after the infusion, he started
to make more eye contact with the doctor and nurses in the room....We saw
our son advance almost three years in development in just six weeks." Two
previously non-verbal children given the suramin spoke their first
sentences within a week. Naviaux stressed treatment is more than a matter
of providing an infusion. Instead the suramin “removed the roadblocks,”
allowing children to benefit from enrichment programs and speech therapy.
However, the effects did not last, and over weeks the participants largely
returned to their previous behaviors.
Suramin is a
medication used to treat African sleeping sickness and river blindness. It
is the treatment of choice for sleeping sickness without central nervous
system involvement. It is given by injection into a vein. Suramin causes a
fair number of side effects. Common side effects include nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, headache, skin tingling, and weakness. Sore palms of the hands
and soles of the feet, trouble seeing, fever, and abdominal pain may also
occur. Severe side effects may include low blood pressure, decreased level
of consciousness, kidney problems, and low blood cell levels. It is
unclear if it is safe when
breastfeeding. Suramin was made at least as early as 1916. It is on
the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, the most
effective and safe medicines needed in a health system. In the United
States it can be acquired from the Center for Disease Control (CDC). The
cost of the medication for a course of treatment is about 27 USD. In
regions of the world where the disease is common suramin is provided for
free by the World Health Organization.
Teaching Special Needs
Every school needs to teach special needs to every
student. This would help students understand what special needs
means, and, this would also help students learn all the
ways they can help people with disabilities, especially
knowing that every person has some form of a disability. This would
require every student to spend time with a special needs
person. Helping people who need extra help has to be a
whole school effort, as well as a community effort. This
is the real meaning of "No Child Left Behind."
"Any form of
Segregation will always have it's problems."
Isolation -
Classroom Management -
Learning Methods
"I don't see people as having
learning disabilities, I see them having temporary learning
inabilities."
Inabilities is
lacking the skills (especially mental skills) required to do
something or get something done.
Lack of ability (especially mental ability) to do something.
Lacking the power to perform.
Impairment. Something immaterial that interferes with or delays
action or progress.
I think that everyone is
Autistic to a certain degree and that Autistic people have the
highest degree of this brain impairment so it's easier to notice. We know that the brain
is not broken, we just haven't figured it out exactly how our
brains work so that we can help autistic people utilize the
brain, and train the brain to do what the brain needs to do in
order to function accurately and effectively. So I believe that
autism will someday soon teach everyone how the brain works and
how we can correct any malfunctions that happen along the way.
We can learn a lot from our impairments. People with
disabilities are just as important as everyone else on the
planet. There is something about struggle. When we struggle we
see things and feel things that we never would have experienced
unless we were struggling. But even though I don't believe that
struggle is necessary for learning, or that you will always
learn something from struggling, what I do believe is that if
you do find yourself struggling, just remember that you could be
learning something important, so keep your mind open, or you
might just miss an opportunity of a lifetime.
"
I believe that one day we will see people with disabilities as
gifts from God. Without them, we would have never learned all the things
that we did. The same thing with diseases. Without diseases we would have
never realized how vulnerable we are, or how many dangers there are. We
owe the world to these people."
When we design for disability, we all benefit: Elise Roy (video and
interactive text)
Florida Teacher Starts Each Day Complimenting Students One by
One (youtube)
Normal is being approximately average or within certain limits in e.g.
intelligence and development. In accordance with scientific
laws.
The actions and activities assigned to or required or expected
of a person or group. Some one with good reasoning skills and
good awareness. Carry out or perform an action. Perform as
expected when applied, Carry out a process or program.
Serve a purpose, role, or function.
Norm.
Standard is a basis for comparison; a reference point against which other
things can be evaluated. The ideal in terms of which something
can be judged. Established or well-known or widely recognized as
a model of authority or excellence.
Struggle is an energetic attempt to achieve something. Make a strenuous
effort or labored effort at a mental or physical task. Working
hard.
Effort
is earnest and conscientious activity intended to do or accomplish
something. Use of physical or mental energy; hard work.
A series of actions for advancing.
It's Not Easy Teaching Special Ed.
Joy in the classroom has been sucked out by ignorant
administrators, who care more about paperwork then people. So
even the kids who need the most help are being suffocated by
administrated politics from ignorant people who have no right
being involved in the
education process, or any process it seems.
People with Disabilities are Gifts from God.
The special education student
population in Connecticut is rising,
even though the total public school population is on the
decline. Last year, 68,445 students in the state received
special education services. That is up about 2,300 students — or
3.4 percent — since the 2007-08 school year. The overall school
population has been on the decline since 2004 and last year
stood at 542,236. In Connecticut, more boys than girls are
identified for special education. 2012-13, the last year for
which national figures are available. In that year, 6,429,331
students nationwide were getting special education services.
Here is a breakdown of the
disabilities that make up the special education in Connecticut
public schools in 2014-15: Intellectual disability, 2,380 0.5%
-
Speech or language impairment, 10,058, 1.9 % -
Emotional disturbance, 5,400, 1% -
Autism, 7,778, 1.5 % -
Other health impairments, 13,946, 2.6 % -
Specific learning disability, 23,416, 4.4% -
All other disabilities, 5,457, 1%.
Learning Specialist
Learning Specialist is an educator who is skilled and
experienced in providing
learning strategies to students who
struggle with learning differences. These educators work
one-on-one or in small groups to give students intensive support
that meets their
individual needs.
A Learning Specialist may assist
a family in any of the following ways:
Conduct observations of the student in his/her work environment
to identify problem areas.
Review previous assessments of a student to formulate a learning
plan.
Identify research-based therapies that will benefit the
student’s unique learning differences.
Use the above therapies to provide remediation to close any gaps
that a student may have in his or her reading, writing or math
skills.
Work cooperatively with teachers to help them understand how
students learn.
Guide parents and teachers to resources which may benefit the
student.
Prekindergarten substantially reduces the likelihood that
students will end up in special education programs later on
Children do best in school when they have a team of
committed
adults supporting them. This is true for all children but it is
especially true for children who have psychiatric or learning
disorders. Get to know the many professionals who are available
to help your child.
Guide to Learning Specialists
Homework Helper provides structure and support to children who
have trouble working on their own. They are particularly beneficial for children who struggle with executive functioning
skills like organization, planning, and controlling
impulsivity.
Study Help
Make sure that the Homework is beneficial and valuable, and not
just about school testing
Tutor is knowledgeable in a particular subject area in school.
Tutors offer individualized attention to students who benefit
from more education and practice in a subject or need help
getting caught up on material.
Tutoring.
Learning Specialist - Educational
Therapist: These professionals, who often hold a master's degree, are
trained to evaluate and aid children with learning disabilities.
They work with you, your child, and your child's school to
develop strategies to compensate for any learning deficits. They
often work with children one-on-one to develop skills the child
finds particularly challenging. The Association of Educational
Therapists (AET) can steer you towards qualified therapists.
Educational Therapy
is a form of therapy used to treat individuals with
learning differences,
disabilities, and challenges. This form of
therapy offers a wide range of intensive interventions that are designed
to remediate learning problems. These interventions are individualized and
unique to the specific learner.
School Counselor: School counselors are educators with a master's degree in school
counseling. They work
with students on their academic, personal, and college and career
development needs. The American School Counselor Association has more
information.
Advising (career counseling).
School Psychologist: School psychologists are trained in psychology and education and
receive a Specialist in School Psychology (SSP) degree. They can
identify learning and
behavior problems, evaluate students for
special education services, and support social, emotional, and
behavioral health. The National Association of School
Psychologists has more information.
School
Psychology is a field that applies principles of
educational psychology, developmental psychology, clinical psychology,
community psychology, and applied behavior analysis to meet children's and
adolescents' behavioral health and learning needs in a collaborative
manner with educators and parents.
Social Worker: A licensed social worker has a master's degree, which involves 2
years of post-graduate training, and can perform psychotherapy
and other interventions but can't prescribe medications. MSW is
the common designation for masters in social work; LCSW means
"licensed clinical social worker," and requires a clinician to
have significant supervised clinical experience after graduate
school. The National Association of Social Workers provides
tools for locating help.
Services for the Public.
Special Education Itinerant
Teacher (SEIT): A SEIT is a teaching specialist who helps children with
behavioral, social/emotional, speech, language, or developmental
issues integrate successfully into the classroom. A SEIT works
with children one-on-one in the classroom or at home, and has a master's
degree in special education, psychology, social work, or counseling.
Itinerant Teacher are traveling schoolteachers. They
are sometimes specialized to work in the trades, healthcare, or the field
of special education, sometimes providing individual tutoring.
Paraprofessional (Para): Paraprofessionals are trained to assist teachers and special
educators, but they do not have a
professional license. Paras
frequently work with students who have special education needs in a
variety of positions including classroom aide, tutor, and inclusion
assistant.
Paraprofessional Educator (wiki).
Special Education Attorney: An attorney who specializes in
special education law. Special
educational attorneys can be hired or consulted if you are
having trouble accessing educational services for your child.
They can help you throughout the IEP
process and represent you at a hearing when there is a conflict
about what your child is entitled to and how the school should
provide it.
Law Knowledge.
Neuropsychologist: Neuropsychologists are
psychologists who specialize in the
functioning of the brain and how it relates to behavior and
cognitive ability. Most have completed post-doctoral training in
neuropsychology. They may have either a PhD or
a PsyD. Pediatric neuropsychologists have done post-doctoral
training in testing and evaluation.
Neuropsychology behaviors directly related to
brain
functioning.
They perform neuropsychological assessments, which measure a
child's strengths and weaknesses over a broad range of cognitive
tasks, and they provide parents with a report that highlights
those cognitive strengths and weakness, and forms the basis for
developing a treatment plan. The report also serves as evidence
for requesting school accommodations, and as a baseline for
measuring whether interventions are effective.
Neuropsychologists also work one-on-one with children struggling
in school, to help them devise learning strategies to build on
their strengths and compensate for their weaknesses.
Neuropsychologists who have passed national proficiency exams
are certified by the American Board of Professional
Psychologists-Neuropsychology or "ABPP-N."
Speech-Language - Hearing
Pathologist:
Audiologists and
speech-language pathologists conduct testing to
evaluate
language delays and
communication problems, and help
address deficits symptomatic of certain learning and
developmental disorders. These specialists can also identify
non-psychiatric causes of troubling behaviors and delays. The
American
Speech-Language-
Hearing Association (
ASHA) provides
information on that sort of testing and aid, and listings of
specialists across the country.
Oral Expression Listening Comprehension (PDF) -
Speech Pathology Services.
Student Affairs - Disability
Services: Every college and place of higher learning is required to offer
accommodations to qualifying students. Students can meet with a
representative from the school who coordinates accommodations at
the Student Affairs or
Disability Services office at their school.
"Using the raw materials of teaching
- time, space, things, and people - a teacher creates his
designs, arranging, ordering and reordering those ingredients of
education in a constant flow and in an intermingling way."
(Quoted from
Creative Teaching, Belmont, CA, Wadsworth, 1961. pg.71).
Differentiated Instruction is providing different students
with different avenues to
learning so that all students within a
classroom can learn effectively, regardless of differences in ability.
Child Development Books
Ages and Stages: A Parent's Guide to Normal Childhood Development Paperback – August 15, 2000 (amazon)
Parents Do Make a Difference: How to Raise Kids with Solid Character, Strong Minds, and Caring Hearts Paperback
May 7, 1999 (amazon)
Building Moral Intelligence: The Seven Essential Virtues that Teach Kids to Do the Right Thing Paperback
September 25, 2002 (amazon)
How to Raise a Human Being: a Parents' Guide to
Emotional Health from Infancy Through Adolescence Paperback
August, 1977 (amazon)
Positive Pushing: How to Raise a Successful and Happy Child Paperback – April 23, 2003 (amazon)
Your Child's Growing Mind: Brain Development and Learning From Birth to Adolescence Paperback –
May 25, 2004 (amazon)
Baby Minds: Brain-Building Games Your Baby Will Love Paperback – July 5, 2000 (amazon)
Child Development (8th Edition) Hardcover – July 28, 2008 (amazon)
The Scientist In The Crib: Minds, Brains, And How Children Learn Kindle Edition (amazon)
The Philosophical Baby: What Children's Minds Tell Us About Truth, Love, and the Meaning of
Life Paperback
July 6, 2010 (amazon)
Causal Learning: Psychology, Philosophy, and Computation (Oxford Series in Cognitive
Development) Hardcover
March 22, 2007 (amazon)
Causal Learning (google book)
Parent Hacks -
E-Books
Alison Gopnik (books)
Meaningful Differences
in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children
(amazon)
The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care was written by
Benjamin Spock, is a manual on infant and child care first published
in 1946.
What Your Kindergartner Needs to Know: Preparing Your Child for a Lifetime of Learning
(Core Knowledge Series) (amazon)
"Your children get only one childhood, so make it special."
Choose your
Children's Books
very wisely.
Children's Literature is for readers and listeners up to
about age 12.