T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
128.1 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:11 | 23 |
| I think one of Burton White's books has very elaborate charts about
such things, but it's really pretty meaningless. Development isn't
linear. Most kids are ahead of "average" in some areas, and behind in
others. And a kid who seems ahead (or behind) at age one may seem the
opposite at age three. Also, some kids have a style of starting an
activity (whether walking, reading or differential calculas) early, but
mastering it slowly; while another kid will start things late, but
master them very fast. I think the kind of generalized metric you seem
to want isn't possible.
Besides, even if available, there probably isn't much of anything you
could or should do with such information, anyway. Pre-schoolers
shouldn't be pushed to advance their intellectual skills; they push
themselves quite adequately, anyway. The "environment" they need to
develop emotional, social, physical, and cognative abilities is not
something that can or needs to be fine tuned to their particular
developmental level. I think any pre-school that tries to sell you on
their special stuff for gifted kids would be demonstrating marketing
savy, not worthwhile programs (just as I would reject any pre-school
that offers computer literacy for three year olds, as one near me
does!).
- Bruce
|
128.2 | Let them develop as they will | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:22 | 6 |
| A long time ago I asked my pedi for such a guide. She discouraged it because
she said I would be "measuring" Kati, and should not really try
to do that. Also, she has found that if a parent notices a child doing some-
thing "early," they will usually be real proud and try to encourage MORE of
it, when they should really be encouraging the skills that are "behind"
instead. Does that make sense?
|
128.3 | My take... | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Jul 13 1990 15:05 | 17 |
| .1 makes a lot of sense to me. While it's interesting to know at what
ages kids do certain things, to use it as a yardstick for "normal" or
advanced development would not benefit the child, particularly in the
early years. And to push a child, I think, would simply not work. But
Penelope Leach's books have plenty of developmental charts in them, if
you have the books or are familiar with the author.
I know that if I held by the charts in the books I've read, I'd be in
the nut factory by now. For instance, my 10 month old has yet to start
forming hard sounds like consonants. According to my pediatrician, he
should have been doing this for a couple of months yet. What? Me
worry? My twins did not utter one word til at LEAST 18 months, and I
mean literally not one word. No ma, da, kitty, nothing.
So my philosophy is study all the charts, but put only a small
percentage of your faith in them - put the rest in your child.
|
128.4 | "Your n Year Old", by Louise Bate Ames | CIVIC::U2CANB::JANEB | NHAS-IS Project Management | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:00 | 9 |
| There is a series of books "Your Two Year Old", etc. by Louise Bates Ames, that
I really like. I think it starts with one and goes through eight. I've read
two, three and four and I felt like either: 1.) someone is spying on our house
or 2.) the kids are reading the books at night - that's how on target they are!
For me, understanding developmental stages makes being a parent about 100 times
easier!
Jane
|
128.5 | Suggested readings | SMAUG::RLAMONT | | Mon Jul 16 1990 17:32 | 22 |
| I just recently started a Prepared Childbirth Class and was given 2
pages of suggested readings. They list Postpartum and Beyond and a
subtopic and under that listed a couple of books that MAY help you.
ON BECOMING A FAMILY T.B. Brazelton (1981)
GROWING PARENT: A SOURCEBOOK FOR FAMILIES Editors of Growing
Child/Parents (1983)
I too think that the other noters are right about how each child
differs during each stage of development but I've found that you really
DO need to know what's expected between a certain time (the books
themselves will tell you that not every child will do this). However,
you really DO need to have a ballpark because that's the way to
understand your child better, and know if there are problems if they
are NOT developing.
In other words, use it as a guideline but know that YOUR little miracle
will be different from all the others. (AND WHY WOULDN'T HE OR SHE BE
ANYWAYS RIGHT)?
Rebecca
|
128.6 | Thanks | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Jul 17 1990 05:54 | 24 |
| Thanks for the recommendation Jane. I'll get a copy of that series of
books.
I do believe that every child progresses at their own pace but I just
like to be aware of the guidelines and does make parenting easier. I do
think the child needs to be in an environment that will develop all
their skills but I'd like to be aware of any advanced or lagging
development skills. I think it is just my personality that I wouldn't
just take the word of a teacher that he needs help in a certain area
without knowing enough about it myself. One of my son's daycare
providers yesterday told my that he didn't know his shapes. She said he
kept saying "what's that?" when they were painting the shapes on the
windows. I told her that that is his way of of starting the convesation
around what was happening and allowing him to tell you what those were.
My son will always ask "what's that?" and I always answer "let's look
at it. What do you think it is?". If he really doesn't know, I explain
it to him. If he knows he carries the conversation. There is a point
where someone else looking at your child sees things differently;
that's why I do like to read text books that do offer guidelines so I
know when to be concerned and when not to be and I don't go in for
"gimmicks" like computer-literate children at the 3 years old or 4 year
old Olympic gymnasts.
Again, thanks for the responses.
|
128.7 | develop their strengths and interests | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:19 | 43 |
| Assuming we're talking about the normal range of development and
not real developmental handicaps, I don't agree with the comment
about working on the things the child is less advanced in. (I'd
say that learning more about how people develop and grow from
childhood to adulthood is likely to help parents avoid this kind
of mistake, by the way.)
No child is going to be good at everything. There's nothing wrong
with that and there's no need to try to force children to be good
at something that doesn't interest them.
I spent major portions of my school life and now my adult life
focussing on the things I do wrong, the "needs improvement" areas.
I was always ahead academically but young for my age emotionally.
Being put ahead a grade only exaggerated the problem. So it was
always, "Bonnie is very good at her schoolwork, but she doesn't
get along well with other children." And then instead of giving
me a challenging assignment to keep me interested, I'd get put in
a group project, which I HATED. And I started to hate myself for
being so awful at this social-interaction stuff, and feeling
terribly inadequate, because so much of what they wanted from me I
just wasn't ready to do. I didn't have the developmental level to
give them what they wanted from me -- I failed -- and I felt like
a failure.
I wound up being even more shy and insecure because I always
wondered how I was doing, and the secret to getting along with
people is to forget about yourself. But I didn't get to that
state until my late teens, when my emotional development caught up
with the rest of me.
The net result has been that until recently I never developed the
things I'm good at. I don't lead to my strengths, I try to cover
up my weaknesses. I still feel inadequate socially -- this
although all the evidence indicates that I'm just fine at getting
along with people and working in groups. I'm not the leader, I'm
not the one who comes up with the brilliant ideas, just a
competent "indian" who can coordinate things because I'm
reasonably well organized -- and there's nothing wrong with that.
If I prefer to work alone and to not socialize, that's just a
preference, not a weakness or a failure.
--bonnie
|
128.8 | Info I just read | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:20 | 24 |
| Bonnie, (re .17)
That's a very interesting comment because a book I was just reading
mentioned that children should spend time on the "skills" they are not
good at. I think they meant it in reference to you have to develop a
well-rounded child and allowing him/her to become completely absorbed
in only the thing they are good at will hinder all the other skills
they need to "survive" in this world. Allowing a child to turn into a
concert pianist at 6 years old and never allowing time for that child
to be with friends or run and play like a 6 year old does more damage
to their "future". They did stress adequate time for the development of
all skills and that working on the ones that were behind the norm was
important. I do think it is a shame when parents may have a "text book"
genuis on their hands and assume that the child knows how to socially
interect as well.
The point being that the child will have a whole set of skills and
varying levels of each. You should encourage them to continue to
develop the ones they are good at (they need the confidence) and spend
an appropriate and adequate time in the ones that need "imporvement"
but not to the point of making the child feel like a failure or
unhappy. It seems to be a difficult balance to find!!!
Andrea
|
128.9 | hothouse flowers | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jul 23 1990 11:04 | 71 |
| re: .8
Andrea, could you post the title and author of the book? I think
I'd be interested in reading it, if I can find it.
Based on your summary, I think I disagree with their premise that
everyone should be "well-rounded," if by well-rounded they mean
equally good at everything. Yes, everyone should be moderately
functional at everything. Yes, your child should have an
opportunity to develop all aspects of his or her personality.
Yes, if your child's really behind in an important skill, then you
should work on it. But in the normal range of behavior, people of
vary widely in what they like and in what they're interested in,
and trying to train the child into the directions the school
system will agree is a well-rounded person only backfires in the
long run.
I truly think that the social and behavioral skills are just like
walking and talking and toilet training and all the other physical
skills -- the child will do them when she's ready, and not a
moment before. We can guide and support and instruct and provide
opportunities to develop those skills, but we can't force them to
develop early (the biography of John Stuart Mill is instructional
here) or hold them back when they want to push on without damaging
them, sometimes in subtle ways.
For instance, Steven's a social butterfly. He likes being around
people, he dislikes being alone. He's got an artistic streak, but
even when he's working on a collage of a mountain, he doesn't want
to work alone. He likes having someone there to talk to while
he's working on it. He often gets upset about having to play
entirely alone, without anybody else at least talking to him.
This is in contrast to Kat, who's a loner. She likes to spend
long hours in her room reading (voraciously), writing in her
diary, watching TV, and otherwise occupying herself with things
that interest her. She has a couple of close friends she does
things with, but most of her free time is taken up with dance, and
the rest of the time she prefers to stay home.
Should I try to push Kat into going to more parties where she'd
have a lousy time just so her social skills are up to somebody's
idea of par? Would she learn more than how to feel awkward and
self-conscious in a situation she wasn't ready to handle? Should
I tell her she should drop dance since it means she can't go out
on Friday nights most of the year? Would I accomplish anything
except make her feel like she's abnormal?
Should I tell Steven that no, he can't go over to his friend's
house because he needs to spend some more time with himself, it's
good for him to feel lonely and hurt? Should I push him away when
he needs to cling? Would I teach him anything but that his mother
wasn't there when he needed her?
I haven't done any that, and you know what? This summer, after
years of complete disinterest in a social life and another year or
so of complaining about how she didn't have a social life, Kat has
been going places and doing things (a boyfriend with a job that
gets out even later than dance rehearsals helped :)). She's ready
for it now, and she's having a great time. Steven spent three
hours up in his room yesterday afternoon making up some kind of
elaborate play for his stuffed animals. Then came downstairs and
played in the study with me for the rest of the afternoon talking
nonstop about what they'd been doing. (Watch out, Calvin and
Hobbes, here comes Steven and Bee...)
Let them grow. Let them be what they want to be.
--bonnie
|
128.10 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jul 23 1990 14:17 | 16 |
| .9 > Based on your summary, I think I disagree with their premise that
.9 > everyone should be "well-rounded," if by well-rounded they mean
.9 > equally good at everything.
It doesn't sound as if we were reading the same entry, bonnie. Andrea
said:
.8 > The point being that the child will have a whole set of skills and
.8 > varying levels of each. You should encourage them to continue to
.8 > develop the ones they are good at (they need the confidence) and spend
.8 > an appropriate and adequate time in the ones that need "imporvement".
I don't find any disagreement here.
- Bruce
|
128.11 | nope | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jul 24 1990 10:59 | 8 |
| No, Bruce, I read the same thing. I'm saying that the appropriate
and adequate amount of time to spend on developing the skills that
don't happen to measure up to your standards of what a child
should be is exactly zero, assuming that the skill still falls
within the 'normal' range, i.e. isn't causing behavioral,
academic, or other problems for the child.
--bonnie
|
128.12 | "Normal" childhoods | RADIA::PERLMAN | | Wed Jul 25 1990 07:39 | 51 |
| I agree with .9. Our 7 year old
son has a clear internal agenda. There was a
time when he firmly said, "I don't play winning/losing games", and
then one day he starting doing it. Lots of examples. He's so firm
about what he's willing to do and what he's not that I've learned to
sit back and wait for him to develop, and that seems to work. I
believe he'll eventually do everything that (I believe) matters,
but it has to be one skill at a time for him. Daycare centers and
the school at first tried to make our son be "normal", with traumatic
results for him and them. Now school is firmly behind letting him
follow his interests, and only spend as much time as he can stand on
the other stuff. (Yeah wonderful Acton School administration!)
So he's quite "unbalanced" in skills but he's happy.
I take some issue with statements like "it's wrong to have a
child concentrate on something (like becoming a wonderful musician)
at the expense of "normal" childhood activities". The previous
replyer may not have meant it that way, but my daughter is a wonderful
violinist, and I have several times had people make remarks like, "Yes,
but does she have a "normal" childhood?" Very rude and judgemental.
There is only finite time, and you aren't going to expose your child
to everything. What does "normal" mean? Do they mean 5 hours of
TV a day? Do they mean watching MTV? Do they mean skiing?
The only example in the previous reply of "normal" was "Playing with
neighborhood kids". A lot of people I know didn't do that very much
at all as youngsters (actually my daughter is very social and does
spend a lot of time playing with friends) and yet grow up to have
families, close friends, and jobs they enjoy.
So I don't believe a child has to spend time with friends in order
for the parents to be credited with giving the child a "normal
childhood". (Playing with friends isn't on my son's current agenda --
if there is a friend over, they'll just do "parallel play" and pretty
much ignore each other. He'd rather not have anyone other than his
sister or parents around.)
So anyway, what you concentrate on and what you expose your kids to
is limited by time, kid's interest, parent's interest, financial
considerations, etc. I don't think we should define "normal" as
anything like
1) activities a, b, and c must be included
2) as many activites as possible must be included -- nothing should
be in depth because that will limit the total number of things
Somehow a lot of Americans seem to get really judgemental about
a child showing excellence at something academic, but wouldn't get
equally judgemental if the family spent an equal amount of time
doing something like (ugh bletch) hunting, fishing, Nintendo,
MTV, or TV, since those
are "normal" American activities (violin playing isn't).
|
128.13 | Try a one semester course | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:37 | 20 |
| Years ago, long before DEC, long before becoming a parent or even
thinking of it I took a course at Asabet Valley Vocational School in
Hudson (near HLO and MRO's) called "Human behavior, growth and
development" at the time I took these it was because I was considering
a career in nursing and need this and another I took at the same time
on Anatomy. As I was taking the course, 3 or 4 months twice a week, I
thought many times that this is what every parent ought to take, just
to try and stay one step ahead of thier children. As a parent I am
seriously considering taking the course again, purely as a parent this
time. I will go home tonite and try to put my hand on the text book, I
found it extremely well written. If you're into such things there was
also a lot on expert theory such as Paget. Try taking a course at a
local college or school instead of or in addition to reading.
BTW, I also second T.B. Brazelton's books, he's got to be the best
pedi-expert there is today!! Has anyone seen his program on Cable
network, usually follows Joan London's(?sp) parenting program. She's
great too!
|