A Word From Our Sponsors…
- 3
Latest News
Being in the Know: The Latest Developments in Stem Cell Research
Jan. 16 2:27 p.m.
1 CommentsRead more
Valuable Offers
- 10 Amazing Functions of the Prostate Gland by BeWellBuzz
- WHY do you train? by Jaqui Karr
- Energy Wrap-Ups for 2011 - Enter 2012 by Kathy Roseborough
- What you should know about Gastric Bypass Surgery by Simon Lee
- Forbidden Healing by Capt. T. C. Randall
- Fiber drinks can help you lose weight by Simon Lee
- How To Immediately Reduce Your Toxic Exposures by HealingGrapevine
- 10 Best Fiber Foods: (BeWellBuzz) Did you know that fiber helps you los...
- Herbs for Panic Attacks: Some people suffer from sudden moments of fear and...
- Underrated Health Benefits of Chamomile Tea: Chamomile frequents the lips of herbalists and nat...
- 16 Health Benefits of Rosemary: Rosemary is a Mediterranean herb with needle-like ...
People Buzzin
Popular Posts
Eating for Your Blood Type: A+ & A-
All of us are individuals in our own right. Every individual's genetic make-up is unique, but at the...
33 CommentsRead more
Benefits of Turmeric for Skin and More
In India, you can't think about a curry without turmeric in it. However, it's only now that people a...
21 CommentsRead more
A Recipe for Healthy Eyes
Age-related macular degeneration affects the part of the eye responsible for central vision, leading...
32 CommentsRead more
Cold or Warm Water. What’s better?
Is drinking cold water good or bad for you? Does the temperature of the water matter at all? Believe...
26 CommentsRead more
10 Reasons Why Flu Shots Are More Dangerous Than a Flu!
The verdict is out on flu shots. Many medical experts now agree it is more important to protect your...
154 CommentsRead more
Mobile Buzz
Get BeWellBuzz updates on your iPhone, iPod or iPad! 
iPhone & iPod Touch App
Download BeWellBuzz for iPhone
1000+ Users
Baby Brain Boosters
Post date: March 13, 2009 7:57 p.m.
What's Your Reaction? important funny typical scary outrageous amazing innovative finally

Love this article and totally agree with it. There’s way too much pressure on the kids right now. Until age of 5 all I did as a kid was play. Running around with my brother and other kids, playing with my only doll that I loved and kept it for quite some time – that was my schedule. And I’m more than sure that nowadays parents weren’t in preschool at the age of 3-4. We should let kids to be kids.
Edutainment for infants is all the rage these days. With loaded names like Baby Einstein, Baby Mozart, Baby Genius, and Brainy Baby, they all claim to offer your baby the intellectual enhancements they’ll need to get ahead, to maximize their potential, to succeed in today’s fast-paced and competitive society.
But there is, in fact, no evidence that any of these toys, videos, books, or methodologies actually provide any long-term benefit, and often in fact have quite the opposite effect.
The issues of excessive testing, unrealistic expectations and high-pressure environments in public schools, over-scheduling, parents’ loss of connection with their children and their own parental instincts, parental guilt over lack of quality time, confusion over conflicting messages on child development, the impact of consumerism and profit-driven children’s industries, and how this all relates to the surge in ‘educational enrichment’ for babies is simply far too massive and complex to properly get into within this brief article. Please read “Much Too Early!”, a highly illuminating article by David Elkind, author of “The Hurried Child and Miseducation: Preschoolers at Risk”, for an overview of some of these issues. Among other things, he explains how knowing the alphabet is not a step towards reading, clarifies the mis-application of the HeadStart program results, outlines the normal intellectual developmental steps of the young child, and reaffirms that education is not a race to be the first to the finish line.
Early Academics: A Distortion of Natural Development
As brain research has led to some understanding about the development of intelligence in young children, including such concepts as “windows” or critical periods and the importance of the first three years, ‘experts’ and educators have jumped on the findings, misinterpreted them, and launched this whole baby brain-building mess.
Dr. Maria Montessori, in observing young children as they played and learned, observed what indeed appeared to be “sensitive periods” — decades before there was any corroborating brain research — where children appeared to be especially primed to learn certain skills or concepts. However, rather than this being an opportunity for parents and teachers to feed factoids to the passive child, this was simply how the child was naturally forming itself. In other words, a young child will instinctively seek out the learning experiences that will best suit its development at any particular time. As long as there is a normal environment to explore, a child will learn to walk, jump, and run, understand spoken language, distinguish and identify colors, textures, and sizes, sing, count, and draw representational figures — incredibly complex ideas, all from its own curiosity and emergent drive to self-create.
The pressure for scholastic success, combined with the belief that the best way to achieve this is through in an indoor classroom setting with textbooks and tests — rather than through practical experience and free play — has become so all-encompassing that schools are cutting recess, and the age for beginning institutionalized schooling keeps dropping (despite the failure to provide any evidence that this actually improves success, and much evidence to the contrary).
In North America, the legal age for mandatory school attendance is usually 5 or 6, though in many areas, you will be looked at quite oddly if your child is not in a formal academic preschool by age 3 or 4. By contrast, many Scandinavian countries do not begin formal schooling until age 7, have longer holidays… and have higher results in literacy and academic achievement.
Let The Children Play
So what should we do, then, with our babies? Of course we want the best for them, it’s only natural to want to give them any advantage we possibly can.
First of all, breastfeed. Formula-fed babies score 5-6% lower IQ’s by school age.
Second, wear your baby. Babies who are worn cry less, and spend more time in the “active alert” state — when they are observing and absorbing information. They also get more adult interaction and a better vantage point for viewing and learning about their world.
Third, perhaps most important of all, let them play. And play with them.
Parents feel enormous pressure to spend meaningful time with their kids, and of course, everybody wants to do what’s best for their kids. But “play” has become a four-letter word. And so often, parents take “quality play time” to mean “teaching time.” They trade play in for structured activities, educational TV and flash cards. But what I believe makes more sense, and what research indicates, is that children learn through play, and play with parents is the best.”
Also remember, while you’re happily playing with your child, that anything can be a toy. You don’t need a house full of mountains of playthings. When my son was an infant, one of his favorite toys was the lid from an old bottle of Vaseline. Possibly not the “greenest” toy ever, but he loved it. Boxes, sticks, old clothes, pots and pans, brooms, simple wooden blocks, scraps of fabric, spoons, anything that makes noise… You don’t have to spend hundreds of dollars on plastic made-in-China nonsense, or even on high-quality wooden eco-friendly toys. Just let them explore, and play.
Found at http://ecochildsplay.com/2009/02/26/baby-essentials-that-arent-part-6-baby-brain-boosters/
Related posts

Importance of Breastfeeding
(BeWellBuzz) One of the first decisions any new mother will have to make is how they will feed their child. While this once was a foregone conclusion,
0 CommentsRead more

Natural Remedies for Breast Milk Deficiency
There are many everyday foods which provide a remedial cure for breast milk deficiency such as fennel, herb tea, garlic, onion and almonds. These food
1 CommentsRead more

Benefits of Marine Phytoplankton
Would you like to increase your energy and inner strength with a few drops a day? Marine Phytoplankton is a supercharged, ocean-based micro algae that
14 CommentsRead more





Helena
March 14, 2009 at 12:10 am
I totally agree – what a great article.
Here in Australia, the popular place for babies is Gymbaroo – some maternal child health nurses saying this essential for baby development. I like having my little boy at home with me where he can develop at his own pace without being compared to other children and being forced to do things that he’s not ready to do.
I will also be home schooling him – that is still a little while away because he’s only 9 months old, but I see my 4 year old niece already having some of her vibrant personality knocked out of her because she is forced to go to kindy when she would rather spend time with her mum at home (or the park).
The excessive need for child achievement is the same as the excessive intervention in childrens’ health – vaccination, antibiotics, baby nurofen for feavers – it’s completely ridiculous. Parent’s are losing their intuitive knowledge about child rearing in favour of listening the pharmaceutical company influenced doctors.
Like or Dislike:
0
0
Link
Dennis
March 24, 2009 at 11:11 am
The study everyone keeps talking about that cites a loss of vocabulary and that DVDs will turn your kids brain into jelly have a lot of erroneous facts surrounding it, and has been promoted as a fear based agenda for far too long. There are scores of positive and real scientific research available to suggest that media viewing for children can actually have a very positive influence. In fact, when you count and look at all the research on this subject, there is an overwhelming amount of positive research that other Universities have performed.
Even the recent Harvard study that states DVD’s cause no harm, but no benefit either, were not studying content ! Read it for yourself. Harvard didn’t test the educational value, nor did they test products like Brainy Baby. Please do not draw conclusions that are not based on fact and then attempt to pass it off to other parents as the truth! Do your homework, please.
The key is content. My children were raised on quality, educational videos and they definitely learned all their basics from videos. DVD’s are just one more tool in the parent’s learning bag and should be viewed as a healthy component to assist in developing a “love of learning” for their child. I believe in parental interaction and other forms of imaginative play, however to completely dismiss DVD’s in view of all the positive research is really throwing out the baby with the bath water.
No parent is suggesting that you force your child to do anything and if you read the literature from companies like Brainy Baby, they completely agree with a “balanced” approaced to learning… nothing forced. But why not give your child every possible advantage?
Even the AAP has said that their policy on media viewing is “just to be on the safe side” and states that it cannot support their policy scientifically (see AAP web site for exact quote).
I wouldn’t exactly cut the cord off the TV yet and as a parent I wouldn’t feel guilty if you use a video. What about all those parents that absolutely swear that their child learned their ABC’s from a video? Don’t we count?
Like or Dislike:
0
0
Link