Posts Tagged ‘young children’
The Hazards of Technology for the Very Young
Maybe you’ve already seen this YouTube video of the adorable one-year-old trying to make a magazine work the way an iPad does, and read her parent’s comment at the end of the video:
“For my one-year-old daughter a magazine is an iPad that does not work. It will remain so her whole life. Steve Jobs has coded part of her OS.”
I’ll be the first to agree that today’s children must learn to use technology if they’re to be prepared for the future. That said, I think we do children a disservice by introducing them to technology at such a young age, because the time they spend using it reduces the time they spend in free exploration of their world. Whether they stay inside playing video games instead of playing outside, sit in the car watching a DVD instead of looking out the window at the changing scenery, or text their friends instead of having a conversation with the visiting grandparent sitting next to them, their ability to use technology at a very young age is stunting their development.
But I get why their parents give very young children these technological devices. Whatever their motivation at the start (wanting their kids to be advanced, wanting them to have the latest gadgets, etc.) they soon discover that hooking their kids on technology gets them out of their hair. The day I saw a mother shopping for groceries in complete silence while her three children slowly ambled behind her, all texting on their phones, I knew she would never again tolerate old-school grocery shopping, with her kids begging for the latest cereal and fighting over who gets to ride on the end of the cart. Technology had done her a big favor.
The ramifications of young children attached to technology are huge. Their physical development is negatively affected by all the time they sit staring at a screen, large or small, instead of playing catch, climbing a tree or swinging on a swing. Their social development is delayed because, while they can text friends easily, they struggle to have conversations with adults. Their emotional development is warped by spending so much time in the unreal worlds creating by gaming, as opposed to gaining the strengths kids once normally developed through face-to-face relationships with a variety of family members and friends.
My kids were fortunate to come of age shortly before technology grew rampant through society like kudzu. Introduced to computers in their early teens, they picked up the ability to use technology very quickly (and long after they had developed the basic skills children normally develop in the first several years of life). Today as young adults they use technology in their work and for pleasure, but it has not taken over their lives. They have other interests that they explore, and they handle social situations easily. I have to wonder if that will be the case with the youngest members of our society who are currently being weaned on technology.
I wish more parents would realize that their young children need time to actively explore their world and learn from it instead of gaining virtual experiences through a screen. I wish schools would stop pushing computers on kids and instead teach them to read, write, do math, and most importantly, become autodidactic. With those skills in place, kids can then easily pick up tech skills and be ready to handle 21st century adulthood by their teens. Instead, I fear today’s parents are creating a generation of technologically dependent social klutzes.
Sharing this concern, one man recently organized an outdoors adventure with seven children, ages 3-16, noting, “The primary purpose of the trip was to get the urchins away from their electronic gadgets and show them the wonders of nature.” He was dismayed to find that the children had no desire to explore nature. In fact, they feared it. His conclusion?
Mark my words: These machines are taking over. Many younger Americans are so addicted they can’t function without them. Never mind nature, witty in-person conversation, and games like stickball or keep-away. Those things are soooooo obsolete. Why bother braving the elements or actually thinking up creative activities? The machines provide instant excitement….
Yes, they do. And kids who are being continually entertained have no incentive to go out and create their own entertainment. But this isn’t inevitable. It’s up to the adults in their lives to hold off on presenting them with technology until they’re older. Technology has many wonderful applications, but being used as a pacifier isn’t one of them.
Preschool Pressure or Preschool Peace?
by Barbara Frank
I always say my kids were homeschooled from birth, because they never went to school and they were learning from the day they were born. Yet I didn’t “school” them during the years from birth to age 5; we certainly did a lot—played inside and outside, made crafts, painted, colored, I read to them—but I never considered that homeschooling.
That’s why I was bewildered when I first noticed the trend of moms joining homeschool support groups even though their children were under five years old. I wondered, what’s their hurry?
Talking with some of these moms has given me some insight into why they consider themselves homeschoolers even though their kids are so young. I’ve learned that today’s young parents are under so much pressure to not only send their kids to preschool at age 3, but to start preparing them (“readiness”) even earlier than 3 that they feel they must call themselves homeschoolers so people won’t think their little ones aren’t being educated. In this competitive society of ours, heaven forbid we should let a young child of 2 or 3 (or even 4 or 5!) just simply learn through play and experiences.
Learning about Preschool Pressure really makes me feel old. When my first child was 3 (how can that be 25 years ago?), children of working moms were often put in daycare, but children of stay-at-home moms were home with Mom, and maybe in a park district class for an hour twice a week. Most parents didn’t think about preschool until the year before kindergarten, and even then, many chose not to send their children to it. Since I had already planned to homeschool my daughter, we never looked into preschool. Once I started homeschooling her at age 5, we liked it so much that we never considered putting any of our next three children in preschool or any school.
But while my children were growing up in an atmosphere of homeschooling families where preschool wasn’t even discussed, the outside world was changing. As more moms rejoined the workforce, the cry went out that children needed preschool in order to succeed in school. “Educational experts” repeatedly cited the success of the government-run preschool program Head Start, rarely mentioning that the kids in that program were so disadvantaged from the get go that special attention would have helped them. An average child home with an attentive parent wasn’t disadvantaged and didn’t need preschool to become prepared. In fact, even 20 years ago, studies showed that any scholastic advantage gained by preschool wore off by third grade and was even suspected of causing early school burnout. But that aspect of preschool wasn’t advertised much.
What concerns me now is that there is an entire generation of young parents out there (you may be one of them) who has been conditioned to believe that their under-age-5 children must have some kind of formal preschool program, even one at home, in order to be properly educated. Since I know from experience that this is patently untrue, I feel bad for any mom living under Preschool Pressure. I worry that finding and implementing a home preschool program for each of her little ones will result in burnout of both the child and the mom. It would be such a shame to burn out and give up on homeschooling; the thought that an exhausted mom will give up and put her burned-out child into formal schooling at an early age is heart-breaking, because it didn’t have to happen.
I wish there was an easy way to remove Preschool Pressure from each mom’s existence, and instead replace it with Preschool Peace, which is what I had, as did the many generations of mothers before me. The best I can do, however, is offer the following recipe, in hopes that you’ll read it if you need it, and share it with anyone else who needs it. Only by finding Preschool Peace can a homeschooling mom conserve her energy for the larger task of homeschooling her children for as many years as she needs to do later on, maybe even through high school. I don’t think I could have survived homeschooling four children all the way through if I’d had to homeschool them in the preschool years. Just the thought makes me want to go take a nap!
Recipe for Preschool Peace
Starting as early in your parenting life as possible, mix:
- One large dollop of the works of John Holt, especially How Children Learn, Learning All the Time, and Teach Your Own.
- Two heaping cups of Better Late Than Early by Dr. Raymond and Dorothy Moore.
- A splash of “Preschool Homeschooling” by Beverly Krueger.
Allow this mixture to rest in your brain for a while, then add (as your child becomes old enough to do these things):
- Lazy afternoons at the park
- Regular visits to the public library
- Trips to the zoo and children’s museum
- Work in the garden (especially making mud pies)
- Large empty appliance boxes and markers
- Finger paints
- Long sessions of you reading aloud to them
Relax and enjoy!
Special note: don’t rush through this recipe—take your time, because soon enough your little one will be a “big kid,” and both of you will be ready to take on a more complicated “recipe.”
Must Reads
Prepare Your Kids for a Challenging FutureA Future of Financial Freedom
Public Education is Going Down
Economic Insights
Grandfather Economic ReportCharles Hugh Smith’s Blog
Economics in One Lesson (free online book)
Only Yesterday (free online book)
Why Raise Frugal Kids?
How to Have Kids Who Can Recognize Quality
Don’t Let Inflation Keep You from Homeschooling
Preparing Teens to Thrive on Their Own
Educate Your Children
The Six-Lesson SchoolteacherHomeschooling in a Nutshell
Guide to Homeschooling
No Teaching Certificate? No Problem!
What’s Your Hidden Curriculum?
Take Control of Your Family’s Schedule
Can Homeschooling Prevent Rebellion?
Preschool Pressure or Preschool Peace?
Preschool for Homeschoolers
Don’t Send Your Child to Kindergarten
1890s Kindergarten Curriculum
Why You Need to Raise Self-Sufficient Kids
How Kids Become Tech-Savvy
Ron Paul’s Homeschool High School Curriculum
Life Prep for Homeschooled Teenagers
Should Your Child Go To College?
What It’s Like Homeschooling Teens
Homeschooling A to Z
Carnival of Homeschooling
Educational Resources
NEW Free 3D Sculpting SoftwareNEW Free Woodworking and Metalworking Patterns
Theodore Roosevelt’s Letters to His Children
Online Math Instructional Videos
For Kids Using the Internet for Research
Singing Science Teacher Videos
Geography Printables
Printable Maps
Digital History Online Timeline
Preschool and Kindergarten Worksheets
Children’s Bible Study Curriculum
Free Federal Resources for Educational Excellence
Science Fair Projects A-Z
Online Knowledge Engine
A Bibliography of Technology
Top 50 Web 2.0 Tools
Oldies but Goodies
Free Books For KindleOnline Classic Book Directory #1
Online Classic Book Directory #2
Online Classic Book Directory #3
Popular Science free issues online
Popular Mechanics free issues online
Special Reports (pdf)
Teaching Your Children to WriteTen Tips for Coping with Temperamental Teens








