Accelerated early childhood education: Difference between revisions
imported>Larry Sanger |
imported>Larry Sanger |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
The notion that babies and small toddlers can be taught to read--after a fashion, at least--often provokes disbelief and astonishment. But it is well-known and easy to demonstrate that children as young as one year old can learn to speak out loud. Consider the YouTube video | The notion that babies and small toddlers can be taught to read--after a fashion, at least--often provokes disbelief and astonishment. But it is well-known and easy to demonstrate that children as young as one year old can learn to speak out loud. Consider the YouTube video | ||
{{#ev:youtube| | <table align=right><tr><td>{{#ev:youtube|V5LlFkXfMZ8}}</td></tr></table> | ||
This child has been taught to say the words out loud by using a "teach your baby to read" product.<ref>''Your Baby Can Read.''</ref> Note that this is a different sort of case from those in which very gifted children simply "pick up" the ability to read.<ref>An example of the latter type of early reading can be seen in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnvDC6HiaBk this video] and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Vys9jvXwcU this video,] in which the baby girl of a pair of speech pathologists can be found to read never-before-seen words with amazing facility. Her parents did teach her to sign, which no doubt increased the girl's facility with other modes of language.</ref> | This child has been taught to say the words out loud by using a "teach your baby to read" product.<ref>''Your Baby Can Read.''</ref> Note that this is a different sort of case from those in which very gifted children simply "pick up" the ability to read.<ref>An example of the latter type of early reading can be seen in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnvDC6HiaBk this video] and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Vys9jvXwcU this video,] in which the baby girl of a pair of speech pathologists can be found to read never-before-seen words with amazing facility. Her parents did teach her to sign, which no doubt increased the girl's facility with other modes of language.</ref> |
Revision as of 12:22, 12 September 2008
Accelerated early childhood education is an ad hoc description of a loose movement, and pedagogy, according to which infants and toddlers benefit greatly from systematic, "academic"-type learning far earlier than has normally been thought appropriate. While there is no generally accepted name for the movement, it has been in existence since at least the 1964 publication of Glenn Doman's How to Teach Your Baby to Read. Doman and those who followed in his footsteps are in no small part responsible for the proliferation of educational videos aimed at infants and toddlers, such as "Baby Einstein." There has since been a backlash against the movement and these products, with critics accusing parents of wishful thinking and suppliers of products as profiteering.
Very early reading
A good place to begin a discussion of accelerated early childhood education is with very early reading.
The notion that babies and small toddlers can be taught to read--after a fashion, at least--often provokes disbelief and astonishment. But it is well-known and easy to demonstrate that children as young as one year old can learn to speak out loud. Consider the YouTube video
{{#ev:youtube|V5LlFkXfMZ8}} |
This child has been taught to say the words out loud by using a "teach your baby to read" product.[1] Note that this is a different sort of case from those in which very gifted children simply "pick up" the ability to read.[2]
Early childhood development experts and educationists have known for a long time that it is indeed possible to teach tiny children to "read" in this way, but many of them deny that it is really reading.
References
- ↑ Your Baby Can Read.
- ↑ An example of the latter type of early reading can be seen in this video and this video, in which the baby girl of a pair of speech pathologists can be found to read never-before-seen words with amazing facility. Her parents did teach her to sign, which no doubt increased the girl's facility with other modes of language.