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Edited on Wed Feb-08-06 08:26 PM by catabryna
I knew exactly what you were trying to say. Yes, we knew about hyper kids in the past (my brother was one of them), but I don't think the increase in hyper kids is because it is more recognized as a problem. Nurture can be just as important as nature in child-rearing and I think we are seeing an effect relating to overload nurturing. I feel certain that my child is hyper due to his nature and history, but it is nurture that is keeping it in check.
My son has had a whole lot of educational games because he's an electronic junkie! They are nearly all LeapFrog and they have been around at varying levels since he first came home. This kid is a "button pusher", literally. A couple of his first toys were the Baby Tad and another toy that made music if you pushed the buttons. He then received a Rock-n-Roll Elmo as a gift (I HATE that thing!). This kid would push those buttons endlessly. While subconsciously, he probably paid attention to the colors and shapes on the Baby Tad, and learned an appreciation of classical music, all he really cared about was cause and effect. Push a button, make a noise! Turn off the tv, turn on the tv... turn up volume, turn down the volume! Didn't matter if I taped over the buttons... he'd find a way to rip the tape off.
Finally, about a year ago, I caved and bought him a Leap Pad and another Leap toy with the alphabet and a magnetic pencil. It wasn't really to teach him anything, but I figured if he learned something while engaging in his obsession, it wouldn't hurt. He then received as a gift a Leap Bus (with the alphabet on the side ~~ yes, MORE buttons). He played with them, but they didn't hold the same excitement as the televison controls! Then, all of a sudden, a few months or so ago, he pulled them out and has been using them on his own and is absolutely loving these gadgets. I never turned them into a teaching activity; I just left them as play things for him. He has apparently picked up much more than I had realized while pushing all those buttons! It is during this last month or so that I've started to notice the reading readiness.
As for educational shows... we don't use them to speak of. He watches Sesame Street on televison (I grew up watching! How could I refuse?). He can watch Thomas the Tank Engine and Bob the Builder and he LOVES the animated version of Charlotte's Web. Cracked me up the other day when he came to me and asked me what "Magnus Opus" meant; I knew where he had heard it and asked him what he thought it meant... "It means Great Work, Mama!". It's now our newest buzz phrase. :-)
Most of the rest of the time, we read... ya know, the standards, Dr. Seuss, Goodnight Moon, etc. He doesn't yet have access to a computer, though I do have one here when I decide he's ready for it.
I am not formally teaching him anything, though we are working on pre-writing skills because of his weak fine motor skills. I bought him some sidewalk chalk and he can scribble or whatever to his heart's content on our back porch. Goodness, these are things we did all the time when we were kids, but everything these days is structure, structure, structure! I'm hopeful that I can provide an environment for my kiddo with some of the same fun that we had when we were kids... playing until dark with all the neighbor kids, drawing a hopscotch on the sidewalk with leftover drywall (and seeing who could find the coolest rock for the token), climbing the street signs and tying a ball to the top so we could play teather ball, climbing the apricot and walnut trees. Yeah, there were a couple of broken arms, a few sprained ankles, and lots of stitches, but we all survived! There are so many things that kids miss out on these days.
I do think that most kids are in overload at much too young an age these days. That is one of the main reasons that, other than Sesame Street, the television isn't usually turned on until after he's asleep. I tape Keith Olbermann because it comes on before his bedtime. And, he sleeps well too, usually 11 hours a night. I do, however, have to cop to having Air America on a lot for my own entertainment which is why my kid says "It's NIH Health Matters" when he hears the little musical signal and really, really wants an Oreck vaccum cleaner! :rofl:
I guess I love to yak about my kid, eh? Heehee!
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