FACTS ABOUT STUDY
Playing scary and violent video games help children master their fears in real life.
Video games can lessen disruptive behaviors and enhance positive development in ADHD children
Practical work in science provides children little or no learning at all
Chess makes kids smart
Gardening improves children’s desire to learn and boosts their confidence
Kids who garden show a better ability to concentrate.
Gardening helped use up surplus energy in active kids.
The process of growing something from seed to fruit helps teach children responsibility and managing a living organism.
Some students learned valuable math skills as they sold their produce to the town for a profit.
Getting in touch with the dirt and bugs, helped some young students overcome their fears.
An English teacher found her student’s creativity in poetry expanded after working in the garden.
Playing with blocks increases neuron count in children
Teaching kids at a very early age is counterproductive to their learning
Children are not blank slates on which adults imprint knowledge
Children’s brains are far more powerful and intuitive than we ever imagined. As more and more research is done on the impact of early education on children, the results continue to point to a surprising conclusion; when children are given a rich environment to explore, they naturally use scientific processes to discover the world around them.
Alison Gopnik, professor at the University of California, reported this in her research that was outlined in the September issues EdWeek’s blog. The push for more academics, more structure, and more early academic intervention is not necessarily beneficial. Adults are not the “givers” of information, but rather facilitators that allow children to use their natural curiosity to discover the world. It would seem that one of the best predictors of future academic success is built on this foundation.
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yᴇᴀ ᴛʜɴx ꜰᴏʀ ꜱᴀyɪɴɢ......
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-ABHI
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