Hi McDume,
I’m sure 17 years ago, or even further back (while your wife was pregnant) you were thinking outside the box in terms of what would be the best approach for your children education. Am I right? I’m sure, like us, you have gone out of your way, educated yourself, researched (with the tools that were available at the time), books, videos, studies…
Certainly you have come across studies, or methodologies that you believe did not fit your way of living, or that made you uneasy and that you would not put your kids through it…
Like you we have done the same, and we arrived here… these parents/granparents/carers/ teachers that you come across here are eager to share, and learn from each other and from our kids too…
Perhaps as you suspected some people take things to the extreme, trying to force kids to “learn†in a forceful environment, and are happy to feed their egos showing off their kids reading around the playground (we cannot stop people from doing whatever they want to do at the privacy of their houses). But I can assure you that is not what this early childhood development is all about.
Glenn Doman has dedicated a lifetime promoting early education, more than 40 years now, (http://www.iahp.org/), not only to health kids but specially kids with brain injury which have been lucky enough to be stimulated early enough to repair themselves their brain injuries and grow up to live a more dignifying life (who would not what a child to be given this chance?)
When people ask me how come my kids can read… I answer: we play with written words, a lot, in fact we play with written words everywhere, at home, on the supermarket, in the car, at the beach… my girls just love playing with written words, from books, billboards, signs, catalogues, boxes… they are everywhere… and we can play our silly games, point to words, decoding them and laughing if we think they are most unusual like when my 4 years old saw ENOUGH… and would not stop pronouncing it and telling me it was funny… Who am I do disagree?
As per the results of the studies you have come across that by grade 3 the kids have lost their zeal to learn, well I cannot answer for that, but I suspect that must have something to do with the forcing you also spoke about before… Don’t know…
All I want for my kids is that they are happy and I take my cues from them, the satisfaction in my children’s eyes when they read me a book all by themselves or when they spot a word that they have never seem before and are able to read it, is undeniable, so I will keep on my path of learning and challenging the “status quo†that children will learn to read when they are ready, I say they were born ready, but unfortunately we didn’t know.
Glenn Doman actually says that we are ready to read as much as we are ready to talk, and if people only spoken to us in a very quiet voice (because we were not ready), we would not learn to talk until later… same thing with words, they have to be big and bold so the kids can clearly see each one of them and not mixed in small prints in books.
Welcome to our forum and I hope you “learn/teach†with us…