Sunday, January 30, 2022

Learning to Learn

Encourage Good Behaviour to Children. Children quickly learn how to behave when they get positive, consistent guidance from you.

1. Be a role model
Use your own behaviour to guide your child.

2. Show the children how you feel
Telling your child honestly how their behaviour affects you helps your child see their own feelings in yours.  

3. Catch your child being ‘good’
When your child is behaving in a way you like, give your child some positive feedback. Example: ‘Wow, you’re playing so nicely. I really like the way you’re keeping all the blocks on the table’. This works better than waiting for the blocks to come crashing to the floor before you take notice and say, ‘Hey, stop that’.

4. Keep things simple and positive
Instruction should be clear, short and appropriate for your child’s age, so your child can understand and remember them.

Babies And Young Children Learn. The parents, other family members and carers – for example, early childhood educators – are the foundation for children’s health learning and development.

Children Learns by Being Involved in His Learning.

  • Choosing books to read
  • Pointing to pictures in books
  • Choosing objects and toys to play with
  • Picking out vegetables for dinner
  • Measuring out flour for muffins.

What Young Children Are Learning?

  1. Self and relationships
    Children learn that she’s loved and important. She starts learning to understand her own needs, thoughts, feelings, likes and dislikes.
  2. Language and communication
    When you talk and listen with children, and read and sing together, you’re helping him learn about language, written and spoken communication, and conversation skills like taking turns and listening.
  3. Numeracy, literacy, handwriting and music

Children develops early literacy through reading and storytelling, playing simple sound and letter games like listening for words that begin with the same sound, and looking at pictures, letters and words in the environment and in catalogues.

Hand writing Skills develop when you encourage him to draw, scribble and write.

Writing, helps your child understand the connection between letters and spoken sounds.

Singing, listening to music, and giving her musical instruments to play.

Source: https://raisingchildren.net.au/preschoolers/play-learning/literacy-reading-stories/reading-storytelling

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