首页
登录
职称英语
Teachers and other specialists in early childhood education recognize that c
Teachers and other specialists in early childhood education recognize that c
游客
2023-12-14
86
管理
问题
Teachers and other specialists in early childhood education recognize that children develop at different rates. Given anything that resembles a well-rounded life — with adults and other children to listen to, talk to, do things with — their minds will acquire naturally all the skills required for further learning.
Take for example, reading. The two strongest predictors of whether children will learn to read easily and well at school are whether they have learned the names and the sounds of letters of the alphabet before they start school. That may seem to imply that letter names and sounds should be deliberately taught to young children, because these skills will not happen naturally.
But in all the research programs where they have done just that — instructed children, rehearsed the names and sounds over and over — the results are disappointing. The widely accepted explanation is that knowledge of the alphabet for it to work in helping one to read, has to be deeply embedded in the child’s mind. That comes from years of exposure and familiarity with letters, from being read to, from playing with magnetic letters, drawing and fiddling with computers.
So parents can do some things to help, although many do these things spontaneously. Instead of reading a story straight through, the reader should pause every so often and ask questions but not questions which can be answered by a yes or no. Extend their answers, suggest alternative possibilities and pose progressively more challenging questions.
And with arithmetic do not explicitly sit down and teach children about numbers, but all those early years count when walking up steps. Recite nursery rhymes. Talk to children. Say this is a red apple, that is a green one. Please get three eggs out of the fridge for me.
The technical term in vogue for this subtle structuring of children’s early learning is "scaffolding". Based on recent extensions of the work of the Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky the idea is that there are things a child may be almost ready to do. Anna, for example, cannot tie a shoelace by herself, but if an adult or a competent child forms one of the loops for her, she will soon learn to do the rest. Applying this concept to older children, one wonderful teacher has her children keep lists of "Words I can Almost Spell".
While this has all the hallmarks of common sense, it represents a significant change of emphasis from the idea of Piaget, which have dominated the theory of early childhood learning. The child in Piaget’s theory looks, more than anything, like a little scientist — exploring the environment, observing, experimenting, thinking and slowly coming to his or her conclusions about how the world works. The image is of a rather solitary pursuit with all the real action in the child’s head.
The Vygotsky model re-introduces all the people who also inhabit the child’s world—parents, care-givers,relatives, siblings and all those other children at play or school. They are not simply noise, clattering in the background while the child’s developing mind struggles on its own. The cognitive development of the child, that is, the learning of colors or numbers or letters — depends on learning how to interact socially, how to learn from the people (as well as the things) in the environment.
What is important is that the child develops the range of social skills — being able to express a preference, knowing how to take rums, being able to stand up for themselves, being able to get into a group, being able to make decisions, being able to share, having confidence to go off on their own. These all require careful nurturing. No one is telling parents not to think about their children’s development.
It is just that it is more important to think about a child’s desire to chat and the importance of social behavior and play activity, than the actually more trivial markers of intellectual achievement such as being the first kid in the group to cut a circle that looks like a circle. [br] Vygotsky’s theory is different from Piaget’s in that the former more emphasizes on the child’s______.
选项
A、exploration
B、achievement
C、interaction
D、nurturing
答案
C
解析
第八段的最后一句话总结时提到了interact这个词,所以选C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3271545.html
相关试题推荐
BritishEducationⅠ.BritishEducationActsA.
BritishEducationⅠ.BritishEducationActsA.
BritishEducationⅠ.BritishEducationActsA.
Anyonewhotrainsanimalsrecognizesthathumanandanimalperceptualcapacit
Anyonewhotrainsanimalsrecognizesthathumanandanimalperceptualcapacit
Anyonewhotrainsanimalsrecognizesthathumanandanimalperceptualcapacit
Anyonewhotrainsanimalsrecognizesthathumanandanimalperceptualcapacit
EducationalValuesLifeisratherhecticforstudentsd
EducationalValuesLifeisratherhecticforstudentsd
EducationalValuesLifeisratherhecticforstudentsd
随机试题
PassageOne[br]Whatdidthewriterthinkaboutthewomaninthemarketplace?Sh
Choiceblindness:Youdon’tknowwhatyouwantWehaveallh
Surveyresultsindicatethatsmokingandalcoholandmarijuana(大麻)useincre
[originaltext]Ifyouareinyourtwenties,youownyourfirstcar,yourcar
下图是太平洋某岛屿图,读图回答下题。 该岛西南部降水丰沛,主要是因为(
在桥梁施工控制测量数据处理中,对导线测量的边长斜距须经( )后才能进行水平距离
患者,男性,25岁。患化脓性扁桃体炎,遵照医嘱行青霉素过敏试验,过敏试验液的注入
房地产企业债务融资的主要资金来源有()。A、上市 B、增发新股 C、
团体督导的优点在于()。A.对每一位被督导者的服务个案都会有大量的信息传递和不同
在期货公司的分公司、营业部等分支机构进行期货交易的,该分支机构住所地为合同履行地
最新回复
(
0
)