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01/22/2015

Infant Caregiver as Detective

Life throws challenges and every challenge comes with rainbows and lights to conquer it.
Amit Ray

"A quality caregiver has to be an excellent detective," observes Dr. Alice Sterling Honig in her new book, The Best for Babies. She continues...

"Adults have to know where a child is in terms of learning the prerequisites for a new skill, such as the wrist-turning ability that allows a child to place a puzzle piece correctly into its hole in the puzzle board. They also have to figure out what will be the optimal or personally more effective ways to support each child's early learning of a new skill. Should a teacher always just wait and watch to see how the child is doing on his own trying to wrestle with a new problem, such as stacking nesting blocks? Jean Piaget, the brilliant Swiss psychologist, affirmed that children must always construct new learning and new understanding on their own through personal experimentation with materials and interactions with  peers. Yet sometimes, if a particular child is easily discouraged at his first tries, a caregiver may decide quietly to provide unobtrusive help. She will support the elbow of that toddler struggling to stack nesting blocks. She will steady the lower blocks so a child can more readily continue to stack the upper blocks as he builds his tower."



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