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9781607743026

You Are Your Child's First Teacher, Third Edition Encouraging Your Child's Natural Development from Birth to Age Six

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781607743026

  • ISBN10:

    1607743027

  • Edition: 3rd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2012-08-14
  • Publisher: Ten Speed Press
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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

You Are Your Child's First Teacherwas the first book in America to popularize the insights of Rudolf Steiner, founder of the Waldorf schools, regarding the developmental needs of young children. This revised and updated edition offers new ways for parents and educators to enrich the lives of children from birth to age six. Since this book first appeared, the complexity and stressfulness of life for young children has increased, and parents are bombarded by contradictions when seeking advice on raising children. You Are Your Child's First Teacheris not just another set of child-rearing rules, but a new way of understanding child development-body, mind, emotions, and spirit-that equips parents to make their own decisions based on cognitive and intuitive knowledge and to raise a well-rounded child.

Author Biography

Rahima Baldwin Dancy is internationally known as a Waldorf early childhood educator, author of Special Delivery, and coauthor of Pregnant Feelings. A mother of four, Dancy is a founding board member of LifeWays North America and co-founded/directed Rainbow Bridge LifeWays Program in Boulder, Colorado. Currently, she is the director of Informed Family Life, through which she organizes national conferences on alternatives in birth, parenting, and education. Visit www.waldorfinthehome.org.

Table of Contents

Preface to the Revised Editionp. ix
Acknowledgmentsp. xiii
You Are Your Child's First Teacherp. 1
A Unique Opportunity
Parents' Dilemma Today
Cultural Dilemmas
Lack of Support for Mothering
Children Are Not Tiny Adults!
The Child's Changing Consciousness
The Role of the Child's Individuality
How Children
Learn in the First Seven Years
Our Task as First Teachers
Trusting Ourselves
Recommended Resources
Home Life as the Basis for All Learningp. 26
Home Life Is Undervalued in Our Culture
Why Is It So Difficult to Be Home with Children Today?
Consciously Creating a Home
Four Levels of Home Life
Home Life as the Curriculum for the Young Child
Recommended Resources
Birth to Three: Growing Down and Waking Upp. 42
Growing into the Body
What Is Your Baby Like Between Six Weeks and Eight Months of Age?
Learning to Walk
The Second Year: Mastering Language
The Emergence of Thinking
The Young Child's Senses
The Emerging Sense of Self
Recommended Resources
Helping Your Baby's Developmentp. 63
Stimulating and Protecting the Sensitivity of the Newborn
What Is It Like Being with a Newborn?
What Is It Like from Months Two to Twelve?
Physical Development
The Development of Intelligence
Emotional Development
Language Development
Toys for the First Year
Recommended Resources
Helping Your Toddler's Developmentp. 92
Encouraging Balanced Development
Dealing with Negative Behavior
Encouraging the Development of Language and Understanding
The Beginnings of Imaginative Play
Providing a Rich Environment for Your Toddler
Toys and Equipment
Recommended Resources
Rhythm in Home Lifep. 110
Creating Rhythm in Daily Life
The Rhythm of the Week
Celebrating Festivals and the Rhythm of the Year
Celebrating Birthdays
Recommended Resources
Discipline and Other Parenting Issuesp. 130
The Question of Discipline
Why Does Parenting Take So Much Energy?
Can You Work toward Rhythm with an Infant?
What about Weaning?
Crying Babies
What about Going Back to Work?
How Long Do Children's Senses Need Protecting?
Toilet Training
Separation Anxiety and "Helicopter Parenting"
Cabin Fever
Other Parenting Issues
Recommended Resources
Nourishing Your Child's Imagination and Creative Playp. 163
Three Stages of Play
Experiencing the World through Play
The Importance of Play in Intellectual Development
Ways to Encourage Your Child's Creative Play
Nourishing Your Child's Imaginative Play through Stories
Recommended Resources
Developing Your Child's Artistic Abilityp. 191
Understanding Children's Drawings and Development
The Experience of Color
Watercolor Painting with Young Children
Metamorphosis in Later Stages of Life
Modeling with Beeswax
Making Things with Your Children
Freeing Your Own Inner Artist
Recommended Resources
Encouraging Your Child's Musical Abilityp. 209
Make a Joyful Noise
Music and Cognitive Development
Singing with Your Child
Movement Games and Fingerplays
Pentatonic Music and the "Mood of the Fifth"
What about Music and Dance Lessons?
Recommended Resources
Cognitive Development and Early Childhood Educationp. 223
Academic vs. Play-Based Learning
Why Not Introduce Academics Early?
The Value of Preschool
Evaluating Early Childhood Programs
LifeWays and Waldorf Early Childhood Programs
LifeWays and Waldorf in the Home
The Value of Mixed-Age Programs
When Is Your Child Ready for First Grade?
What Happens Around Age Seven?
Beginning Academic Work: The Waldorf Approach
What about the Advanced or Gifted Child?
Recommended Resources
Common Parenting Questions: From Television to Immunizationsp. 255
Preparation for Life
Computers
Balanced Development
Television
Toys
Video Games
Immunizations and Childhood Illnesses
The Sick Child
What Makes Children So Different from One Another?
Religion and Young Children
Recommended Resources
Help for the Journeyp. 281
Conscious Parenting Is a Process
In Conclusion
Appendix: Rudolf Steiner and Waldorf Educationp. 286
Notesp. 290
Bibliographyp. 303
Indexp. 311
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

How Children Learn in the First Seven Years

     The child between birth and age seven experiences the world primarily through her body. The senses are completely open, without filters or buffers, beginning at the moment of birth. The newborn continues to experience each sensation with her entire body and being. This is easy to see in the infant, who is all hunger or the pain in her stomach, or all the blissful sensations of nursing that cause her eyes to roll back and her toes to curl. The three-year-old, as well, is much more open to impressions of the world coming through the senses than is an adult. We can even observe that children’s eyes stay open longer between blinking than do an adult’s.
     Two things are happening through sense impressions from birth through age seven. The child is both learning about the world and being shaped by the impressions she takes in, just as a sculptor might work with clay. This phenomenon does not occur very often with adults, who are less open and responsive to the environment than young children, but we can see a similar phenomenon in the molding of the features that the elements of light and weather etch into the face of a seaman or farmer.
     This “sculpting” effect of impressions on a young child’s developing organs, which was pointed out by Rudolf Steiner in the early 1900s, was not meant to be taken metaphorically. Current research has demonstrated that this is physically true for the young child’s brain, which is still forming, not just growing larger. According to an article in Newsweek, “‘Only 15 years ago,’ reports the Families and Work Institute in the just-released study ‘Rethinking the Brain,’ ‘neuroscientists assumed that by the time babies are born, the structures of their brains [had been] genetically determined.’ But by last year researchers knew that was wrong. Instead, early childhood experiences exert a dramatic and precise impact, physically determining how the neural circuits of the brain are wired.”13 The second thing the child is doing through sense impressions is learning about the world. Through the body the baby learns about near and far, attainable and unobtainable, as when she learns that a spoon can be grasped but the flowers on the table remain out of reach. As she begins to learn the names of things, memory, language, and thinking develop so she can give expression to her own and the world’s emerging complexity. When the child reaches age three and beyond, what is taken in with the senses is also transformed and comes out again in the creative play and imagination of the young child.
     The child’s major task in the first year of life is taking control of the body. Sitting, crawling, and walking are quickly followed by running, jumping, climbing, and other feats of dexterity as fine and gross motor coordination increase. Everything is done for the first time—using a shovel, sitting on a seesaw, cutting with a scissors—and then it is done over and over again. The child loves to move and to imitate, learning through doing something with someone else or after seeing it done. And the young child loves repetition, hearing the same story over and over or playing the same circle game, no matter how simple or boring it may seem to an adult.
     The young child is also learning about the world emotionally, learning the fundamental lessons about trust and attachment, and later lessons about sharing and consequences. It has long been known that babies and young children in institutions where they are denied the love of a primary caregiver suffer “failure to thrive syndrome” and can die, even though their physical needs are being met. Now PET scans of the brains of orphans who have been institutionalized since shortly after birth show that the temporal lobes, which regulate emotions and receive input from the senses, are nearly quiescent.14 Such children suffer emotional and cognitive problems resulting not only from a lack of stimulation but also from a lack of love and bonding.
     The baby is love. Bonding is less a process of babies learning to love their parents—because children will love even parents who abuse them—than of parents establishing the connection that will enable them to make room in their busy lives for another being who needs attention twenty-four hours a day! Children enter the world with a great deal of love and trust. They are not yet able to perceive good and bad, but they take everything as good and appropriate to absorb and unconsciously imitate.
Our Task as First Teachers
One of our primary tasks as our children’s first teachers is to provide them with impressions of the world that are appropriate for them to take in and copy. This means guarding and protecting them from sensory overload in a world of urban frenzy, and surrounding them with experiences that teach them about the world in a gentle way by letting them do things directly themselves and later act them out in their play.
We also need to strive to model appropriate behavior—that our emotions are under control with our children, that we don’t spank them while admonishing, “Don’t hit!” and so forth. Our actions speak louder than our words with the young child, who cannot help but imitate. Through us, children learn whether or not their initial love and trust in the world were well founded.
     Another of our main tasks is to understand our children’s physical, emotional, and mental development so we can guard it and let it unfold without hindrance. No one would want to stop a child from walking, but it is also something that we don’t have to worry about teaching the child. The child will walk when she is ready, as a natural expression of the mastery of her own body—the development of balance and the achievement of verticality in the face of gravity that has kept her horizontal for so many months. There is a task for us—to guard, to protect, to understand, to share, and to enjoy with the child the unfolding of his or her abilities. We can do things to enhance abilities by providing an example and allowing the young child to express them freely from out of his own being. We can also note discrepancies in development and areas at risk and take gentle steps to help ensure balance. But with the young child much more is achieved indirectly through example and imitation than head-on through lessons.
     No matter what our family situation or lifestyle, we as parents are our children’s first teachers. The importance of what they learn in the home and through their relationship with us cannot be underestimated. By understanding how children develop and some things we can do to help their balanced and healthy growth—physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually—we will not only help our children but also increase our own enjoyment and growth as parents.
 

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