I still have not heard back from any of my international contacts, so I continued working on the podcast alternative for the assignment. This week, I reviewed the World Forum Radio podcast featuring George Forman (http://worldforumfoundation.org/wf/wp/current-work/world-forum-radio/). Forman is the Co-founder of Videatives, Inc., which is a company that helps educators understand children's play by video recording children during play and then providing a narrative description about what the child is doing and what the child's thinking process could actually be. Forman has extensively studied Piaget's theories on play, writing several books about the topic. During an child observation, Forman discovered that children may actually be learning about their environment from an active, verb-focused viewpoint. Instead of looking at how things are in the world, children look at their environment and see what everything is doing. The little boy in Forman's observation was playing with a log. He stopped walking and set the log in a vertical position. We would normally say that the log looked like a tower, which is a noun-based conclusion. Forman concluded that the boy was excited to see the log stand on end because it was standing, not falling, which is a verb-based conclusion. I really like Forman's view of thinking in terms of focusing on the world through a verb-based lens. Children are often engaged in play, so they are always manipulating objects and determining what their actions do to the objects.
I also took the opportunity to review Harvard University's Global Children's Initiative website (http://developingchild.harvard.edu/index.php/activities/global_initiative/). One thing that I was able to relate to was when reading the Initiative's fact sheet, I noticed that they are focusing on improving mental health resources for children around the world. In my classroom and in our program, we have noticed a significant increase in the number of children and their families who have needed mental health serviced due to a variety of factors in their lives. For example, we have an eighteen month old child whose mother is in prison for drug consumption and possession and the child has displayed an increasing amount of biting behavior in the classroom. Through observations, we cannot find any specific triggers that provoke the biting, so we have called for mental health services to help us assist the child with working through this behavior. A variety of factors can influence mental health behaviors that need to be addressed and it seems that the Global Children's Initiative agrees. Another insight that I gained from the website was the impact that malaria and other health issues are having on the educational experience for children in Zambia. The overall life expectancy for the population of Zambia remains below fifty years, due to the impact of poverty and illness. Educators understand the importance of early childhood education and care practices and how it can improve a child's life expectancy and performance, which is why they are focusing on improving the malaria treatment and prevention practices in Zambia. By helping children receive a healthy start in life, advocates hope to improve the children's education performance and increase life expectancy. I also followed the link to the ACEV: Mother Child Education Foundation (http://www.acev.org/en/anasayfa). The ACEV is based in Turkey, but has partnered with organizations in thirteen other countries. They focus on strengthening the relationships between the mother and child and the father and child in needy homes, understanding that healthy relationships are a key component to a child's childhood experience. ACEV provides a variety of professional development trainings for educators to assist families with improving early childhood experiences in the needy families of Turkey and Turkish immigrants around the world. I found it reassurig that other educators around the world share the same aspirations for early childhood education as we do in the United States.
Hi Tiffany,
ReplyDeleteI love the "verb" approach to play. I have never thought of it like that, but it does make sense. Children are always manipulating things and watching to see what will happen. Sometimes, I think children are smarter than adults. They learn by exploring, and we learn from them!
Hi Tiffany!
ReplyDeleteI enjoy reading your blog posts. I really enjoyed learning about the verb-foused viewpoint. When I now observe children during free-play, I will look at them with a different perspective.
I too, reviewed Harvard University's Global Children's Initiative. It is a great resource full of information about different approaches taken around the world.
Cheers!
Sonali
I also have a child who needs mental health. He was locked in a closet from a very young age,(he is 6 now) to this day he has meany social workers and counselors. He will continue to need on-going care until he is much older. It is so sad to think that children need such serious interventions at such a young age. Thankfully their are people who have to courage to help these children.
ReplyDelete