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Parenting Tips

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Learning through Play

by Sandra Turner-Davis, Ph.D.

Young children struggle to understand the world and their role in it. How does a child, as young as 4, make sense of the sensations that form their daily lives? The answer may not be what you think it is. It is clear that for a child, the most effective teacher is play.

And perhaps the most effective form of play is role-playing in which a child pretends to be someone else: a mother, a father, an astronaut, or a football star. Role-playing gives the child the ability to see the world from another perspective. In a caring and nurturing environment, role-playing can teach empathy and respect.

As the child grows, play can become more involved and complex. Playful interactions with others become more common with shared imaginations and roles. In cooperation with friends, children begin to make sense of their world and work through their fears and anxieties.

Parents: turn off the television and the Internet and join in the fun. There are few more rewarding experiences than playing with your child; through your play, you teach, your child learns, and sometimes your child teaches you too.

Sandra Turner-Davis, Ph.D.

Dr. Turner-Davis is a popular freelance author, speaker, and curriculum specialist. She has served as the director of Early Education at the University of Indiana, where she also served on the governor's task force examining education challenges in the inner city.

Dr. Turner-Davis has authored 11 books on education and co-authored more than 25 parent and teacher resource books. She was the keynote speaker at the 2016 Midwest Educator's Conference and has appeared numerous times on CNN, Fox News, and PBS.

Raising a Reader

by Diane Haberstadt

Reading is the key to education and love of reading will lead to a love of learning. Consider the following tips to help cultivate a love of reading in your child.

  1. Talk the Talk Reading is about words, so help grow your child's vocabulary through active and imaginative conversation. The larger the vocabulary, the greater the opportunity for exciting and meaningful reading.
  2. Book It Do you have books in your house? Your child won't read without books and a nice library shows your commitment to reading. By the way, does your child see you reading?
  3. Make it Loud The first step to reading is reading aloud to your child. Build happy memories by sharing your favorite classics and don't be afraid of long books. Children can handle big books that take weeks — or even months — to finish.

Cultivating a love for reading is a gift that keep giving throughout your child's life and into his or her adulthood. Read about it.

Diane Haberstadt

Diane Haberstadt is an author, speaker, teacher, and above all, a busy mom of three. She is a co-creator of Science Discovery World's Science 21, an interactive program helping children learn about the science of the 21st century. She is also the author of the popular book Raising the Inquisitive Child.

Diane is on the board of Intervision Schools, working to bring Web and Internet technologies to inner-city schools and centers.

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