When does a child begin to write?

My son was admitted to school when he was 4-. He had to go to school about a year sooner than he would have had it not been for the Ganguly Committee report and recommendations. He was placed with the children who were atleast six months older than him.

His teacher's constant refrain to me," Mrs.XYZ, please treat this seriously! Your son is easily the most intelligent child in my class. But he is so moody! When he refuses to write- he simply refuses. I can sit with him for an hour or two or three... he will not write! Please make him write!" This is coming from a teacher teaching ( AND trained to do so) nursery children. I reply, quite nonchallantly," Yes, ABC, he is intelligent and understands far more than you would expect from a child his age. However, motor development proceeds along certain predefined milestones. He does not even know how to hold a pencil! Teach him that before you expect him to write." I teach him precisely that. I do not worry that there are children in the class ( who are incidently 6 to twelve months older than him!) who can and do write.

Have you seen a child attending normal school who is not able to form the lettering by the time he is in class 1 or 2? In this case we are not even talking about the ability to spell correctly- only form the letters.

Language aquisition must follow milestones. Each has to be achieved before the journey can go further. There may be some overlap, but the milestones cannot be sequenced differently. A child has to first and foremost LISTEN. Then he/ she begins to experiment with sounds and starts to SPEAK. When parents and care-givers talk in baby-talk, the child develops faulty speech. Typical of many Indian families," Ale Mela Beta!" We are setting the child up for a 'r'/ 'l' substitution. 'r' sound, in any case, is a sound that is difficult and gets established as late as 4 or 5. After having the LISTEN-SPEAK in place, the child begins LETTER RECOGNITION or PRE-READING. It is only after beginning to recognise lettering can a child logically move on to WRITING.

Preschool and nursery should logically prepare a child for the task ahead- writing readiness. This means the child must be taught how to hold the pencil. This has to be taught with love and patience. The little one must be given crayons to play with and have a splash of colours on their sheet. Once the grip of the colours is well-established, the little hands may be given the stylus. Even so, finger tapping exercises, thumb- to middle-finger-dance and even the simple wave help the child develop motor-readiness to hold the pencil and rush headlong into the world of the written word.

At this point, the product of this effort is NOT important. The only thing important at this time is the grip AND the motivation of putting the pencil to paper.

Some of the good schools in Delhi 'teach' children without having any plans or programmes in place. Sad. This could affect the tender children adversely- very adversely.

A few years ago, the competitive world opened its jaws to swallow the parents who wanted to boast of children who could do this, that and everything else. The only problem with the situation was that the parents were holding on tight to their children's tiny hands. The world swallowed the children, too!

From nursery, the children came down to pre-nursery and play-school began when they had barely begun to find their feet. Some children began preschool before they even turned two! However, was it really play?

Some of the good playschools, fortunately, were working according to the play-way and teaching with fun and games. In these schools, letter recognition preceded letter formation. Letter formation was taught in a sequence that helped the child develop fine motor skills. These children wrote first a 'c', followed it with an 'o' and then an 'a'. It was only after they were comfortable with these that they moved on to 'b' and 'd'.

All the while the children sang and danced and used their hands and fingers in little gestures to promote development of motor control required to write. My daughter was lucky to be in such a school. Thank you, 'The Study'!

This is much better than and much more than what I am seeing in formal schools. I wish I could make a difference to other children. I feel saddened by the pressure other mothers feel when the teachers begin complaining. I only want to say, "Hold on, Mums! They will all get there. Follow your heart. Do what feels right for you and for the child."

And if you cannot understand all this- think- and watch- Taare Zameen par! Not for dyslexia. Not for acting. Not for story line. Only to see how a child- any child MUST be allowed to flower and grow without being smothered!

Happy Mothering!

4 comments:

Quest said...

Welcome, to the Real World Child!!!

It's not just the parents who undergo the stress-very often,we directly/indirectly subject the child with the same stress-multiplied! The child begins his life almost as if it is the end of it!
Wish we were all more sensitive to these issues! Here is where "Good Parenting" plays such an important role.
" Yes, ABC, he is intelligent and ........! Teach him that before you expect him to write."
Well, just makes me want to add...

"He who would learn to fly one day must first learn to stand, and walk, and run, and climb, and dance. ONE JUST CANNOT FLY INTO FLYING"

Nature Walker said...

Dear Quest!
As usual... you ae saying exactly what I need to!
Parenting is a dedicated full-time commitment. i feel it cannot be bad... if it is not good, it is not parenting. Being a parent makes us aware for the first time in our life what it is like to have our heart outside our body. When we feel so- we can only be good.
Parents who want to boast of super-kids are forgetting parenting somewhere in the by-lanes. They are bringing their life's pace and culture to their children's life- killing childhood in the process.

Time we all stopped... paused... and let our children ENJOY childhood. That is parenting! Allowing the children to do what they can. Let us strive to make adjectives- good or bad- unnrcessary when discussing parenting.

Dyslexicon said...

Children are adult's toys - play with them without distressing them. Nature made these little creatures cute so that adults would be motivated to take care of them.

And on a similar note life is a "game" for children - otherwise they would not have any "motivation" to live & grow. So even education / learning should be fun & game.

If you are in the business of serious education then try educating adults - and you will soon become strongest proponent of un-education !!!

Nature Walker said...

Dyslexicon!
It may have been due to these difficulties that in the West, some parents have preferred home-schooling. They'd much rather follow a curriculum- any curriculum at home and have their children tested at the end of an academic year.

"cute" children arouse a sense of responsibility along with loving care giving. Education, too has to meet the same standards

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