Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: move differently + teach children + talk  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/8/2008)


Business West
Social Activist, ?Javatrekker? Dean Cycon Believes in Organic ...
Business West, MA -
If I could, then no coffee company had an excuse to do things differently. ?Looking back over the past 15 years,? he concluded, ?I?d say we?ve had a major ...
Beyond the Free Market: The Structure of School Choice
RedOrbit, TX -
They draw money and kids away from the regular public schools where union members teach, and their teachers usually need not be part of the district ...
A Day in the Life of...a Van Wert minister
Times Bulletin, OH - Jul 6, 2008
"I deliver it differently mainly because there is a different dynamic age-wise in the services as well as often the first service people have been to church ...

Business West
Canine Agility Is Growing by Leaps and Hounds
Business West, MA -
Those four leagues are completely separate entities, each playing its own set of games and constituting courses differently. The judges map out each course ...
Movie ratings pose parenting challenge
Cape Cod Times, MA - Jun 28, 2008
"Just because it's a movie, you don't stop being a parent," Perle says. "You wouldn't throw them the car keys without getting out there and teaching them ...
The very model of a secondary modern
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jul 1, 2008
Learning how to learn came to the fore, and Wallis raided good practice and research from all over the world to move the children on. ...
Looking at the Dropout Issue
Washington Post, United States - Jun 30, 2008
Some children don't like the discipline, which often means those who misbehave may not talk to their friends. Many families move out of the area. ...
Just in time for free agency: Ken Holland's Top 9
MLive.com, MI - Jul 1, 2008
Coaches can teach players only so much, but they can also learn a lot from veteran players. People look at our team and say we're old, but we're old for a ...
Engaging Bailey
News-Herald.com, OH - Jun 28, 2008
"It was the most perfect move I have ever made," Tamara said. "It helped him understand autism only means his brain works a little bit differently than ...
School moves, new sports ahead
Easton Journal, MA - Jun 26, 2008
goal of 2.008 books was reached and passed; ultimately 5695 books were read and a movie night where over 300 parents and children came was held in ...
Source: Google News

Learning to Teach Mathematics Differently: The Interaction between Coursework and Fieldwork for … -
CB Ebby - Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2000 - Springer
... 1997) stated, ?writing out explanations helps students develop their own voice
and move away from ... LEARNING TO TEACH MATHEMATICS DIFFERENTLY 81 ...

[BOOK] Primary Teachers Talking: A Study of Teaching as Work -
J Nias - 1989 - books.google.com
... to identify with their classes, to talk of themselves ... is with the whole class, not
just one child. ... emphasized by the solitary nature of much primary teaching. ...

[BOOK] The Schools Our Children Deserve: Moving Beyond Traditional Classrooms and" Tougher Standards"
A Kohn - 1999 - books.google.com
... 18 In many places, things are actually moving backward ... have a teacher who does things
differently and makes ... You might say they want vertical move- ment without ...

[BOOK] Children Talking Television: The Making of Television Literacy -
D Buckingham - 1993 - books.google.com
... far more than an evaluation of teaching and learning ... opening ofthe new Museum ofthe
Moving Image on ... Children and Television: The Context ofResearch and Debate ...

[BOOK] How to talk so kids will listen & listen so kids will talk -
A Faber, E Mazlish - 1982 - hitinc.org
... Move!? 5. Lecturing and moralizing: ?Teasing Sara was not a ... where they can see
themselves differently 3. Let ... You will teach your child what it means to be ...

[CITATION] Aspects of teaching and learning
D Wood - Children of Social Worlds: developments in a social context, 1986

[BOOK] Teaching Children to Learn -
R Fisher - 2005 - books.google.com
... Successful learning involves helping children to move on to ... time to music ?recognising
and identifying tunes ?moving in time ... 10 TEACHING CHILDREN TO LEARN ...

Looking at Homework Differently -
L Corno - The Elementary School Journal, 2000 - JSTOR
... Looking at Homework Differently Lyn Corno Teachers College ... and feedback have to occur
before moving on. ... struggles with boundaries, attempting to move beyond or ...

Becoming a Gendered Body: Practices of Preschools -
KA Martin - American Sociological Review, 1998 - JSTOR
... fashioned, properly com- ported and moving bodies establish ... stem from an inability
to move confi- dently ... girls' and boys' bodies differently, constraining girls ...

[BOOK] Kids Make Sense: An Ethnographic Account of the Interactional Management of Success and Failure in …
RP McDermott - 1977 - Dept. of Anthropology, Stanford University

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Teach children to be comfortable with those who walk, talk, move differently

 

 

Dear Jan: My 7-year-old son is uncomfortable around a classmate who has a noticeable physical disability. What can I say to him to get him over his fears?

— A parent

Dear Parent: From birth, children look for consistencies in their environment. At 5 months old, children know that people move themselves around a room and that chairs don't. People pick up chairs and move them. So then if a child sees a person sitting in a wheelchair and the wheelchair moves the person around, the child seeing this occurrence for the first time is taken aback, not knowing about this particular phenomenon.

Humans are efficient learners. They size up quickly how people typically walk, talk and move. When children realize how most people walk, talk and move and that they do so with some predictability, then children don't need to learn about each person each time they see a new face or body. They rely on what they've deemed typical and generalize that information quickly to new people and situations. By doing so, they feel safe around a variety of individuals.

So when a person walks, talks or moves differently, children, and even some adults, are drawn to see just how that person is different. A child will stare until he realizes just what those differences are all about. People with differences initially perplex those who see them for the first time. Soon, as the differences become familiar, a person focuses on their similarities and commonalties as they shed those fears or uncomfortable feelings.

I remember the first time my daughter, age 3, noticed a person in a wheelchair. It happened at a grocery store while I was paying the cashier. My daughter walked up to the person and asked, "Why are you in that chair?" I wanted to rush over and stop her, but then I paused. I realized the woman in the wheelchair was gratified that my daughter had inquired about her disability, and she thoughtfully responded, explaining that she had cerebral palsy and couldn't walk on her own. This one encounter put my daughter on the path to lessening any fears regarding people who get around differently than most.

The more a person understands and is around a broad spectrum of people with untypical behaviors or disabilities, the easier it gets. Therefore, it is up to you to embrace your son's discomfort and fear by facing this child and others with disabilities. In time, your son will broaden his comfort zone.

Here are some ways to quicken the process:

• Invite this child and others who are disabled to your home.

• Read your son stories that include children who are different than he. Start with "What Was I Scared Of," by Dr. Seuss.

• Watch movies with stories about people with disabilities.

• Model approaching and interacting with people with disabilities.

• Affirm your child's fears and then offer information about various syndromes and birth defects.

• Talk up the similarities between all children rather than focusing on their differences.

• Teach your child to offer the disabled child assistance.

• Encourage your child to approach the disabled child with questions.

• Help your child find commonality — a hobby or interest — between him and the disabled child.

The bottom line: Communicate to your child with words and actions that the world is made up of a broad spectrum of individuals, and that by getting to know this classmate his life will be enriched. You must hope, too, that the disabled child will accept your child's unique personality and appearance.

Jan Faull, a specialist in child development and behavior, answers questions of general interest in her column. You can e-mail her at janfaull@aol.com or write to: Jan Faull, c/o Families, The Seattle Times, P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111.

More columns at www.seattletimes.com/columnists

Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
 

 

Continue News With:News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords::

Contact Iconocast

Home Page