Anonymous wrote:My cousin posts daily photos & videos of her 3.5yo daughter’s intellectual accomplishments on our family’s sharing platform.
The latest was her daughter writing out words. Previously it was tracing letters, counting to 50, memorizing facts, and playing STEM related games.
We don’t do these scholarly activities at home, but I’m not here to contrast parenting styles. I’m glad their daughter is bright. Girl power! I’m here to ask is this what’s going on in other families as well? Will this really give kids a leg up in school or will they be bored in class when others are learning?
Anonymous wrote:My cousin posts daily photos & videos of her 3.5yo daughter’s intellectual accomplishments on our family’s sharing platform.
The latest was her daughter writing out words. Previously it was tracing letters, counting to 50, memorizing facts, and playing STEM related games.
We don’t do these scholarly activities at home, but I’m not here to contrast parenting styles. I’m glad their daughter is bright. Girl power! I’m here to ask is this what’s going on in other families as well? Will this really give kids a leg up in school or will they be bored in class when others are learning?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The child is loved and her parents are amazed by what she can do - all good things.
Emphasis on academics is not new - my parents did the same.
With my little kids I do not push reading or math at all because I don’t see the value in doing so before school. It’s not fun for me to be the teacher and I’d rather we all go outside and play.
But if the kid and her parents are connecting and having fun then good for them.
I think it's the sharing that is the problem. The mom wants others to be amazed by her kid. Not a good thing when she's not doing anything amazing.
If it’s a family only type album/sharing I don’t see the issue. Grandparents in particular will be equally enthralled. My brother is constantly texting our family thread with his toddlers athletic “achievements” like hitting a baseball or whatever. I don’t always respond but I get that he is just proud and wants to share.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The child is loved and her parents are amazed by what she can do - all good things.
Emphasis on academics is not new - my parents did the same.
With my little kids I do not push reading or math at all because I don’t see the value in doing so before school. It’s not fun for me to be the teacher and I’d rather we all go outside and play.
But if the kid and her parents are connecting and having fun then good for them.
I think it's the sharing that is the problem. The mom wants others to be amazed by her kid. Not a good thing when she's not doing anything amazing.
Anonymous wrote:My son is about this age. He knows how to count up to 14 or so. He remembers facts and brings up what he knows in conversation. But I don't think he would be able to recite an assignment like "here are 5 things I know about gold fish."
What he does instead is he turns any new information into a colorful story where his imaginary friend is the lead character. That's probably a more common way that kids this age learn - they take new information and build it to their play.
So is your niece exceptionally bright by comparison because she can count to 50? Similarly, is an adult who put in the effort to memorize a poem/passage 'smarter' than others? I don't think so. But definitely shows that some parts of their brain like memory are well trained in this situation.