|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
The Early Achievement Controversy
| Article
# : |
16830 |
|
|
Section : |
LIFE
|
| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1989 |
1,603 Words |
| Author
: |
Patricia L. Fry Patricia L. Fry is a free-lance writer living in California. |
Teaching infants to swim, toddlers to play the violin, preschoolers to read, write, and work out complicated mathematical problems: Can it be done? Should it be done?
Glenn Doman, founder and chairman of The Institute for the Achievement of Human Potential, is just one of several in the child development field who shouts a resounding YES! Research shows that the human brain grows rapidly during the first six years of life and has an incredible capacity for soaking up data. Thus some child-development experts urge parents to take advantage of this period of super learning and give their children an academic boost.
Doman, in his book How to Multiply Your Baby's Intelligence, states that it's easy to teach a six-month-old baby to read because "all children are linguistic geniuses from birth." Doman is making a significant contribution to what he terms the "Gentle Revolution" movement, designed to "give all parents the knowledge required to make their babies highly intelligent, extremely capable and delightful children, and by so doing to make a highly humane, sane and decent world."
Doman's "superkids," for the most part, are created and not born, which means that any parent can teach any child to excel academically even before they are old enough to cross the street by themselves. One four-year-old in Doman's program, for example, reads independently from an encyclopedia. A two-year-old reportedly reads Japanese and is currently learning algebra and geometry. Another child began talking at six months and is already reciting poetry at a year. One little boy could read five thousand words, do arithmetic, and play a recognizable tune on
... (2000 of 9687 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|