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" My mother had a great deal of trouble with me but I think she enjoyed
it." - Mark Twain
Early Experiences and
Language Growth
Karen Stephens, writing to parents in her Parenting Exchange
column, "Early Experiences Lay Foundation for Language Growth," observes:
"Communicating through spoken and written language is one of the most important
skills your child will ever master. With it theyâll develop, nourish and
maintain social attachments that will support them a lifetime; first within
the family, then beyond. It will help them learn to understand themselves as
well as others.
"To master language children must do more than learn to pronounce a basic
vocabulary and then be able to spell it. The basics of any language include
the ability to listen, speak, read and write. Competence and versatility in
all four areas equip children with tools they need to make sense of a lifetime
of experiences and relationships.
"Children first achieve 'receptive' language. That means they listen to,
focus on and then make sense of sounds. In the beginning, kids understand far
more language than they can produce. With maturation and experience, children
next develop 'expressive' or spoken language. They first produce sounds, then
words, and then sentences to get their needs and wants met. Soon theyâre
labeling everything in sight, just to prove that they KNOW, by golly, they KNOW
what something is!"
"Early Experiences..." is one of 14 titles on Parenting
Exchange on CD Collection # 6. To learn more about this and other Parenting
Excange collections, go to: http://mail.ccie.com/go/eed/0539
For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.
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