16.04.2004

What All Children Need

I AM a visitor in your beautiful country, working on a project which investigates services provided to orphan and vulnerable children aged 0-8 years.

In this capacity I have been visiting homes and orphanages where

these children spend their days.

I must say that I have come to note some facts.

 

Firstly I believe that for the most part children in Namibia are

loved and cared for in the best way that situations allow.

 

However I do not think that many people realize that early

experiences set the foundation for a child's behavior, development,

attitudes, and psychosocial and physical health for the rest of his

or her life.

 

Children from birth onward need active interaction with their

environment.

 

They need to be talked to and sung to.

 

They need to have interesting things to look at and someone to

put into words the things that they are seeing.

 

Playing with sand and water, with pots and pans, making pictures

- with a stick in the sand, with some chalk on a slate or with a

crayon and paper - are important activities which are the

precursors of reading and writing (even when the picture looks like

tiny dots or scribbles).

 

Playing with different sizes of sticks or stones and making

designs or sorting pieces of fabric represent pre-mathematics.

 

Giving children pots or plastic dishes to stack - flour mixed

with water to shape, a ball of grass to throw are all

educational‚ activities for children from age one onward.

 

Children also need to use large muscles - to run, climb, push

and pull things.

 

They need to engage in imaginative play - that is pretending to

be a mother or father or truck driver or doctor.

 

This pretend play helps them to learn how to behave in socially

acceptable ways.

 

Doing 'real' work‚ such as helping with household chores

also provides important learning experiences, but children should

not be given responsibilities at too young an age.

 

This creates anxiety which can lead to depression in later

life.

 

While many children are lacking in sustainable nutrition,

shelter and health services and while many organizations and

individuals are working hard to provide these, I hope all remember

that feeding‚ the brain with stimulating and interesting

activities is also a fundamental need and right for young

children.

 

If every community had an (affordable) creche where children

before school age could engage in these learning activities, even

if only for a few hours per day, I believe that we would see some

radical improvements in educational and social attainments and, in

the long run, in national economic development.

 

Jacqueline Hayden

Windhoek

 

I must say that I have come to note some facts.Firstly I believe

that for the most part children in Namibia are loved and cared for

in the best way that situations allow.However I do not think that

many people realize that early experiences set the foundation for a

child's behavior, development, attitudes, and psychosocial and

physical health for the rest of his or her life.Children from birth

onward need active interaction with their environment.They need to

be talked to and sung to.They need to have interesting things to

look at and someone to put into words the things that they are

seeing.Playing with sand and water, with pots and pans, making

pictures - with a stick in the sand, with some chalk on a slate or

with a crayon and paper - are important activities which are the

precursors of reading and writing (even when the picture looks like

tiny dots or scribbles).Playing with different sizes of sticks or

stones and making designs or sorting pieces of fabric represent

pre-mathematics.Giving children pots or plastic dishes to stack -

flour mixed with water to shape, a ball of grass to throw are all

educational‚ activities for children from age one

onward.Children also need to use large muscles - to run, climb,

push and pull things.They need to engage in imaginative play - that

is pretending to be a mother or father or truck driver or

doctor.This pretend play helps them to learn how to behave in

socially acceptable ways.Doing 'real' work‚ such as helping

with household chores also provides important learning experiences,

but children should not be given responsibilities at too young an

age.This creates anxiety which can lead to depression in later

life.While many children are lacking in sustainable nutrition,

shelter and health services and while many organizations and

individuals are working hard to provide these, I hope all remember

that feeding‚ the brain with stimulating and interesting

activities is also a fundamental need and right for young

children.If every community had an (affordable) creche where

children before school age could engage in these learning

activities, even if only for a few hours per day, I believe that we

would see some radical improvements in educational and social

attainments and, in the long run, in national economic

development.Jacqueline Hayden

Windhoek