
Schools for
young children must
be developmentally appropriate
Developmental stage
theory, a relatively new branch of psychology, assumes that in their
growth from infancy to adulthood humans go through stages which are sequential, invariant and universal.
These stages apply to growth in all domains: the physical, the
mental (or cognitive), the vital (or affective) and the social. Some developmental
psychologists have also posited moral and spiritual stages of
development. Although the stages reflect a universal pattern for
growth, human beings pass through these stages at different
rates and with varying degrees of sophistication. One person may
advance rapidly in social skills but be slow to develop
physically, another may spurt ahead in the cognitive domain but
learn social skills slowly. In a broad sense, however, it is not
possible to jump a stage, or to be force-marched through it.
Until a child is ready to make growth in a given domain and
through a given stage,
all that loving parents and conscientious teachers can do is to
prepare the environment; we can not �make� growth happen.
Patterns of development are also strongly affected by the
individual personality with which we come into the world, and
with the conditions of the culture in which we live. Children
brought up in a seafaring society may learn to swim very early;
children brought up by highly verbal parents are apt to begin
talking earlier.
Unlike the concept of childhood which was common a century ago,
and still prevails in some societies, children are not thought
of or treated like little adults. Childhood is recognized as a
stage in human development with special qualities all its own.
Psychological theory, supported by our own common sense
observations of children, shows us that young children do not
think like adults; they do not even think like older children.
Their perceptions of the world are embedded in their own
spontaneous actions and desires. They do not reason abstractly;
they do not even reason logically as we understand logic, though
within the range of their perceptions the thinking may be very
logical. Ask your four year old whether he has a brother or
sister. If he says yes, ask him who is the sister/brother of
that person? It is not often that the four year old understands
that the relationship is reciprocal; that if Jack is his brother
he is also Jack�s brother. Ask him what happens to the sun at
night. But don�t try to force him to learn the right answer
because he does not yet have enough experience of the world, or
the mental ability, to understand abstractly that the earth is
moving when you can just look around and see that it isn�t.
Even I have a little trouble with that idea when I think about
it! No wonder the flat earth theory took so long to be
disproved. The young child knows the world as he or she sees it
- literally. That things may be other than they seem is a stage
of thinking they will come to later.
At one of our kindergarten seminars we discussed guidelines for
development in young children from the book Yardsticks: Children
in the Classroom Ages 2-12 in which Chip Wood, drawing on the
theoretical work of Arnold Gesell, Piaget and others, as well as
on his own extensive experience with children, has described the
common characteristics of children at each age from four to
twelve. He describes these common characteristics in four
domains: the physical, the cognitive (mental), the social, and
in the realm of language. Within the physical domain he notes
rapid changes in vision, with fine and gross motor ability as
the child matures. For example, in four year olds vision and
fine motor ability are still developing, and it is therefore
unwise to expect the child to do close visual work, like copying
from the board, or fine motor activity like embroidery. Six year
olds, on the other hand, have gained increasing body control and
are mentally ready for more abstract tasks - getting ready to be
readers and writers as well as runners and singers.
Four year olds, he says, are �ready for everything�. They
are explorers, adventurers, sparkling with energy, continuously
on the move, full of exaggeration, using and enjoying many large
muscle activities, if not yet ready for fine motor and close-up
visual activity. Fives are more compliant and more comfortable,
but they are also happier when the environment is structured and
predictable, with bounded opportunities for exploration and free play. Sixes
are �in an age of dramatic physical, cognitive and social
change�. They are industrious, they thrive on praise, they can
be extremist in anything, and they are at the threshold of large
changes in their perceptions of the world.
In general the young child is egocentric and impulsive. He knows
only the world immediately around him, and, embedded in his
perceptions, he is clear about what he thinks he knows, he is
also full of curiosity; he questions, he investigates, he
expects the world to bend to his desires, and he is seldom
capable of planning ahead.
(This is a very skimpy summary of a very readable book. Parents
and teachers of children up to the age of 12 may be interested
in borrowing it from the Teacher�s Access Centre at
Transition. All of the other books mentioned are also available
to borrow.)
As we looked at the defining characteristics of children at
different levels of development we tried to match their needs
and interests with the curriculum of the kindergarten, and for
the most part found the curriculum a fitting mix for the
changing developmental patterns of four to six year olds. |