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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Self-Esteem Killers ...


If you saw someone beating a child infront of you, what would you do !!
That wasn't a question, because surely you would feel obligated to stop it.
Why? Because it is the most obvious form of physical child abuse.
But what about the "Verbal Abuse" ?!!!
Well, words can hit as hard as a fist, and the damage has as much or more impact than physical violence.

Self-Esteem Killers are a form of verbal violence, it is destructive to a person's well-being and is therefore always a form of abuse.  A self-esteem killer is a statement about another person that is designed to diminish that person's sense of personal worth.  Often these statements are humorous in a cruel way.  When children are brought up hearing these self-esteem killers, they are likely to then pass on self-esteem killers to others without realizing what they are doing in the moment.  They may not recognize their destructive nature. 

Using Self-Esteem Killers with children is very dangerous, because labels become a self-fulfilling prophecy.  Meaning, your child's self-esteem and his/her resulting behavior are built in part on the "labels" of character that you and other caregivers use to describe your child.
Parents are the most powerful people in a child's life, using self-esteem killers to describe your kid's character has much to do with the interpretation a child will have of his/her own character and what kind of person this kid will grow up to be, because they lack previous experience to believe otherwise than what they are being told.

So, what to do ? How to change our language & attitude ? Showing some really "creative" examples of  self-esteem killers to avoid ... will all be posted next !

Character Stations

Thursday, October 14, 2010

How does our child learn to read !



Learning to read can start as early as 9 months old!  You don't believe me, watch this:
Your Baby Can Read Program !

Also now in schools in the UK, Australia, USA & Canada, the lattest proven method of teaching kids to read and to write is based on the below mentioned process of a child's early learning of reading & writing. It can be used starting 2-6 years of age.
Jolly Phonics !


In order to understand how these programs work, we need to understand how a child learns to read:

The Beginning Roots:
•Children begin to learn to read before they are even able to recognize a single letter. Throughout the first few years of life, children are exposed to sounds and rhythms in speech. These patterns help them develop an understanding of how words are formed and the individual sounds that compose the words.

Language and Literature's Role

•Exposure to language and literature is essential for a child to learn to read. As an infant and toddler, a child integrates the sound patterns in words and starts to develop phonemic awareness---an understanding of letter sounds and how they fit together in words. From the earliest ages, children learn that certain words rhyme and that there are rhythms to language.

Learning Phonics

•As children finish kindergarten and move into the first stages of learning to read, they starts to recognize individual letters and the sounds they make. When exposed to written letters, children start to associate the appearance of the letter with the sounds with which they have become familiar. This process is the natural continuation of the earlier phonemic awareness. Phonics---the relationship between letters and the sounds they make---is the cornerstone of learning to read. Children first learn to correlate the appearance of a letter with the sound it most commonly makes, then move on to combinations of letters to form patterns of sound.

Decoding

•Once phonemic awareness is solidly in place, children learn to decode words more quickly upon seeing the letter patterns. This ability to visually connect the letters and combinations is called "the alphabet principle." Practices that help a child learn to read include repeating rhyming words and breaking down the words into "taps"---one tap for each syllable. Also try repetitive visualization and pronunciation of common letter combinations such as "sh," "ch" and "st."

Sight Reading

•After children can reliably phonetically sound out basic words that follow the rules of pronunciation, they begin to work on sight reading. Some words in language cannot be phonetically read and the child must learn to read them simply by looking at the word as a whole. Sight reading is a process of memorization.

Maximizing Reading Potential

•To optimize children's ability to learn to read, provide early and frequent exposure to written language. This process is ideally begun before kindergarten. By that stage, the child should have a solid foundation for beginning to learn to read.



Want to know more about those two programs and how to apply them at home if you want!
Follow us at http://characterstations.blogspot.com/


Character Stations

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Make the Shift ... Stop PUNISHMENT !!!


  Punishing our kids for having done or said something wrong! Who doesn't or who didn't !
Well, punishment is a "fear-based" parenting method that urgently needs to be replaced by new ways of shifting to family relationships that promote unconditional love, positive self-wroth, open communication, healthy self-esteem , compassion and responsibility and cooperation. 
Big words ?
OK, let's start all over again !

What is Punishment ?
  There are two kinds of punishment - psychological and physical.  Psychological punishment can be verbal or non-verbal threats that instill fear or damage a child's self-image; physical punishment can be slapping, spanking or pulling hair, causing a child physical pain with the intent of associating the child's undesirable behavior with pain.  FEAR is the natural result.
  As a method of controlling others, punishment is a powerful tool.  When children are afraid, parents have incredible control over them.  How does fear of parents affect children?  They will be on edge, anxious and out of balance.  Clearly, children do not function at their best when they are in fear.  For that reason, punishment works against a child's ability to develop into a thinking, loving and confident person. 
The use of punishment creates resistance, rebellion, lying or begrudging compliance.  As a method for controlling children, it works, at best, on a short-term basis, and is likely to work mostly when the punisher is present.  The moment the punisher leaves, the temptation to continue the inappropriate behavior can be overwhelming, as misbehavior becomes an assertion of their desire to be self-determined. 

  Many of us determine our self-worth based on others' opinions, which is called being "out-directed", i.e. if others approve of us, we are worthy.  If others disapprove of us, we feel we must not be worthy.  We can only develop the confidence needed to take action and be fully responsible for our choices when our self-worth is internally based, i.e. we are "inner-directed".
  Initially, parents are the only people children know to look to in order to find a sense of self.  If the parents hold an unaccepting and critical view of their children very early in life (through psychological and/or physical punishment), their children will believe "I am unworthy because I am a bad person"  When parents view their children in a more positive way, the children are more likely to see themselves as important, worthy and good people.  This helps children become "inner-directed", which what we all want our children to be, because we will not be around them all the time to "direct" them.

  It takes a lot of effort to make the shift
* From: authoritarian power To: shared power/team building
* From: win/lose conflict To: win/win with cooperation
* From: expectation of conformity To: appreciation of diversity
* From: catching them being bad To: catching them being good
* From: power struggles To: conflict resolution
* From: passive aggressive To: assertive communication
* From: verbal/physical abuse To: promotion of self-esteem
* From: PUNISHMENT To: DISCIPLINE WITH LOVE

It does take a lot of effort, but the good news that it works and that it is not only dead words on screens!!!

" Here is a little known psychological truth - a paradox, too:
  you acquire more influence with young people when you give up using your power to control them!"says Dr. Thomas Gordon author of Discipline that Works.


Character Stations

Monday, October 4, 2010

INFLUENCIAL PARENT(S) of Influencial public figures !

   Parents are often blamed or credited for the way their adult children behave, the success that they have, and the misfortunes they experience. We often look to the parents to see where someone's values come from and to see who is "responsible" for the type of person one becomes.

In many instances, it does seem we are primarily a product of our upbringing but certainly there are times that delving into one's past and parenting style just doesn't match up with what we see.

This page is dedicated to parents, who definitely influenced their kids so positively in ways that had changed their lives' paths and only pushed them forward. Yes, the way we handle our kids, talk to them, inspire them, support them, encourage them, believe in them, play with them, respect them, educate them ... etc and above all LOVE them, does indeed influence our kids' outcome.

Here are some examples of parents, that we could learn from :

  • ALBERT EINSTEIN:

It's interesting to note that neither parent appeared to have any significant knowledge or aptitude for science or math. Both of his parents were primarily interested in Albert's academic progress and he seemed to enjoy suppport related to this from the extended family; from financial support to the provision of educational materials his schools failed to provide. He was reportedly dyslexic and had limited verbal skills for many years. Both he and his parents had to ignore the negative reports from teachers in order to succeed by finding different schools.

  • RICHARD BRANSON : 

 the founder of the Virgin Group and the only person to ever create eight separate billion dollar companies each in a different sector.

Richard was part of a close-knit family, raised in the countryside of England. From a small boy he was strongly influenced by his parents, who still remain an integral part of his life today. Whenever he is asked about the influence of his mother on him, he says: "impossible to keep up with". When Richard was a small boy, his mother was determined that he should stand on his own two feet. At 4 years of age, she put him out of the car and told him to find his own way to his Grandmother's house. Still a memorable event for Richard, he attributes his mother's determination that he should find his own way in life as a great part of his success. He says: "What you're really doing is bringing up your children to continue onwards after you. It's finding the time to be really close to your children. Finding the time to be sure they have 100% love and commitment from a father or a mother."

I will - daily - add two influencial public figures, who were once normal kids raised up by some "amazing" influencial parent(s).  Follow us for more inspiring parents !!!

Character Stations

How to talk with your Baby before your Baby can Talk !


Babies have the gift of curiosity and thirst for knowledge. What if you were able to understand what your baby was thinking about, and provide an enriching interaction based on that knowledge? The Baby Signs® Program allows you to do just that!
Babies can learn and use simple hand gestures, or sign language, to communicate what they need, what they want or what they see as young as 5 months old. Imagine if your 6 month old told you she wanted to nurse without crying, or your 11 month old told you he saw a dog across the street without grunting, or your 14 month told you the side walk was too hot for her bare feet without screaming!
This basic ability to communicate before they can talk, gives babies a great boost to their self esteem, helps parents and caregivers appreciate the intelligence of their babies, and can dramatically reduce the frustration that parents and babies experience when communication is difficult.  Intensive Research demonstrates using signs with pre-verbal babies helps them learn to talk and gives them a jumpstart to their intellectual development in addition to other Benefits.

Watch this !!!
 
You can take classes and you can even start at home.
HOW ? ... @ Character Stations !!!

Character Stations

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Early Learning is not for "Show Off", it's a science !


  Some parents - especially mothers - think that Early Learning is a luxury that we can work on with our kids, so that it would feel nice showing off what our kids "know" that others don't.  Well, that is not really what Early Learning Programs are all about !
Learning should be about the child, not about the adult keeping up with other people’s children or proving herself or himself as a perfect parent or caregiver.
Early Learning should help your child understand his or her experiences, not fill their heads with facts through “drill and kill.” And when children are actively involved in what they are learning in a hands-on way, they remember more.

    Research on the development of young children, including their brain development, creates a great deal of interest in early learning, with many positive repercussions. Studies show that “real” learning doesn’t “wait” until children enter school. The early years are critically important learning years.

So again, what is Early Learning or Early Childhood Education are all about !

Early childhood education is the organized sequenced practice of educating at one of the most vulnerable stages in life. According to the NAEYC & UNESCO ECCE (Early Childhood Care and Education) Unit  (National Association for the Education of Young Children), Early childhood is defined as the period from birth to 8 years old. A time of remarkable brain development, these years lay the foundation for subsequent learning.

Early childhood education often focuses on children learning through play.
The terms preschool education and kindergarten emphasize education around the ages of 3–6 years. The terms "early childhood learning," "early care," and "early education" are comparable with early childhood education.
Researchers in the field and early childhood educators both view the parents as an integral and inevitable part of the early childhood education process. WHY ? Because children learn through their important relationships(social learning); they learn when they feel good and are engaged and motivated in what they are learning (emotional learning); and they learn when they are making sense of their world (intellectual learning) ... So, no one would disagree that the security and warmth of being around one's own parents provides the best atmosphere for our kids' Early Learning.
Let me rephrase this again : No one should ask brave working moms to stay at home and provide "the atmosphere" for their kids learning ... all am saying is that parents (and that highly includes daddy too)should be an integral part  of the early learnig.  An hour or two with parents who have the right tools for their kids' right age bracket is better than a whole morning at the best knowledgeable and most professional daycare in town.
Much of the first two years of life are spent in the creation of a child's first "sense of self" or the building of a first identity. This is a crucial part of children's makeup—how they first see themselves, how they think they should function, how they expect others to function in relation to them. For this reason, early care must ensure that in addition to employing carefully selected and trained caretakers, program policy must emphasize links with family, home culture, and home language, meaning caregivers must uniquely care for each child using Developmentally Appropriate Practice, Individually Appropriate Practice and Culturally Appropriate Practice. Care should support families rather than be a substitute for them

Early childhood education takes many forms depending on the beliefs of the educator or parent.
Some of the most popular resources and programs are available at Character Stations and will be posted soon ! So, keep on following us !


Character Stations

Saturday, October 2, 2010

What is Character Education all about ?


  Character education is basically developing positive personal attributes and civility among our kids.
It is a whole-school effort to create a community in which positive attitudes, values and behaviours are fostered. These qualities are promoted explicitly, modeled, taught, expected, celebrated, and continuously practised in every day actions. In short, character education is the promotion of universally desirable qualities such as respect, responsibility, honesty and integrity.

HOW ?
Programs have been designed in a way that makes it attractive and natural for kids to absorb and related to and that is done through movies, story-telling, heroes, hands-on activities, songs, projects, volunteer work and mini-projects.



 Character Stations is certified and trained to teach Character Education material through two Programs: *** CHARACTER FIRST



*** GOOD CHARACTER !!


Well, if you think about it, we all need Character Education and not only our kids and students  : )

Character Stations

Monday, September 27, 2010

Back to Board Games !


Board Games are vanishing gradually from our households as a result of Technology invasion in all of its forms.

Is that happening to you ?
Well, you need to reconsider ...
WHY ?

* Board Games are rich in learning opportunities. They satisfy your child's competitive urges and the desire to master new skills and concepts, such as:

•number and shape recognition, grouping, and counting
•letter recognition and reading
•visual perception and color recognition
•eye-hand coordination and manual dexterity
•subject related games for math, literacy, ... etc depending on grade and age
•Important life lessons such as:
- Good sportsmanship
- Respecting rules and ethics
- Analyze your options
- How to plan ahead (reasoning & strategy skills)
- Every move has consequences
- You can win some and lose some, and still end the game with dignity
- Even when the odds are not in your favor, you can still turn the game around, so never give up
- Taking time to spend with your children in an activity that requires you to sit down together, to face one another, to talk to each other, and to enjoy each others company shows your children that you love them, which is one of the most important lessons kids learn through board games.
- Games don't need to be overtly academic to be educational, however. Just by virtue of playing them, board games can teach important social skills, such as communicating verbally, sharing, waiting, taking turns, and enjoying interaction with others. Board games can foster the ability to focus, and lengthen your child's attention span by encouraging the completion of an exciting, enjoyable game

HOW to Choose the Right Game at Every Age ???
While in the long run we need to teach values, ethics, academic skills, and the importance of playing by the rules, in the early years the primary goals are helping your child become more self-confident and ambitious and to enjoy playing with others. For example, as children approach 5, they have more sophisticated thinking skills and can begin to incorporate and exercise their number, letter, and word knowledge in literacy-based games. By 6, children may prefer more cognitively challenging games like checkers, which require and help develop planning, strategy, persistence, and critical thinking skills.

Need to know the best award winning board games based on age and skill in question, wait up ... I will be posting a special post on that !!

Character Stations

The Power of MUSIC on our kids development - Intro !


The research about music and children’s development is truly stunning. More and more, the eyes of the research community turn to music as a vehicle to deliver a learning experience to children.

The bottom line: early, positive, and age-appropriate experiences with music programs —can have a remarkable and research-proven impact on your child’s:

* language and literacy skills (vocabulary, comprehension, listening, expression)
* social and emotional development
* mathematics and pattern-recognition skills
* ability to plan, guide, and self-regulate their behavior
* Musically-trained people perform better on general intelligence tests (higher IQs)

So WHY?
Because music lessons train kids:
• focus attention for long periods of time
• decode a complex symbolic system (musical notation)
• translate the code into precise motor patterns
• recognize patterns of sound across time
• learn rules of pattern formation
• memorize long passages of music
• understand ratios and fractions (e.g., a quarter note is half as long as a half note)
• improvise within a set of musical rules


WHAT TO DO ? What classes to attend ? What tools and material would help ? What more resources to read about the topic ? How to custom-make your program according to your kid age and interests? More on details is coming up !

Whether Music is introduced to a kid's life in a form of Classes or instrument-playing learning, the positive effects are the same. Just choose what your kid will enjoy best.

Until then, watch my favourite Kindermusik Instructor ever : )


Music does wonder to the kids' brains ! Follow us to know more !


Character Stations

Sunday, September 26, 2010

BRAIN GYM for our Kids - Intro !


School is here and who doesn't need a helping hand to have our kids sit down, focus and concentrate longer to do their homework/study without getting into power struggles !

Well, Brain Gym is a program of physical movements that enhance learning and performance in ALL areas. Brain Gym includes 26 easy and enjoyable targeted activities that integrate body and mind to bring about rapid and often dramatic improvements in: concentration, memory, reading, writing, organizing, listening, physical coordination, and more. Brain Gym develops the brain's neural pathways the way nature does through movement.These simple exercises are based on the copyrighted work of Paul E. Dennison, Ph.D., and Gail E. Dennison since 1981.
Brain Gym benefits include improvements in learning, vision, memory, expression, and movement abilities, in both young people and adults. In the classroom, teachers typically report improvements in attitude, attention, homework, behavior, and academic performance for the entire class.
Brain Gym also comprises a set of exercises that uses fingers to stimulate neurons in the brain that improves blood circulation. The aim is to stimulate the nerves in the body and create energy.

Sharon Gelber is one of my favourite BG Instructors, who has always inspired me. Her Workshops are an exciting new medium to allow children of all ages to experience a full creative experience, uniting the two sides of the brain and the body in achieving full potential.
Take a look at one of her BG clips to have an idea at:

Click here to have an idea about BG activities for kids !!!
Character Stations offer Brain Gym classes for kids and workshops for parents who would need guidelines, knowledge, tools, toys ... etc to integrate Brain Gym into their daily routine.

Character Stations

Saturday, September 25, 2010

How Not to Talk to Your Kids -- The Inverse Power of Praise !


The Power (and Peril) of Praising Your Kids – New York Magazine – PrĂ©cis
By Po Bronson 07/05/2007



Thomas is a fifth-grader on West 84th. Thomas is one of “the smart kids” and since he could walk, he has heard constantly that he’s smart, from his parents and many adults. He scored in the top one percent of the top one percent when he applied to kindergarten.
But this self-awareness that he’s smart hasn’t always translated into fearless confidence when attacking his schoolwork. In fact, Thomas’s father noticed just the opposite. “Thomas didn’t want to try things he wouldn’t be successful at,” his father says. “Some things came very quickly to him, but when they didn’t, he gave up almost immediately, concluding, ‘I’m not good at this.’
Why does this child lack confidence about his ability? A large percentage of all gifted students severely underestimate their own abilities. They adopt lower standards and expect less of themselves. They underrate the importance of effort and they overrate how much help they need.
When parents praise their children’s intelligence, they believe they are providing the solution to this problem.
But a growing body of research strongly suggests that giving kids the label of “smart” does not prevent them from underperforming. It might actually be causing it.
Psychologist Carol Dweck studied the effect of praise on 400 fifth-graders in a dozen New York schools. Some were praised for their intelligence. They were told, “You must be smart at this.” Other students were praised for their effort: “You must have worked really hard.”
Of those praised for their effort, 90 percent chose the harder set of puzzles in a non-verbal IQ test. Of those praised for their intelligence, a majority chose the easy test. The “smart “ kids took the cop-out.
“When we praise children for their intelligence,” Dweck wrote, “we tell them: Look smart, don’t risk making mistakes – avoid the risk of being embarrassed.”
Those praised for their effort got very involved, willing to try every solution. They significantly improved. Those praised for their smarts assumed their failure was evidence that they weren’t really smart at all and did worse than they had at the very beginning – by about 20 percent.
“Emphasizing effort gives a child a variable that they can control,” she explains, “Emphasizing natural intelligence takes it out of the child’s control.” Those who think that innate intelligence is the key to success begin to discount the importance of effort. I am smart, the kids’ reasoning goes; I don’t need to put out effort.


Dweck found this effect of praise on performance held true for students of every socio-economic class, hitting both boys and girls – the very brightest girls especially.
Teachers at the Life Sciences Secondary School in East Harlem could pick out students who had been taught that intelligence could be developed. The students improved their study habits and grades after they had been told that the brain is a muscle and that giving it a workout makes you smarter.
Dr. Roy Baumeister will soon publish an article showing that for college students on the verge of failing in class, esteem-building praise causes their grades to sink further. To be effective, praise need to be specific. Sincerity of praise is also crucial.
According to psychologist Wulf-Uwe Meyer, by the age of 12 children believe that earning praise from a teacher is not a sign you did well – it’s actually a sign you lack ability and the teacher thinks you need extra encouragement. Teens believed that it’s a teacher’s criticism that really conveys a positive belief in a student’s aptitude.
Once children hear praise they interpret as meritless, they discount not just the insincere praise, but sincere praise as well.
Scholars from Reed and Stanford determined that praised students become risk-adverse and lack perceived autonomy. The students had “shorter task persistence, more eye-checking with the teacher and inflected speech that answers have the intonation of questions.”
Dweck’s research on overpraised kids strongly suggests that image maintenance becomes their primary concern – they are more competitive and more interested in tearing others down.
Students turn to cheating because they haven’t developed a strategy for handling failure. The problem is compounded when a parent ignores a child’s failures and insists he’ll do better next time. Michigan scholar Jennifer Crocker explains that the child may come to believe failure is something so terrible, the family can’t acknowledge its existence. A child deprived of the opportunity to discuss mistakes can’t learn from them.
The ability to repeatedly respond to failure by exerting more effort - instead of simply giving up – is a well-studied trait. People with this trait of persistence, rebound well and can sustain their motivation through long periods of delayed gratification. Persistence is more than a conscious act of will; it’s also an unconscious response, governed by a circuit in the prefrontal cortex part of the brain. This circuit monitors the reward center of the brain and it intervenes when there’ s a lack of immediate reward. When it switches on, it’s telling the rest of the brain, “Don’t stop trying. There’s dopa [ the brain’s chemical reward for success] on the horizon.”


“The brain has to learn that frustrating spells can be worked through,” say Dr. Robert Cloninger at Washington University, “A person who grows up getting too frequent rewards will not have persistence, because they’ll quit when the rewards disappear.”
I (the author) had thought “praise junkie” was just an expression – but it seemed as if I could be setting up my son Luke’s brain for an actual chemical need for constant reward.
I try to use the specific-type praise that Dweck recommends. I praise Luke for concentrating without asking to take a break when he does his math homework and after soccer games, I praise his effort if he works hard to get the ball.
This focused praise helped him see strategies he could apply the next day. It was remarkable how noticeably effective this new form of praise was.


If you have time, it would be great if you can read the whole article. It's one click away : )

Character Stations

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Who am I ?

I am a mother of two amazing girls - 4 and 2 years old - .
Down to earth mothers know that MOTHERHOOD is not an easy job, especially if you want to do well on it !!! Being a mother/parent is ... frustrating and rewarding at the same time. My best moments on a long rough day is a look at their peaceful faces while they are asleep.
On the continuous roller-coaster of ups and downs, I committed myself to their development:
BRAIN & CHARACTER !!!
I was extremely fortunate to be exposed to the best up to date developmental programs available in Toronto-Canada, where I didn't only take my girls to these programs but also got certified in them.
The benefits were so rewarding that I felt I needed to share them with all mothers who share the same cause and search for the best ways towards their kids' development.  I wanted to reach all mothers, but on top on my list were the EGYPTIAN mothers of all social backgrounds.
WHY ?  ... because I am a proud Egyptian women and mother, who wants to bring the best related-knowledge acquired - back home -

So, after 5 years of search, exposure,study, and experience, I am honored to be certified in the following programs:
1- Parenting
2- Baby Signs
3- Kindermusik
4- Brain Gym 101
5- Character Education
6- Early Learning

Each one of those programs added to me before they did to my little ones.
And I don't stop adding more tools, material and programs to anything that would develop our kids minds and characters. My DREAM is to be one of the awareness sources "that really matters", through my resources center "Character Stations" since 2006, where I daily work in progress to bring it all under one roof !

Dina Elbaroudy Nasralla
Character Stations.