Oh come on- I'm an Early Childcare worker, believe me- you didn't need to be sitting her in a chair for learning to happen.
The current practice and theories recognise the child's inherent ability to learn. When you force it on them in ways they aren't developmentally ready for, it can stunt development in other key learning pathways.
At that age she needed to be focusing on gross and fine motor skills, verbal language (not flash cards).
This is what we did with our son who eventually started to read by the time he was 3. By the time he was 4, he was reading at a second grade level. As long as your kids enjoy it, keep it up!
shes a cutie.
danleetrp 1 year ago
Oh come on- I'm an Early Childcare worker, believe me- you didn't need to be sitting her in a chair for learning to happen.
The current practice and theories recognise the child's inherent ability to learn. When you force it on them in ways they aren't developmentally ready for, it can stunt development in other key learning pathways.
At that age she needed to be focusing on gross and fine motor skills, verbal language (not flash cards).
Not to mention the way she sits. How uncomfy.
Treemeadow 1 year ago
I think she just likes the letter B more. She probably finds it a more interesting sound. She's very good at mimicking though!
Indrina 1 year ago
we have enjoyed homeschooling our 9 here in the uk.google bibliosca and see our videos
bibliosca 3 years ago
We love homeschooling!
Creekermom 4 years ago
This is what we did with our son who eventually started to read by the time he was 3. By the time he was 4, he was reading at a second grade level. As long as your kids enjoy it, keep it up!
CaliforniaArchitect 4 years ago