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    How to Get Smart Kids

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    • S Offline
      sleepy
      last edited by

      胎教 is important too 😉

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • B Offline
        BeContented
        last edited by

        sleepy:
        胎教 is important too 😉

        No wonder my DD whole day think of food......plan for her next meal what she wants 😓 Since Mon, she has been telling me what she wants for Saturday's breakfast cos' she's having a long day..... :rotflmao:

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        • D Offline
          Dreamaurora
          last edited by

          struggling:
          gee, the answer is ... PLAY!

          :imcool:

          http://www.healthxchange.com.sg/healthyliving/childrenhealth/Pages/Want-Smart-Kids-Involve-Them-in-Active-Play.aspx
          Chey, I thought you were going to invoke Lee Kuan Yew's 'graduates must marry graduates'. :rotflmao:

          Hmm, sports over videogames. Why not combine both? Buy Kinect 360 or Wii. :evil:

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          • JenniferJ Offline
            Jennifer
            last edited by

            sleepy:
            胎教 is important too 😉

            Plus brain food.

            Seriously.

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            • E Offline
              Eagle-Ladybird
              last edited by

              Thanks for the article. I’m gonna send it all those who think I was too lax with my kids. After all, I may not be that wrong, hehehehehe

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              • S Offline
                struggling
                last edited by

                It’s a struggle though to balnce between believing in this and letting my kids go play, when the exams are looming…


                But, I do recall my own childhood days when seems to be playing everyday, riding bicycles, climbing trees, playing marbles and five stones, etc… And still doing pretty well in the exams!

                Shall we all just a take a leap of faith and just do it, given the professional endorsement and advise given?

                Who dares?

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                • C Offline
                  Chenonceau
                  last edited by

                  struggling:
                  It's a struggle though to balnce between believing in this and letting my kids go play, when the exams are looming....


                  But, I do recall my own childhood days when seems to be playing everyday, riding bicycles, climbing trees, playing marbles and five stones, etc.... And still doing pretty well in the exams!

                  Shall we all just a take a leap of faith and just do it, given the professional endorsement and advise given?

                  Who dares?
                  In my experience, this is true.

                  The current PSLE syllabus is constructed in such a way (and is so demanding) that we MUST leverage on the very efficient subconscious learning that happens through play. My son barely has to study Science but still scores well in P5 and P6 simply because I encouraged him to play with his physical surroundings and do experiments with them. He started at 2.

                  It's a bit like playing around in the kitchen with Grandma without being taught from age 2... and then enter a culinary school to learn cooking theory and rigorous practice. The theory and practice becomes so much more intuitive simply because you've messed around so much during childhood.... that one needs little effort to master them.

                  Parents fear so much that unstructured play teaches nothing... or that kids cannot recall. It's quite ok if they can't verbalise or recall what they've learnt through play in toddlerhood and P1 & P2. It'll all come together in P5 and P6. Actually, if encouraged to play and explore, kids absorb much more, than if you make them do assessment books all day in K2.

                  Amongst other things, my son learnt his alphabets by spitting on ants to make them run in the shapes of the alphabet.

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                  • L Offline
                    Lyddon
                    last edited by

                    From a man's perspective...

                    Find a smart intelligent woman to love, to marry and is willing to bear your child/children.

                    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/brainy-sons-owe-intelligence-to-their-mothers-1339099.htm

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                    • A Offline
                      ammonite
                      last edited by

                      Why must everything be dictated by "smartness"? We let them play because it makes them "smarter"? We get tutors for them because it makes them LOOK "smarter" (and argue about it like verbal mud-wrestling)? We work on their motivation so that we can maximise their "smartness"? The latest that makes me roll my eyes absolutely - the debate on breastfeeding and how it makes children "smarter" or not.


                      No wonder the top prize winner of the UOB art competition is called "Let Me Sleep".

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                      • B Offline
                        beanbear
                        last edited by

                        What about street-smartness? We heard how some kids grow up to be academically smart but not street smart. My DD is academically weak - failing all subjects - but many adults including teachers who know her call her as very street-smart with strong influential skills.


                        I toggle between pride and fear coz I don’t know if her street smartness will be enough to get her past her basic education in Singapore. Also at times, I wonder where she gets her street smartness from? I’ve got 4 kids and DD being number 2, has been "nurtured" similarly but she’s turned out alot more resilient and street smart than the rest.

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