I've spent many years studying children's behavior, trying to better
understand how "nature" and "nurture" impact human development and the
role of social experience on brain development. Some of this science is
featured in the upcoming PBS series, This Emotional Life (airing next week, January fourth through sixth on PBS).
In a relatively short period of time, our society has radically
shifted our collective view of childhood--just over a generation ago,
the maxim was that children "should be seen and not heard," reflecting
relatively little interest in early childhood. Now a great deal of
media attention, marketing, and adult conversation is centered about
questions regarding the best approaches to parenting. This is a
double-edged sword. In some ways, parenting has become a competitive
sport, with adult's perceptions of their own competence too closely
tied to their children's performance. On the other hand, it does appear
to be the case that early childhood is important for human development,
and adult attention to the needs of children has lead to improvements
in children's health and education. As a scientist, I spend a lot of
time studying how and what children are learning as they interact with
their parents and others.
The hot button issue in child development concerns what is "innate"
or what sorts of information, traits, and tendencies are already in our
brains from the moment we are born. The idea that we enter the world
with lots of skills and knowledge is an old and very attractive idea.
But my own view is more of a vanilla ice-cream approach. Rather than
lots of fancy features, it is likely that what humans enter the world
with is a general ability to learn. We have an amazing ability to be
able to pick up on various things that are happening in the environment
and remember them and group them together. As a result of these very,
very powerful abilities to learn, what we're able to do is master lots
of different complex behaviors--reading emotions, understanding basic
physics, decoding language. If human infants are indeed born with
highly effective learning abilities, when we're interacting with our
children we are teaching them.
When we are forming our earliest relationships, such as forming social bonds or attachments
-- what we are doing is learning. We are learning how to signal to
others when we need help for hunger or pain or fear; we are learning
who responds to our needs, and how consistently those people respond.
As we become older, we learn more complex social cues: what makes other
people upset; what makes them comforted; what will result in
punishment; what will result in reward. I believe that our brains are
born ready to learn about emotional cues... but all that learning
depends upon the kinds and quality of social experiences that we have
had. These experiences turn on different sets of genes, tune our
attention to different aspects of our social world, and imbue our
experiences with meaning.
So as a parent I try and step back and ask myself whether I am
making these learning experiences clear to my children. Am I being
consistent? Have I tried to show my children a clear link between what
they have done and why I am upset? Social life is very complex for
young children. It can be very easy for adults to forget that they are
trying to learn based upon very little information... sort of like
trying to communicate in a second language: it helps when people speak
slowly and clearly and simply at first.
The big picture is that children are very active learners. Learning
does not mean just numbers and letters. It also means learning about
relationships. We have to learn how to communicate to others how we
feel, how to read the signals that others are sending to us... and even more daunting, how to regulate our feelings and behaviors
when interacting with others. The building blocks of complex emotions
such as love stem from this type of back and forth between two people,
parent and child. Being able to recognize what somebody else is
feeling, recognize that your needs are met, recognize that you've met
somebody else's needs. This interplay is really at the core of a
reciprocal relationship.
As a parent, what I try to do is to use situations as moments to
help children master social communication, love, understanding, empathy
because these are not things we are born with, they are skills that
emerge with practice. Do I do this all the time? When we are late for
school, and the lunches are not made, and the kids want a cereal that
we've run out of, no one is putting on their snow pants, and a glove is
missing, and I have not had my morning coffee well, that's not so much
a teachable moment as it is just trying to make it through the moment.
Source: Huffington Post - http://tinyurl.com/ykw3lgt