Aug 19 2009

‘Please’ Is Not A Magic Word

Category: MontessoriThe Writer @ 4:59 pm

I have often wondered why the word ‘Please’ is not as often used when we conduct lessons for children. It is often taught as a magic word. Well, I question that, in a sensitive way. Take a look at the following ways of inviting a child to the work area by asking him questions like:

“Would you come with me please?”

“Would you like to come with me please?

“Would you like to come with me to the work area?”

“Would you like to follow me to the work area?”

I find that I get the same response whether or not I use the word ‘Please’. In fact, if I drop the word please, it goes unnoticed and then child will respond just as well.

I watch children educational programmes Dora The Explorer, Diego, Hi-5, Barney or Blues Clues. There are no deliberate attempts to use the word ‘Please’ to get the viewers to stay tuned to the programmes. All the characters used in the programmes manipulates the psychology of the mind with speech modulations, articulations, graphics, songs and drama to edutain (educate-entertain) the child. There is no need to use the word ‘Please’ to get them to dance, sing along or play pretend. The power to move the child does not rest on this one so called magic word.

Would you like to try some? Please??

YET, when a child forgets to use the word ‘Please’, they get a quick reminder to rephrase and repeat. It happens all the time to children. Let me highlight 2 things relating to the real life experiences between a child and the adult:

You don’t always get what you want even after using ‘please’. My daughter wants to watch television after dinner at 6 p.m. and has asked me permission. My response has been “No dear, you have homework to do and school in the morning.” She wants to drink coca cola with her McDonald’s meal, she doesn’t get it. I saw a 3 year old boy who struggled with his mother who refused to let him sip his apple juice before he takes a bite off this burger. He stared at his mother who talked down at him, “Say please first.”

You don’t earn your respect from a child just because you say please. Some children are just boisterous and need a lot of room to express themselves.

“I want to eat now,” says the boy.

“How do you say it?” asks the mother.

“May I eat now?” asks the boy.

“No how do you say it politely,” the mother asks.

“May I eat now please.”

“That is better.”

There is nothing wrong with ‘May I eat now?” The boy knows no difference between saying please and not saying it. However, adults are apt to stretch children’s psychological development so much so they become egocentric at teaching a child to use the word ‘please’ in his request for favours. The child who has been rejected once or twice whilst he has used the word ‘PLEASE’ can no longer understand why he should serve the selfish desire of his parent to feel respected before receiving a harmonious response.

I used to think ‘Please’ is a magic word. I think it is probably only a word that reconstructs the psychological freedom path the child is walking on. If the child asks, ‘May I eat now?’ in a soft, comfortable polite tone, he should already be rewarded for his effort to express his wish in proper correct sentence. Anything more to correct it, will only lead him to question its relevance and the paradox becomes greater and more confusing.

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Aug 12 2009

You Are Not A Blogger Until You Join BlogCatalog

Category: MontessoriThe Writer @ 12:31 am

I am pleased when Blogcatalog finally approve Accelarated Experience, a blog title to the site you are reading right now, http://absorbentmind.com. Read this post to know How I Chose The Domain Name?.


What Is BlogCatalog?

A social website which is said to have more than 80,000 sites submitted in one place. I may be wrong with the figure but you can see it for yourself that there is a huge number of bloggers everyday busying chatting, discussing and exchanging shouts (their personal mailboxes) with one another everyday. They have covered every needed feature a blogger would require to get the traffic, exposure and learning experience.

It is undeniably the place to submit your blog if you want to get a headstart in blogging. It might take you 48 hours to wait after your application is accepted but once you have your foot in the doorway, you will expect nothing less than 80,000 other blogs to connect with.

If you have studied the theory of society of cohesion, a term coined by Maria Montessori, you will understand perfectly the idea of how members of social community cohere to form a binding contract of friendship based on mutual freedom and respect for one another.

What you stand to gain from joining BlogCatalog is what bloggers want to achieve anyway. Readers, readers to comment on your blog, bloggers to discuss and share their experience, and lots more.

The key to BlogCatalog’s success is in their discussion board, shoutboxes and the fact that bloggers are free to choose who they want to connect with. Bloggers are people and human beings have to interact and actually become socially skilled and confident. That is the foundation of society.

Bloggers On The Main Discussion Board

Bloggers On The Main Discussion Board

Bloggers who have joined BC (blogcatalog) wear their badge proudly I think. I mean it creates a sense of belonging to a community. I know there have been many instances where you do get into disagreement in the discussion board. You can leave the general discussion board and focus on connecting people within your own groups.

Like I have stated before in a mirror post, “You are not a blogger until you join Blogcatalog”. Join now and get approval.

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Jul 22 2009

How Not To Be Angry With Your 3 Year Old

Category: Home, MontessoriThe Writer @ 2:42 pm

“A child of 3 comes to us like a new human being” Maria Montessori. What we do during the 1st two years will help him to shape his potentials but he does not know yet how to use them: his voice, limbs etc. It has nothing to do with character building or discipline. They do not follow structure the way we understand it. They are exploring all that is given to them, it is important for him to get it off his system, or he will not feel he is growing.

This is not deviance: it is a sort of deviation from the norm, which to us is the human person we want our kids to become. Patience, understanding and empathy help to reach out to a 3 year old who is constantly demonstrating zest for learning and experience. When we have the faith in him to grow at his own pace, he will calm down because he starts to feel he has the attention. It does not matter at this point what you have to do to help him listen to you. Our first step is calm ourselves down when our 3 year old toddler misbehave.

In a classroom setting, 3 year old kids have reportedly taken as long as 3 months to overcome separation anxieties and settle down for classes. Teachers have to literally carry the child to the mat to join the rest of his friends during circle time, and teachers do this repetitiously to demonstrate (not tell) the child, that is what is expected of him when we sing to the class “Everybody sit down sit down, just like me.”

Punishment or reward will not help a child to grow out of this phase. To him, he is just like us, a human being with the same potentials which he needs to use at his own will. We want him to be independent yet a deviant child shows his desire to be independent in the best way he can.

The simplest solution to deal with 3 year old kids who do not seem to behave, is to prepare a stress release corner. This is a retreat not an isolation chamber. Here the child gets to release his boredom and stress doing mindless activities like playdough, cutting, chopping, pressing or hitting on drums. Make use of recycled materials and do not leave sharp objects unattended. He should be allowed to use a pair of scissors and shown how to handle it too. A 10 minute lesson goes a long way in educating child the importance of handling a pair of scissors than an hour of nagging about who is to be blamed for not noticing the child is holding one in his hand.

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