One question that my teachers and I are frequently asked by Perform parents is ?Where should my child be at this stage?? And if I'm completely honest, as a mother myself, it's a question that I find myself asking about my own children too.
I guess, as parents, that's our job. We worry about our children's well-being and happiness so it's only natural to show our love and care by looking out for potential problems and "measuring" them against benchmarks.
Having said that, maybe we should relax a little?
Last week, I was chatting to a Head Teacher who told me about a very stressed mother who was worried that her daughter (5 and a half years old) wasn't reading as well as her classmates. The mother was suggesting that she cut down on her daughter's after-school clubs to do more reading practice with her and focus on getting her to be "as good as her friends".
The Head Teacher (who has years of experience and four children of her own) said very simply ?At this age we should be developing the child as a whole and not just focusing on one aspect? and I wholeheartedly agree with this. We get so stressed with wanting to see achievement at an early age (even down when they can sit and crawl (!)) that we can easily forget that children develop at different ages and that's completely normal.
For example, do we teach children to read too young in the UK? According to Professor Katz, an American Education Professor, the UK model of teaching children in pre-school and Reception can actually be damaging. She claims that children shouldn't even be introduced to the alphabet before they are five and a half years old.
Katz advocates that vocabulary should be learnt in context as opposed to on paper and recommends that play and creativity is the key. She defends this more informal approach by quoting evidence that shows that, although early readers do well in tests initially, at 11 or 12, they are no better (and often worse) than children who had a later start at reading.
I'm sure that statistics can be found for and against early reading and academic pre-school focus and, of course, it is human instinct to want to see your child achieve things early, if only to allay our own fears of slippage later on. But I firmly believe that the main aim for every young child should be to nurture their happiness, confidence, and creativity and as the Head Teacher said ?develop the child as a whole?.
Looking back at my own children, my son walked at 11 months and my daughter at 18 months but they both walk, run, skip and jump now. So did it matter that one walked quite early and one walked quite late? I think not. And, parental anxiety aside, isn't this the same for all child development?
I'd love to hear your thoughts.