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SAMPLE PREPARE TOMORROW’S PARENTS MONTH 2007 |
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Beyond Guaranteed Preschool: Prepare Tomorrow’s Parents
According to a poll published
this April, 63% of Americans strongly support a policy to guarantee affordable,
quality early childhood education for every child. Democratic presidential
front runners Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama both recognize the importance of preschool education
and are committed to increasing its availability.
Senator Obama
has applauded the state of
Why child-rearing classes?
As Senator Obama pointed out in a 2006 speech, research shows that “by
age three, roughly 85 % of the brain’s core structure is formed.”
Senator Clinton
makes a similar point when she writes “during the first three years of any
child’s life, his or her brain expands to three times its size at birth.
Infants and toddlers need to be stimulated, read to, and nurtured…”
If the first three years of a
child’s life are so very important, than isn’t preschool much too late to
ensure that our children are getting the right kind of mental stimulation? Many
parents are unaware that verbal interaction stimulates brain development; they
speak few words to their babies or toddlers, and rarely read to them. Nor do
they provide play activities and toys that stimulate the brain’s verbal and
spatial relations centers. Many think that corporal punishment is the only way
to discipline children including toddlers. Some, like the 23 year old Chicago
man, arrested March 12 for aggravated battery of his infant child, seem
unaware that shaking a baby can lead to its death. Some children are so
traumatized by severe physical punishment that their ability to learn and
relate in a positive way to teachers is seriously impaired.
No one doubts that the most
effective way to teach important skills-- reading, writing, math etc. -- is in
schools. What could be more important than the skill of being a good parent?
Young people must be provided with basic information about child development before
they become parents. The future of our nation rests in large part on their
competency as fathers and mothers.
Because they serve as a
deterrent to teenage pregnancy, child-rearing classes should be mandatory in
all our school no later than 5th grade -- some girls become pregnant as early
as age twelve. Once young people understand how demanding children are emotionally
and financially, girls lose their fantasy of a doll like baby that will provide
unconditional love, and boys lose their belief that impregnating a lot of girls
is cool. In June 2006, Senator Obama co-sponsored
a bill to encourage responsible fathering. Child-rearing classes are
probably the single most effective way to do just that.
In developing child-rearing
curricula there is no need to start from scratch. Some excellent programs exist
already. Family and consumer science teachers in
At a high school level,
students are offered classes in child development akin to those taught at
universities. Some programs use “Real Care Babies,” electronically programmed
baby simulators. Each student has to take the “baby” home a few days a month.
”Babies” wake up several times a night as newborns do; they often cry during
the day. They cannot be turned off and so students get a very real sense of the
responsibilities of being a parent.
For as little as
approximately $25 per student, the
De Paul University School
for New Learning professor Dana McDermott, and social philosopher and
author Myriam Miedzian
are Board Members of Prepare Tomorrow’s Parents (www.preparetomorrowsparents.org) which is sponsoring the 6th annual
Prepare Tomorrow’s Parents Month , from Mothers Day through Fathers Day.
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|Home Page| |Illinois Prepare
Tomorrow’s Parents Resources| |National Prepare
Tomorrow’s Parents Month Resources| |Contact Us| |