Making
Connections: How children learn
A summary of Recent Brain Research
Many parents, child care providers, and volunteers have instinctively
understood the importance of the language activities they
share with children begriming in the first years of life.
These activities are not limited to reading, but also include
storytelling, singing, and ordinary exchanges that take place
in the course of everyday life. Now, after more than 20 years
of focused study, new brain research is confirming the merits
of these activities. With the help of new brain imaging technologies,
brain researchers are gaining insight on how and why these
activities promote early development - not only intellectual
growth, but healthy social and emotional development as well.
On the basis of this research, many pediatricians place such
value on the stimulation children receive when read to at
a young age that they have begun to prescribe reading to babies
along with regular check-ups and vaccinations.
The neuroscience associated with this research is complicated,
but its lesson is simple: babies brains develop at astonishing
rates in the years after birth. Young children have a tremendous
capacity to learn from the moment they are born, but optimal
development hinges on the experiences provided for them by
the adults who take care of them. Scientists have long believed
that reading with children creates a context in which learning
can occur. Today, however, they have evidence that reading
is one of the experiences that actually influences the way
young brains develop-that is, the brains's circuitry is "wired."
But how does this work? At birth children have most of the
brain cells, or neurons, they will need for a lifetime of
learning, but these brain cells are not yet linked with the
complex networks that are needed for mature thought process
to take place. In the early years, young children's brain
cells form connection-synapses-very rapidly.What causes brain
cells to form connections? Genes control some of the process,
but experience is also a crucial ingredient. Every time a
caregiver, or a teacher interact with the infant or toddler,
connections are formed. Positive interactions with nurturing
caregivers-like the attention children receive when they are
read to-profoundly stimulate young brains. This stimulation
causes new connections to form neural pathways(we might think
of as "learning pathways") and strengthens existing
ones.
In the first years of life children form extra synapses.
In fact, a three-year-old has twice as many connections as
an adult. In the second decade of life, as children move toward
adulthood, trillions of extra connections are eliminated.
But this is not a random process. Those connections that have
been used repeatedly in the early years have become stronger
and tend to remain; those that have not been used often enough
are shed.
In adolescence young people are losing connections or synapses
at a rapid rate, and this may sound worrisome(especially as
they approach the age when they begin to think about getting
their driver's licence's). But in fact, the process of shedding
excess synapses is perfectly natural and in fact, beneficial
for the human brain. It is something like pruning plants in
a crowded garden: the ones that remain can grow larger and
stronger. By eliminating seldom-used pathways, the brain leaves
room for sturdier, more efficient neural networks. The result
is a brain whose "circuitry"is better organized
and better suited for learning the more difficult concepts
and skills that a young adult needs to master.
The pruning process is therefore critical to optimal brain
development. It also explains why early experience is so crucial.
Children whose neural pathways have been reinforced by a great
deal of positive early experience-including a variety of language
activities-will be better off when the brain's pruning process
begins.
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