Neighbor News
Integrating Emotion & Learning in Everyday Moments
Your own ideas about how to integrating emotion and learning in everyday moments with your child are probably better than anything!

Integrating Emotion & Learning in Everyday Moments
By Dr. Kyle Pruett
Excerpt from Me, Myself and I
Find out what's happening in Snellvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Your own ideas about how to integrating emotion and learning in everyday moments with your child are probably better than anything I could advise for you personally. But here are some ideas and suggestions that might help you customize those ideas.
- Talk with your child. Hopefully, you have been doing that since the moment she was born. Chat with her about what you and she are doing. She’ll become part of the conversation sooner if you express to her what you love about being a parent.
- Encourage curiosity and understand that repetition is a good thing for him, boring though it might be for you. The neurological basis for the insistence on the familiar lies in the fact that when synaptic connections are repeatedly activated by the same stimulation, they become immune from elimination during the brain’s pruning process. They survive to become permanent neural connections that enhance learning. So go ahead and do what your child likes – over and over. This is a good rut to be in.
- Simply being nearby and available while your child plays on his own is so important, as is your willingness to interact. So get down on the floor and stay awhile. Of course, this is hard for working parents, but the effort is worth it.
- Nothing beats reading. Children don’t learn interactive, conversational language from TV because it does not respond to them. Language and eventually reading are learned from being actively engaged in speaking and reading with others – hearing parents and caregivers talk to each other and waiting for the child to respond.
- Children learn best in the context of their daily lives and when the amount and kind of stimulation fits their temperament, level of development, interests or preferences, and mood. Pressure to perform or conform to high expectations can lead to stress that can sabotage learning through burnout and confusion.
- Young children do not need to be taught how to think. Science is careening ahead pursuing fascinating findings and ideas about how, even whether, children this age actually do think. But our ignorance dominates our knowledge embarrassingly. We are still understanding why they even want to think in the first place. It is like walking or talking, unfolding in due course when the maturational timekeeper tells the mind-body duality, “Johnny: it’s time?”
- The five-second check-in. Since most of us don’t spend our days staring endlessly at our toddlers and preschoolers, it is important that you take a few seconds to assess the mood, or state your child is in before you join in his doings, ask him to do something or simply interrupt him. This is the feeling state that will determine his ability to understand or comply with whatever you might need, no matter how small. If you are not tuned in, he probably won’t hear (i.e. learn).
- Join your child. Follow her lead in activities she is already involved in. Don’t take over – it will turn her off. But if you want her to learn, become a partner in the exploration she has begun. Add a ball to hide in the pots and pans scene, or move close and take her hand if she is wary of a dog on a walk. Don’t instantly rescue (unless safety is an immediate concern) because you will lose one of those interesting moments of tension that could be mastered, leading a child to a wider, more complex understanding of the world.
- If your child balks at a “learning” moment with you, it could mean you didn’t read the five-second check-in right. Back up and let your child know you know what she is feeling first. (“I guess you weren’t quite through,” or “It’s hard to have to stop when you are having fun doing X.”) When the feeling domain feels appreciated, then the learning domain is less burdened.
- If your child needs redirection after you have connected with his mood or feeling, ask softly what he might enjoy doing. If you still have no luck make two suggestions of things he might do and help him choose. He will probably need some pump-priming from you, since you can manage your own mood apart from his. Remember, how you are in such moments, is as important as what you do.
- If it’s important for you to initiate an activity that will bring you pleasure and you know it could be good for your child, like reading or going for a walk, stabilize your own mood first. Only then can you help your child regulate hers. Once done, then she can crawl up on your lap or get out the door and learn. For some kids, it’s the other way around. But for the majority, in the feeling and learning dance, it isn’t always possible to say who is leading.
The Goddard School located in Snellville, GA offers a year-round program for children from six weeks to six-years-old. Children are encouraged to develop at their own pace in a warm environment supported by a team of dedicated teachers. The Goddard School FLEX Learning Program™ is based on a unique learning continuum that encompasses developmental guidelines, formative assessments and child-focused lesson plans that are delivered in a creative and fun environment with a child-centered approach to meet each child's individual needs.
Find out what's happening in Snellvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
For more information on why The Goddard School located in Snellville, GA is the place for fun and learning, please contact The Goddard School Snellville!
The Goddard School Snellville
1565 Janmar Rd. Snellville, GA 30078
(678) 344- 0042