The New York Times Sunday Magazine published an article titled “America’s Children Are Unwell. Are Schools Part of the Problem?” It was written by staff member Jia Lynn Yang.
I anticipated that the article would be another lament about test scores, of which there have been many recently. But it wasn’t!
Instead, Yang described the explosion of mental health issues among the nation’s children. And she attributed it largely to the unending pressure to compete for ever higher test scores. EXACTLY!
Yang knows that the changes in school are not the only cause of declining mental health. There are many more culprits, including social media and the pressures of contemporary life. And there is also the possibility that children are being misdiagnosed and overdiagnosed. I can’t help but recall a story from 1994 about an elite private school that received a private $2 million grant to screen children for learning disabilities. Overrun by experts, the program “got out of hand.” Nearly half the children were diagnosed with disabilities, and the program was cancelled.
We live in a stressful world. Children are pressured to succeed, to comply, to compete, to win the approval of their peers, to dress the “right” way, to be and do things by which they will be judged by their peers, by their parents, by the world they inhabit. Some children succeed, many don’t.
Schools these days are doing things to children that add to their stress. They have been doing harmful things to children by federal mandate since 2002.
Besieged by expectations, demands, and pressures, many children are breaking. It’s our fault.
She writes:
One of the more bewildering aspects of the already high-stress endeavor of 21st-century American parenting is that at some point your child is likely to be identified with a psychiatric diagnosis of one kind or another. Many exist in a gray zone that previous generations of parents never encountered.
A diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is practically a rite of passage in American boyhood, with nearly one in four 17-year-old boys bearing the diagnosis. The numbers have only gone up, and vertiginously: One million more children were diagnosed with A.D.H.D. in 2022 than in 2016.
The numbers on autism are so shocking that they are worth repeating. In the early 1980s, one in 2,500 children had an autism diagnosis. That figure is now one in 31.
Nearly 32 percent of adolescents have been diagnosed at some point with anxiety; the median age of “onset” is 6 years old. More than one in 10 adolescents have experienced a major depressive disorder, according to some estimates. New categories materialize. There is now oppositional defiant disorder, in addition to pathological demand avoidance…
The experience of school has changed rapidly in recent generations. Starting in the 1980s, a metrics-obsessed regime took over American education and profoundly altered the expectations placed on children, up and down the class ladder. In fact, it has altered the experience of childhood itself.
This era of policymaking has largely ebbed, with disappointing results. Math and reading levels are at their lowest in decades. The rules put in place by both political parties were well-meaning, but in trying to make more children successful, they also circumscribed more tightly who could be served by school at all.
“What’s happening is, instead of saying, ‘We need to fix the schools,’ the message is, ‘We need to fix the kids,’” said Peter Gray, a research professor at Boston College and the author of “Free to Learn: Why Unleashing the Instinct to Play Will Make Our Children Happier, More Self-Reliant, and Better Students for Life….”
Other books have echoed this critique. I think offhand of the book by Pasi Sahlberg and William Doyle: Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive. This is how they summarize their argument:
“Play is how children explore, discover, fail, succeed, socialize, and flourish. It is a fundamental element of the human condition. It’s the key to giving schoolchildren skills they need to succeed–skills like creativity, innovation, teamwork, focus, resilience, expressiveness, empathy, concentration, and executive function. Expert organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Centers for Disease Control agree that play and physical activity are critical foundations of childhood, academics, and future skills–yet politicians are destroying play in childhood education and replacing it with standardization, stress, and forcible physical restraint, which are damaging to learning and corrosive to society.”
There is an organization–Defending the Early Years–that fights for the rights of childhood, that tries to keep academic pressures out of the classrooms of very young children.
But who defends the children in grades 1-12? There are groups of parents in almost every state who oppose the pressures of high-stakes testing, oppose the efforts by tech companies to replace actual experiences with machines and technologies, oppose the interference of politicians to standardize teaching.
One group fights off the tech companies that use personal student data to market their products: The Parent Coalition for Studebt Privacy.
Corporate America now looks to the schools as a source of profit. The schools and students need to be protected from rapacious capitalism, which wants to privatize schools for profit and sell products that monetize instruction.
Yang describes the transformation of the school from the 1980s to the present:
School was not always so central to American childhood. In 1950, less than half of all children attended kindergarten. Only about 50 percent graduated from high school, and without much professional penalty. A person spent fewer years of their life in school, and fewer hours in the day furiously trying to learn. However bored a child might become sitting behind a desk, freedom awaited after the final bell rang, with hours after school to play without the direction of adults.
But as the country’s economy shifted from factories and farms to offices, being a student became a more serious matter. The outcome of your life could depend on it.
During an era of global competition, the country’s leaders also began to see school as a potential venue for national glory, or shame. In 1983, a commission created by Ronald Reagan’s secretary of education, Terrel H. Bell, released a dire report on the state of American schools called “A Nation at Risk.” It warned that “if an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.”
Over the next decade, Democratic and Republican governors such as Bill Clinton in Arkansas and Lamar Alexander in Tennessee began molding their states’ schools with new standards of testing and accountability. Schools were treated more like publicly traded companies, with test scores as proxies for profits. Before long, schools had public ratings, so ubiquitous they now appear on real estate listings.
The pressure kept rising. By 2001, 30 states had laws that imposed a system of punishments and rewards for schools based on their test scores. The next year, President George W. Bush’s signature education reform law, No Child Left Behind, made the effort national.
With school funding now on the line, there were unmistakable incentives for children to be diagnosed. Starting in the 1990s, students with autism or A.D.H.D. become newly eligible for added support in the classroom. Getting a child treated, potentially with medication, could help an entire classroom achieve higher scores, especially if the child’s behavior was disruptive to others. And in some parts of the country, children with disabilities were not counted toward a school’s overall marks, a carve-out that could boost scores.
The added metrics may well have compelled more children to receive the support they needed. Either way, educational policymaking yielded a change in diagnoses. In states that added new accountability standards, researchers found a clear rise in A.D.H.D. According to one analysis, the rate of A.D.H.D. diagnoses among children ages 8 to 13 in low-income homes went from 10 percent to 15 percent after the arrival of No Child Left Behind.
The impact of the law on autism diagnoses has been less documented. But there is a great deal of overlap among these disorders. Anywhere from 30 to 80 percent of children diagnosed with autism also have A.D.H.D. Experts have also pointed out that the rise in autism has largely taken place on the more subtle end of the spectrum, where psychiatrists expanded the diagnosis. Students with this profile often need educators who can be eminently flexible in their approach, a tough task when an entire classroom has to focus on narrowly mastering certain testable skills.
The demands on performance in higher grades trickled down into younger and younger ages. In 2009, the Obama administration offered greater funding to schools that adopted new national learning standards called the Common Core. These included an emphasis on reading by the end of kindergarten, even though many early childhood experts believe that not all children are developmentally ready to read at that age.
With each new wave of reforms, the tenor of kindergarten changed. Rote lessons in math and reading crept into classrooms, even though experts say young children learn best through play. Researchers discovered that in the span of about a decade, kindergarten had suddenly become more like first grade.
Preschool was not far behind, as even toddlers were expected to stay still for longer stretches of time to imbibe academic lessons. This again defied the consensus among early childhood experts. Children, parents and teachers struggle through this mismatch daily. In 2005, a study showed that preschoolers were frequently being expelled for misbehavior, and at rates more than three times that of school-age children.
“We’re not aligning the developmental needs of kids with the policies and practices that go on daily with schools,” said Denise Pope, senior lecturer at Stanford University and co-founder of Challenge Success, a nonprofit group that works with schools to improve student well-being.
The pressure to learn more led to a restructuring of the school day itself. Before the 1980s, American children usually had recess breaks throughout the day. By 2016, only eight states required daily recess in elementary schools. And when researchers studied what had become of lunchtime, they learned that children often had just 20 minutes to not only eat but stop to use the bathroom after class, walk to the cafeteria and wait in line for food.
I think about my own time in the public elementary public schools in Houston. We had recess every day. I don’t think it was a matter of state law. Educators then knew that children needed time to play. It was common sense. Today, parent groups organize to persuade legislatures to mandate recess. If they don’t, parents fear, every minute will be spent preparing for tests and taking tests.
They are right. The so-called “reforms” of the past quarter century–No Child Left Behind, high-stakes testing, competition, Race to the Top, punishing or rewarding teachers for their students’ test scores, closing schools and firing staff because of low test scores, the Common Core standards–have made test scores and standardization the heart of schooling.
In a continuing campaign to raise test scores, there are winners and losers. Typically, the winners are children from affluent families, and the losers are the children of not-affluent families. The winners are celebrated, the losers are stigmatized. The social class divide among children is hardened by these practices.
Worse, the pressure on students has caused an increase in anxiety, depression, and boredom. In response, parents seek diagnoses of autism or some other learning disorder so that their children will get more time or attention.
Some parents blame the public schools for the pressure and competition imposed on them by elected officials. They seek alternatives to the public schools, which are obsessed with standardization, testing, and accountability.
Yang points out:
This discontent helps empower the conservative effort to defund the public school system and let parents pick their own schools, with taxpayers covering the tuition. Each child who no longer seems to fit into the country’s education system — and more often than not they are boys — potentially expands the constituency for these ideas. And trust erodes further in the progressive project of a democracy built on giving everyone a free and equal education.
The Democratic Party is unable or unwilling to see the problems they helped create. The Republican Party is quite happy to see the public search for alternatives like charter schools and vouchers, and it has enabled the movement to have taxpayers foot the bill for private and religious schools.
By turning childhood into a thing that can be measured, adults have managed to impose their greatest fears of failure onto the youngest among us. Each child who strays from our standards becomes a potential medical mystery to be solved, with more tests to take, more metrics to assess. The only thing that seems to consistently evade the detectives is the world around that child — the one made by the grown-ups.
Who made that world? Both political parties. Governors. Legislatures. Think tanks. The wealthiest, who believe their financial success proves their superiority. Editorial boards.
Here is the most significant lesson that our elected officials refuse to learn. Their elaborate schemes for testing and measuring children have hurt children and undermined the joy of learning. They have raised the anxiety level of children while corrupting education itself.
Education is not what gets measured on standardized tests. Education is exploration, investigation, insight, observation, wanting to know more, learning to love learning.
Our politicians, prodded by so-called “reformers,” have managed to pollute education while demoralizing teachers and destroying public commitment to public schools.
Our public schools need to be freed from the failed ideas that hurt children. We need a rebirth of sturdy ideas that

For newer readers of this blog, check out Dr. Ravitch’s The Death and Life of the Great American School Systems: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education and Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools. In fact, buy two and send one to your State Representative. (Or send a copy of this blog).
So many ironies at the turn of the century. While “Blah, blah, blah for the 21st Century” mission statements were all the rage in school districts the politicians version was all about new ways to blame and targets to attack (schools, progressive education, and liberals). Some corporations versions were profit and gaining favor with politicians and privatization.
Imagine if conservatives had heard President Bush’s comment about the “soft bigotry of low expectations” and invested in schools, teachers, research, infrastructure, community (involved in education) schools support instead of gotcha politics of heavy-handed accountability, ranking schools, the “Texas miracle” and one-size-fits-all curriculum.
The “A Nation At Risk” intro letter gets much attention. Too bad state legislators and the governors stopped reading there. (Some of) the recommendations would surprise you. But it was too late. Politicians and corporations saw dollar signs. Conservatives found new targets to blame. They started the anti-respect-for-diversity awareness, anti-equity, anti-union wars. The “achievement gap” was a wake-up call for the Blue Ribbon winning suburbs but used as a blame-the-victim and “save” the low SES communities with charters and privatization.
Children and Childhood?! Seems that the social media goliaths, the FDA, and gun lobbyists didn’t get the memo.
p.s. one (only one) thing the MO legislature got right last year was banning cell phones in schools for the entire day (not just in class). It’s working.
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”Our public schools need to be freed from the failed ideas that hurt children. We need a rebirth of sturdy ideas that…”
Would be great to 👂 hear some thought filled, experience filled, ❤️ heart filled responses to this Fill In The Blank.
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THE failed idea that is the foundation for the rest of the failed ideas is the standards and testing malpractice regime. Until we eliminate that the teaching and learning process will continue to be bastardized into high stress-for ALL involved-pseudo teaching and learning.
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“By turning childhood into a thing that can be measured,”
Here’s the problem. Right there. The word measured has been appropriated to mean something it cannot. Phrases like “look for indicators” and “form a judgement of” would have been more true to reality during debates about education, but measured sounds more authoritative.
There is much in a word
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You are quite correct, Roy, in pointing out the bastardization of the teaching and learning process involved with falsely using the concept of measuring that cannot ever be accomplished-what a student knows.
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I have contended for years that our high schools are emotion meat grinders and it had little to do with test scores (and yes, I am that old). Teaching college freshmen in a lab setting I occasionally engaged the group in discussions to make class less boring. My favorite question was “Can you remember back to last year and think about what seemed to be so important and now … ?” I remember a young man saying “None of that stuff is important now. It is as if we were other people then.” This was just a year later, mind you.
Gosh, a bunch of immature human beings going through puberty all thrown together unsupervised by adults … what could go wrong?
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While I agree completely with the need to decrease the academic pressure in schools, I am wary of the author’s correlation of some of these pressures (like NCLB) with an increase in mental health diagnoses. They cite that the diagnoses of ADHD in certain demographics increased with the onset of NCLB. I would like to understand if there were other factors at play, namely increased access to obtaining a diagnosis.
Since most kids with ADHD or autism tend to manifest symptoms before they reach kindergarten, I think it’s doubtful that an increasingly high pressure academic environment is causing a rise in the numbers of students with neurodevelopmental disorders. Perhaps the problem is that the author is lumping together mental health issues like depression and anxiety with neurodevelopmental disorders like ADHD and autism.
The message that I am hearing in this article is that “if kids spent less in school and more time playing and having play-based curriculum in kindergarten,” then there would be fewer kids with ADHD and autism. I don’t think this is true. I think there is a dangerous mythologization of the past going on here. I don’t have data, but I would hypothesize that the increased diagnoses of ADHD and autism probably correlate better with increased access to diagnostic services and increased special education staff in school districts.
That said, I do absolutely agree that there is way too much academic pressure in schools starting from a very young age. But we cannot talk about this problem without talking about the inequity in society overall and the pressures of increased COL. These issues are connected.
Back to kids with special needs – I believe that kids with ADHD and other disorders/disabilities are the canaries in the coal mine. They are the blacklight on the weaknesses of the education system. Instead of trying to “fix” these kids, educators need to see that the ways that these kids learn differently help to shape learning environments that are better for all kids.
For example, a NT kid will tolerate the utter boredom of Math Fact Lab (IYKYK) and just blast through the monotonous questions to get it done. And the teachers will say, “See? This program works great!” But a kid with ADHD will find this drill and kill program too boring to tolerate and they will just not do it. And the teachers will say, “There is a problem with this child because they don’t do the program”. The reality is that a program like Math Fact Lab is a poor excuse for learning. There are much better, authentic ways to teach math. But when districts shove these programs on their teachers, it takes a very brave teacher to buck the trend. And teachers are generally not paid enough to be that brave.
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What you are hinting at is the misuse of a medical model, i.e., diagnose and cure over a focus on actual teaching and learning. Teaching and learning is not about diagnosing and curing.
I’ve believed since this erroneous conceptualization came into the education realm harms too many students by labeling them with supposed mental deficiencies that can then be cured with the proper prescription of. . . (take your pick of the many programs now used) sold by edupreneurs.
Is there a place for legitimate testing for valid diagnoses of learning disabilities? Of course, but what I am talking about is the background paradigm in which the whole teaching and learning process is embedded.
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As ever, higher income families looking to jigger the system to fill their needs plays a role here. Boston’s most “elite” public school has so very many kids whom their teachers would designate as NT, but their parents, seeking expanded testing time for SAT’s, AP’s, etc have obtained diagnoses for exactly that accommodation. They have the wherewithal to fight school administration. Elsewhere in the school district, parents of kids whose need is apparent to the professionals go without.
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I visited a school once back in 1980 that believed things like ADHD were masks for deeper psychological needs. I was not so sure, but their program seemed to be working.
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“The schools and students need to be protected from rapacious capitalism, which wants to privatize schools for profit and sell products that monetize instruction.”
The goals of education are student focused, and these goals are not aligned with the interests of Silicon Valley or Wall St. When we add politics to the mix, we produce the pressure cooker that our young people are in. What is best for students must start with their needs, not business interests or political agendas. Education is in decline in this country because too many special interests are being served to the detriment of the students, teachers and the schools that serve them. Endless testing and data collection are a ticket to failure. We need to return to education that best serves the needs of the whole student, give teachers the freedom to teach, and allow professional educators to drive curriculum and instruction.
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In Bowling for Columbine, Matt Stone from South Park talked about the academic pressure-cooker environment he grew up in. He described being put under tremendous pressure in sixth grade not to “screw up” the math test that determined placement in honors math. He said he was made to feel that if he didn’t stay on the “right path,” he would end up dying “old and lonely.” He felt like students were “scared into conforming”.
Here’s a link to his interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0dYtOOtfQtM
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I’ve taught for 18 years. This is true. We set unrealistic expectations then harshly judge the kids.
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I wonder if highly competitive and intense educational approaches in other countries, like Japan, also have similarly high incidences of adhd and autism diagnoses. I also wonder if we see the same kinds of diagnoses in more educationally enlightened countries like Finland. Cross-cultural comparisons might give us more information about the causes of this problem.
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This would be so interesting. The comparison would have to account for cultural stigmas of mental health, though. Japan is a high-conformity society where any difference is stigmatized. I wonder what Finland would look like, because I remember Pasi Sahlberg saying that a majority of children receive additional intervention during their early years of school. This would be such an interesting study for someone to do.
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I have heard from people I trust of a significantly high suicide rate among young people in Japan:
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/people/article/3307328/japans-youth-suicide-crisis-worsens-record-student-deaths-reported-2024
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Good question
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It’s a Christmas Miracle! The NYT has actually taken a look into public education that isn’t from the perspective of the reformistas!
But one thing is overlooked. Schools are a microcosm of society at large. Since underfunded and maligned public schools serve kids who
the anxiety and stress we all feel under the current regime is magnified for children.
I know my former colleagues do all they can to reassure their students, but between the grip of the testing calipers and the uncertainty of our larger society, where can kids relax?
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I just checked the NY Times Editorial and Opinions section and was surprised not to have found a rebuttal to this wonderful (and unexpected) NY Times Sunday Magazine article.
One thing I’ve come to believe is that “The New World Order”, ushered in by the Clinton/Carter/Bush Sr mandatory GATT/NAFTA infomercial in the late ’90s, had a great deal to do with the changes we’ve seen over the past two and a half decades.
Forget about the fact that we led the world, by a mile, in the area of patents created at the time. The USA as a nation of innovation was no longer good enough. We now had to compete with the likes of Singapore, Shanghai, Japan, etc in the area of elementary, middle, and high school test scores. And it really went off the rails once the business world saw that the floodgates were open.
I don’t even care anymore whether the NY Times will take responsibility for it’s part in furthering this debacle…so long as they continue to print truly informative high profile pieces like this one by Jia Lynn Yang .
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Gitapik, I agree. Bear in mind that the U.S. led the world in innovation , medicine, and science despite kids having lower test scores than countries like Japan. Which may suggest that there is little or no causal relationship between test scores and economic success as well as preeminent in research.
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Please read: Sprouting the Curriculum: Thoughts on Perversely Logical Ways to Improve American Education by J. Lockwood White
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Looks like a good one. Thanks!
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My daughter is 29. I remember when she was 16, she asked me to consider what it might be like to grow up, since grade school, hearing/seeing/reading on a near daily basis about the serious potential of the destruction of the planet as we know it.
She made a direct parallel between this and the underlying anxiety and fatalism that she And others of hers’ and the following generations are feeling.
This can’t help but be part of the equation when it comes to the mental health of younger people, today, imo.
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Gitapik,
One of my grandsons, the same age, is also afflicted with that same sense of fatalism. He knows deep in his bones that our world is not sustainable. Impossible to win an argument. He’s calm, but deeply pessimistic. Trump’s determination to stop and reverse all efforts to fight climate change is confirmation of his fears.
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Diane: my daughter is an extremely positive minded human being. But the fatalism seems to be baked in at this point. I think there’s an element of Zen at play, in terms of how she deals with it.
And, yes: Trump has only exacerbated her (other others) perceptions.
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Sorry about the late reply…I have recently come to the conclusion that reading is a technological construct…It is not a natural part of our brains neurodevelopment. In LinkedIn I wrote this…
A Case for the Public Schools
It’s Learning that Creates Opportunity
I have gone down quite the rabbit hole. I began looking at timelines for human history. I found one website that piqued my interest, https://lnkd.in/eYUzDHRF. Homo sapiens arrived about 300,000 years ago.
The list of technological achievements in human time on this planet included horse hunting spears 200,000 years ago, mixing and storing pigments 100,000 years ago, drawing 73,000 years ago, bow and arrow technology 61,000 years ago, language 40,000 years ago, woven fabrics 30,000 years ago, potters’ wheels 6200 years ago, earliest folk tales 6000 years ago, and the list goes on. Writing and numeral systems did not exist until around 5300 years ago.
So? In only 2% of our time as a species have we had some form of written communication. We developed much of our technological disposition prior to the written word. We began writing on clay tablets, moved to papyrus around 4,600 years ago, developed centers of higher learning around 3,000 years ago, and experienced the first book of European literature, The Iliad, 2700 years ago. 1950 years ago, Pliny the Elder developed the first encyclopedia before we were using paper. In 1455 Gutenberg developed movable type, in 1844 Morse invented the Telegraph, the computer was invented in 1937, the personal computer in 1974, the internet in 1974, the Iphone in 2007, and ChatGPT in 2022.
What does this have to do with education? Too often reading, like most technological advances, has been introduced by educators as a short cut to knowledge while ignoring the importance of foundational understanding. Reading is critical for navigating our contemporary world, but comprehensive literacy requires engagement with all aspects of our environment to enhance a child’s ability to learn. Children must have prior knowledge of content before being motivated to read about it. Educators forget that learning is an aspect of our intellectual evolution where reading is a technological application.
The cerebral development of humans with sentient encounters came before decoding script. Even with today’s vast array of communication technology we should introduce children to tactile exploration before the abstract representation of the written word. Focusing on sensual development that enhances critical thinking, curiosity, and inquiry motivates a desire to read.
Our brains grow through the development of synapses created from experiences that make understanding possible. Introducing tactile engagement to children first results in greater success encountering reading and technological devices later. Play, social interaction, and exposure to the environment are required prerequisites for success in reading. Early reading will not ensure future success with advances in technology. Our human history shows us that introducing children to the world around them makes opportunity limitless.
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