Archive for the ‘Hot Topics in Early Childhood Education’ Category

The First Day of School Daze

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Your child’s first day of preschool can be as stressful as it is exciting, but with a little planning ahead and a little patience, you can mark this milestone with ease and aplomb. Here are a few little urbanite tips to help you prepare for that fantastic first day.

1) Take your child to see their new preschool before their first day. Point out landmarks during the drive or the walk there, and let them get a good look at the school itself. You can even call the school and ask to let your child see their empty classroom, so the building will already be familiar when they see it full of other children and strangers.


2) Eat a practice lunch with your child from his or her new lunchbox. Even if their school snacks won’t differ much from what they’d eat at home, they’ll be more comfortable with how things are packed and what they can expect on the day. It’ll also give them a chance to practice opening any tricky new tupperware.

3) Everyone loves having fun new clothes for the first day of school, but keep in mind that the more complicated the outfit, the longer it will take your child to get out of it when they remember in the midst of all this preschool excitement that they need to use the bathroom, and fast. To prevent accidents, keep clothing simple and comfortable. If you dress your child in pants fastened with zippers and buttons and snaps, be sure they’re zippers and buttons and snaps your child can undo easily, without help. Here at little urbanites, we’d suggest starting out the school years with elastic waisted pants for boys, and a comfortable dress or tunic with leggings for girls.

The key to preparing your child for their first day of preschool, just like for any new experience, is letting them know what to expect. With just a little pre-planning, you can leave the stress behind and celebrate the new!

Green Baby: ADHD and Food Additives

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Can what your child eats effect their behavior?

When I was a daycare director I would not allow food with sugar served to the children before noon, yes, believe it or not many day cares and schools feed children cookies, sugar snacks, and sugary cereals in the morning and wonder why the kids are acting “crazy”.  Think of all that sugar in OJ and fruit punch!

But have you heard that some researchers are linking  food additives to hyper activity or Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)?  Food coloring and benzoate preservatives are the additives researchers believe can trigger this disorder.  

A 2007 study by the United Kingdom’s Food Standards Agency, the British equivalent of the Food and Drug Administration, found that 8- and 9-year-olds who drank beverages with food dyes were more likely to become hyperactive.  Food manufacturers in Britain have been asked to remove six artificial dyes from their products by the end of 2009.

“It’s not that the food dyes are the underlying cause of ADHD or hyperactivity, but if a kid is predisposed to it then the dyes can trigger outbursts and behavioral outbursts,” said Michael Jacobson, Executive Director of the Center For Science In The Public Interest.

Jacobson says research dating back to 1980 has linked food dyes with behavioral problems in children.

Links to additional information:

http://www.cspinet.org/reports/chemcuisine.htm#dyes

http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/default.aspx

http://www.fda.gov/

Safe Sleeping for Baby

Sunday, December 13th, 2009


Safe Sleep Practices

  • Always place babies to sleep on their backs during naps and at nighttime. Because babies sleeping on their sides are more likely to accidentally roll onto their stomach, the side position is not as safe as the back and is not recommended.
  • Don’t cover the heads of babies with a blanket or overbundle them in clothing and blankets.
  • Avoid letting the baby get too hot. The baby could be too hot if you notice sweating, damp hair, flushed cheeks, heat rash, and rapid breathing. Dress the baby lightly for sleep. Set the room temperature in a range that is comfortable for a lightly clothed adult.

Safe Sleep Environment

  • Place your baby in a safety-approved crib with a firm mattress and a well-fitting sheet (cradles and bassinets may be used, but choose those that are JPMA (Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association) certified for safety).
  • Place the crib in an area that is always smoke free.
  • Don’t place babies to sleep on adult beds, chairs, sofas, waterbeds, or cushions.
  • Toys and other soft bedding, including fluffy blankets, comforters, pillows, stuffed animals, and wedges should not be placed in the crib with the baby. These items can impair the infant’s ability to breathe if they cover his face.
  • Breastfeed your baby. Experts recommend that mothers feed their children human milk at least through the first year of life.

Talk About Safe Sleep Practices With Everyone Who Cares For Your Baby!

When looking for someone to take care of your baby, including a child care provider, a family member, or a friend, make sure that you talk with this person about safe sleep practices. Bring this fact sheet along to help, if needed. If a caregiver does not know the best safe sleep practices, respectfully try to teach the caregiver what you have learned about safe sleep practices and the importance of following these rules when caring for infants.

H1N1 and Pregnancy

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009


I knew the swine flu was serious but this morning on my to work I heard a new report from the cdc. I wanted to share the facts with you.


“The CDC is aware of about 700 cases of 2009 H1N1 in pregnant women since late April or early May,” Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease and Control and Prevention told FOXNews.com. “There have been about 100 pregnant women admitted to intensive care units and there have been 28 pregnant women who have died from 2009 H1N1.”

Women’s immune systems are weaker when pregnant. The vacine is avaiable and next time you are at your doctors you can ask them about the risk and benifits of vacines. Also one of the best ways of protecting yourself and others is washing your hands and covering your month when you sneeze.

To read more visit cdc.gov

Obama's Education Plan

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Obama says American kids spend too little time in school, putting them at a disadvantage with other students around the globe.

Obama and Duncan say kids in the United States need more school because kids in other nations have more school.

”Young people in other countries are going to school 25, 30 percent longer than our students here,” Duncan told the AP. ”I want to just level the playing field.”

While it is true that kids in many other countries have more school days, it’s not true they all spend more time in school.

Kids in the U.S. spend more hours in school (1,146 instructional hours per year) than do kids in the Asian countries that persistently outscore the U.S. on math and science tests — Singapore (903), Taiwan (1,050), Japan (1,005) and Hong Kong (1,013). That is despite the fact that Taiwan, Japan and Hong Kong have longer school years (190 to 201 days) than does the U.S. (180 days).

Read more at NY Times

Your Child's Developing Brain

Monday, November 24th, 2008


Before I opened Little Urbanites I studied early childhood development and education. The most fascinating topic for me is brain development. Neuroscientists are still researching the brain and how it develops. I used zero to three for the following information.

The human brain begins forming very early in prenatal life (just three weeks after conception), but in many ways, brain development is a lifelong project. That is because the same events that shape the brain during development are also responsible for storing information—new skills and memories—throughout life. The major difference between brain development in a child versus learning an adult is a matter of degree: the brain is far more impressionable (neuroscientists use the term plastic) in early life than in maturity. This plasticity has both a positive and a negative side. On the positive side, it means that young children’s brains are more open to learning and enriching influences. On the negative side, it also means that young children’s brains are more vulnerable to developmental problems should their environment prove especially impoverished or un-nurturing.

What role do parents play in a baby’s brain development?

Parents are another important part of the developmental equation. Infants prefer human stimuli–your face, voice, touch, and even smell–over everything else. They innately orient to people’s faces and would rather listen to a speech or singing than any other kind of sound.

Just as newborn babies are born with a set of very useful instincts for surviving and orienting to their new environment, parents are equally programmed to love and respond to our babies’ cues. Most adults (and children) find infants irresistible, and instinctively want to nurture and protect them. It is certainly no accident that the affection most parents feel towards their babies and the kind of attention we most want to shower them with—touching, holding, comforting, rocking, singing and talking to—provide precisely the best kind of stimulation for their growing brains. Because brain development is so heavily dependent on early experience, most babies will receive the right kind of nurturing from their earliest days, through our loving urges and parenting instincts.

In spite of all the recent hype about “making your baby smarter,” scientists have not discovered any special tricks for enhancing the natural wiring phase in children’s brain development. Normal, loving, responsive caregiving seems to provide babies with the ideal environment for encouraging their own exploration, which is always the best route to learning.

The one form of stimulation that has been proven to make a difference is language: infants and children who are conversed with, read to, and otherwise engaged in lots of verbal interaction show somewhat more advanced linguistic skills than children who are not as verbally engaged by their caregivers. Because language is fundamental to most of the rest of cognitive development, this simple action—talking and listening to your child—is one of the best ways to make the most of his or her critical brain-building years.

BPA Laws in CA

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

The Importance of Sleeping

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Smile with your Baby

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

The Importance of Reading

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008