|
| |
The following suggestions are courtesy of the New Jersey Education Association (NJEA)
- Stimulate your child to make use of all senses in discovering the
surrounding world. Encourage curiosity about the feel of textures and material,
characteristic smells, sounds, tastes, weights and sizes of things. Train the child to
look carefully to see beyond the surface appearance of the environment.
- Children are normally curious and should be encouraged to find answers to
questions by patient observation and through the use of preferences, either at home or in
libraries or museums. Let the child manipulate and learn about familiar objects: a
dripping faucet, the household water system, a nutcracker, an old doorbell, discarded
appliance, locks and door hinges or household plants and gardens. When making household
repairs, servicing the family car or other domestic equipment, include your child as an
observer. Natural scientific and mechanical skills can be discovered and developed in this
way, and many scientific principles can be demonstrated in first-hand practical ways.
- Make certain that you teach your child rules of safety in handling of
electrical, mechanical and chemical equipment. In this modern scientific era, a whole
range of educationally approved toys and games are on sale for gift giving to the budding
young scientist in your home. Consider giving a subscription to a scientific magazine, an
easy-to-assemble radio earphone set, a general science kit, an ant farm or toy farm that
grows real crops, binoculars, an aquarium or terrarium, a chemistry set, a model airplane,
a biography of an inventor, a telescope, a microscope or a magnifying glass.
- Work with your child on projects such as making bird feeders, caring for
pets, setting up a home weather station, observing the night sky and preparing a family
vegetable or flower garden. Take the opportunity to confer with the childs science
teachers. They welcome such parental interest and can give many useful tips to help you
reinforce your childs formal science training.
- Encourage your child to become a "collector." Provide a place
for collections, even if its is just a dresser drawer, a soapbox or a shelf in the
bookcase. An upended orange crate provides shelves for "display" of rocks,
insects, leaves, stamps, collections of flowers or leaves.
|