Things You Should Say to Raise Smart Kids Who Think for Themselves
December 16, 2015
By Dr. Dana Suskind
The
most important thing any parent can do for their children is to have
conversations with them, starting the day they’re born. While genetics
supply the blueprints, how much children achieve is largely determined
by how and how much parents talk and interact with them.
As
parents, we want to make our words count. So why not maximize the
phrases we say every day and help our kids get smarter, faster?
1. Ditch the directives
This
first question invites a child to think through the situation, which
can lead to stronger problem-solving skills down the road. It also
supports his/her emerging autonomy. The second is more of a demand that
can make you feel like you’re in control. But in reality, using
directives does little to help build your child’s brain.
2. Praise the process
What
we really want our children to feel is that they can overcome any
challenge if they don’t give up. It’s called grit, and it’s what
distinguishes people who succeed from people who do not. Developing
perseverance and staying motivated expand the brain.
When
we talk to our children about how hard they worked, we turn “smart”
into an action. And we let them know it’s an action we want them to
repeat again and again and again.
3. Encourage a positive self-image
Never underestimate the power of words. It turns out that researchers
discovered that young children, three to six years of age, were more
likely to clean up a mess when they were asked to be helpers than if
they were asked to simply help. Try this simple rephrase the next time
your child spills his glass of milk or doesn’t want to put away her
toys.
4. Focus on the behavior
Ultimately,
we want our children to know right from wrong, to grow up and make
healthy life choices. It all starts when they’re young. Criticizing a
specific behavior helps children learn exactly what not to do without
hurting their sense of themselves.
Learning to fix a mistake becomes do-able and desired. Believing that you’re bad takes a long time for a child to unlearn.
5. Be as specific as possible
Our
children need every chance to learn new words and make the connection
between the words we say and the environment they live in. “It” comes
naturally to us as adults; we know what we mean after all. But every
word and every description helps to build your child’s brain.
The
more we can use specific labels for what we’re talking about — the
kitchen chair, Uncle Charles, your red tricycle — the more our children
will understand and richer vocabulary they will have.
At the end of the day, what matters most is that we say more, not less.
In
homes where there was a lot of parent talk, the children were more
prepared for school. They performed better in school and achieved more
outside of school. And this was true, regardless of where the children
lived, how many degrees their parents had, or how much their annual
income was.
Every
word you say builds your child’s brain. It doesn’t require any
additional time. By talking with your child, you transform taking a bath
or peeling a banana or cleaning up the play room into a brain-building
experience that also strengthens the bond between you and your child.
Dana’s book, Thirty Million Words: Building a Child’s Brain, is now available on Amazon.
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(Photo: Getty Images)
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