How to Boost Your Child's Memory
I love doing things that I can watch my child learn from and help them as they learn. Advice from Doctors is always a plus and Parents.com know a lot of experts, so when they talk I listen. These tips here I've used and they work great to help my son memorize chores, words, phrases, people and location of things.
Amplify’d from www.helpwithconception.com
Tips To Help Improve your Toddlers Memory
by Jodi Dillon on November 7, 2011
It seems like just yesterday I could sit my son in one spot and he wouldn’t move, well, because he couldn’t. Now that he is 15 months, he can walk, and he realizes he can do things on his own, I have a whole new chapter to learn. But lately it seems that, even though I feel we have a general understand of what he is not to do, he will still do it and even says “not!”
Well according to an article on Parents.com, Caroline DiBattisto, M.D., children can be impulsive, and frankly their memory hasn’t fully developed yet. So even though I told my son yesterday Not to feed the dog, he may not remember that yesterday he was told it was wrong. Kids recall some things, but forget others, and the majority of the time it’s random. Remember children are learning everything, from language, to their surroundings, to what is right and wrong. It’s like being given a final exam in calculus on the first day of school. Children need to build these cognitive skills with reinforcement by using developmentally stimulating activities. Here are a few examples.
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