1, which provides a method to help better observation.
Generally, the baby's eyes are scattered. When parents read picture books to their children, their eyes always look around, or stare at the distance in a daze, not knowing how to observe.
Let children learn to observe. You can let your child follow your finger, watch your finger follow up, and look from left to right in an orderly way. After learning to read in an orderly way, children can be taught to grasp the big and let go of the small.
From the whole to the local observation: for example, if you walk in the park and see a meadow in the distance, you can ask your baby, "Look, what is that green?" Then guide the children to "there is more than grass on the grass." What else did you see? " Children may also see many large and small, red and yellow wildflowers.
Count, look at the size, look at the color and look at the shape. This process is to let the children see the whole part.
Look at the secondary characteristics from the main characteristics: "What does Dad wear today?" Children may say "white clothes, black pants". Let children notice the main features of things first.
These skills can be brought into the dialogue with children in life, and children will gradually realize that there are so many ways to observe the original things! The more methods and skills children master, the stronger their observation ability.
2. Ask your child more questions.
Asking questions will lead to thinking, and children who are good at thinking must be good at observing. Ask questions to children everywhere in life, such as asking children:
Do you know why the toy car runs?
Do you know the name of the kitten?
Asking questions is not to test children, but to arouse children's thinking and develop the habit of being good at observation through communication.
3. Take the children out for a walk.
What really ignites children's learning motivation is to let them have the spirit of exploration and curiosity. Take the children out for a walk, because life is always the best classroom. We will send our children to paid preschool classes, buy all kinds of picture books and toys, but the children just lack all kinds of social experience and natural experience.
I have never seen what the world and society are like. Never seen a blooming flower or a flying bird. This will greatly deprive children of the exercise of observation. Psychologist Piaget believes that the more new things children see and hear, the more they want to see and hear. The more they know, the more curious they are, and the more eager they are to explore and learn.