We are an english family with a 6 year old.We lived in France for three years, when we arrived our child was three.We left three months ago believing our child was happy as she is fluent in french, but since moving back we wonder how fluent she was as althought she appears to be flawless when she speaks since we returned to England she appears a much happier child. When we lived in France we thought she had adhd but now we just think she was unhappy, communication is everything!
2006-11-18 03:52:21
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
We have a son with Angelman Syndrome....the biggest part of this is the inability - or extremely limited ability- to communicate...5 -6 useful words is normal.....his receptive language is much better than his expressive language...compound that with the fact he is also DEAF....frustration...emotional outbursts...hyperactive behaviors...we have become very well versed in body language.
Personally, I feel that ALL children should be taught to use sign-language....if not as pre-schoolers, then starting in kindergarten...teachers should leave reading and writing until at least the end of the second grade....
2006-11-18 04:53:15
·
answer #2
·
answered by justannae 3
·
3⤊
0⤋
Very much so. If a child finds it difficult to communicate, he/she may become very frustrated. It also depends very much on an adult's ability to listen to the child's opinion and discuss behaviours in a calm manner or to help him/her out of a crisis through role modelling.
2006-11-18 03:43:04
·
answer #3
·
answered by lovelylexie 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
wholly, a child's ability to communicate determines not only social and emotional growth but even IQ (which in young children is graded primarily in vocabulary).
Everything a child learns from 9 months is firmly routed in sucessful communication. thoe terrible twos are there child's way of understanding social interaction through confrontation. As you would realise, effective communication is essential for the child to learn how to behave
2006-11-18 03:41:58
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes, absolutely.
Emotional and verbal literacy (or lack of them) create poor behaviour like nothing else. A child who sees any 'difficult' emotion as anger (because that is the reaction in 'their world') will behave accordingly under any stress. A child who cannot say what they want to (because they have limited vocabulary or confidence) will resort to what toddlers do and shout/thrash around. Two students who cannot discuss, will argue.
Sadly school cannot do it all- much of this happens in the early stages of life, when they learn to speak. They learn what they hear from mum.
2006-11-20 04:48:29
·
answer #5
·
answered by squeezy 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
rather a toddler's habit is usually a communique of a few variety. It seems such as you will desire to be conversing of selective mutism. that's the place a toddler who CAN communicate, refuses to realize this. Or while you're speaking some toddler who's performing out, this may be the toddler's way of conversing an unmet choose.
2016-10-15 17:15:15
·
answer #6
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Greatly!
Empower children with appropriate language to express their wants, needs and comments on their surroundings. Then there's communication of feelings and compassion for others, seeing things through another's perspective and empathy!
2006-11-18 11:42:29
·
answer #7
·
answered by atheleticman_fan 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Look around when they can't communicate properly.
They cannot solve their problems.
So the only thing left is to express in violence in clubbing one another until tragedy happens in planet of apes.
What happen is that they could not put words in action that created the mess in planet of apes.
They spend so much time with ghost stories that they could not differentiate between fantasy and reality or ghost stories in planet of apes.
The blunders and slip-ups with human errors in the creation of living human kind into mankind at loss with our creator's universal gifts of life vital for their own survival and advancement of themselves in planet of apes.
2006-11-18 18:27:08
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
it's pretty simple if children can communicate and know how to do it effectively there's less chance they will become frustrated allowing them to complete whatever they are tring to do when you can communicate you can let people know how you feel that in turn makesd solving the issue much esier and stress free.
2006-11-18 12:43:15
·
answer #9
·
answered by caragreeneyes 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes, have you noticed Ebonics speaking kids have more of an attitude? This is also caused by television and video games! This world is not treating our youth very well.
2006-11-18 03:46:03
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋