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Autori principali: Arnold, Renea, Colburn, Nell
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2005
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ710439
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author Arnold, Renea
Colburn, Nell
author_facet Arnold, Renea
Colburn, Nell
Arnold, Renea
Colburn, Nell
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Oh! What a Smart Baby: What You Need to Know about Children's Brain Development Arnold, Renea Colburn, Nell Genetics Brain Child Development Environmental Influences Language Skills Neurological Organization Brain research is complicated, but its message is simple: babies are born learning and what they learn is up to us. New research on infant brain development shows that a child's experiences in the first three years of life have a distinct impact on her later development and learning. Here's why. All babies are born with one organ that is not fully formed--the brain. Three-quarters of a child's brain develops after birth. Neuroscientists once thought that brain development was mostly influenced by genetics. Now there is evidence that a baby's environment determines how the neural pathways are connected. Research shows that young children who have been talked to and read to by their adult caregivers exhibit language skills that far exceed those of children who received little verbal stimulation.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ710439
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle Oh! What a Smart Baby: What You Need to Know about Children's Brain Development
Arnold, Renea
Colburn, Nell
Genetics
Brain
Child Development
Environmental Influences
Language Skills
Neurological Organization
Oh! What a Smart Baby: What You Need to Know about Children's Brain Development Arnold, Renea Colburn, Nell Genetics Brain Child Development Environmental Influences Language Skills Neurological Organization Brain research is complicated, but its message is simple: babies are born learning and what they learn is up to us. New research on infant brain development shows that a child's experiences in the first three years of life have a distinct impact on her later development and learning. Here's why. All babies are born with one organ that is not fully formed--the brain. Three-quarters of a child's brain develops after birth. Neuroscientists once thought that brain development was mostly influenced by genetics. Now there is evidence that a baby's environment determines how the neural pathways are connected. Research shows that young children who have been talked to and read to by their adult caregivers exhibit language skills that far exceed those of children who received little verbal stimulation.
title Oh! What a Smart Baby: What You Need to Know about Children's Brain Development
topic Genetics
Brain
Child Development
Environmental Influences
Language Skills
Neurological Organization
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ710439