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Old September 13th 07, 08:19 PM posted to misc.kids,misc.education
Ericka Kammerer
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Posts: 2,293
Default cover article in Time magazine on gifted education

Donna Metler wrote:
"Herman Rubin" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Ericka Kammerer wrote:
Herman Rubin wrote:
In article ,
Ericka Kammerer wrote:
Herman Rubin wrote:
In article ,
Ericka Kammerer wrote:
Herman Rubin wrote:
In article ,
Ericka Kammerer wrote:

.................

No, it's not. The notion of a variable that
can represent a wide variety of things is a pretty serious
abstraction. At that age, language is much more concrete,
usually representing a 1-1 correspondence between the
word and that which it represents.

They do know about pronouns, and the ambiguity in
their use. They also know of ambiguity in common
nouns, and there are quite of few of them such as
boy, girl, table, chair, raindrop, dog, cat, rabbit,
and enough more for them to realize that this is
not the case. They can handle a story in which
rabbits are named Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail, and
Peter. How hard is it to get across the idea that
they can have any other set of names.

It is exactly this which can make it difficult. Very young children
overgeneralize. If something's furry, they may call it "doggie" or if they
see a woman, they may call her "mommy".

Later, they add specifics. That doggie is actually a cat, and his name is
Tom. That mommy is Stephen's mommy, and her name is Mrs. Jones. And
everything is in relation to the child.

To a very young child, EVERYTHING is a variable. As they grow up, they start
getting the idea that some things are fixed, can be trusted, can be depended
on and which can't. Because that dog is NOT a cat, and he's not a horse
either, even though all three are items in the set of "furry animals".
Stephen's mommy is not the same as Jamie's mommy or Kevin's Daddy. They're
not interchangable parts. And, no, the world doesn't stop when you're not
there, and no, it doesn't revolve around you.

Until a child is through this stage, which continues into early elementary
school, I don't think the concept of "they can have any name you give them"
is going to have the right effect-because young children already believe
this, and are slowly but surely learning that this ISN'T the case for most
of the things they encounter in day to day life.


In addition to that, while there are similarities
between variables and things like pronouns, that doesn't
necessarily make pronouns all that abstract. Young children
are still using pronouns to refer to fairly concrete things--
people, objects, etc. The ability to deal with abstraction
isn't just about understanding that there are "catch all"
names for concrete things that would otherwise be referred to
by a specific name. An abstract concept, on the other hand,
is abstract regardless of how it's referred to.

Best wishes,
Ericka