Children are natural learners

Children are learning in every waking moment. Learning is a natural activity for children, not something separated out from play or from life and called “learning.” Because children are quite open to the world, they approach it inquisitively. They carefully observe and want to know all about what they are seeing.

By the time a child comes to kindergarten around the age of 4, he or she has naturally learned many complex tasks, for example, his native language. Becoming conversant in a language by the age of 4 is not a small achievement. On into their adult lives, they go on learning many new things—the challenge is: how to create a learning environment that supports the natural tendency to learn, not suppresses it.

If we’re all inherently natural learners, why should we have to force-feed learning? Why create classrooms where learning seems a chore? Why not create an environment that supports and encourages and gives scope for natural learning?

There are various means we can use to create a learning environment that supports a child’s natural tendency to learn:

·       We can train teachers to be supportive facilitators and guides who follow the interests of children, listen to their thoughts and feelings, and expand their interests into a wider context in the area in which a child wants to learn. This is how a child gets empowered to make the most of the learning environment.

·       We can create situations and opportunities for this, empowering children to take leadership in their own learning. Interest is key; by giving scope for the children’s own interests, the learning environment can seem attractive and come alive. For example, a group of sixth-grade boys will be more enthusiastic about mathematics if they’re comparing individual career sports scores.

·       We can provide the right resources for this. A resource-rich environment that allows a child easy access and full ownership can help stimulate his natural tendency to learn. A library of media resources with a simple user index, natural resources from the physical environment, visitors who share life stories and skills, field trips that offer an integrated learning experience, a well-stocked library of books that can be taken home—all these can support the ongoing impetus to learn.

If the child’s tendency to be a natural learner, to absorb knowledge from experiences through their own interests, is supported, encouraged, and facilitated, the natural outcome will be an adult who is a lifelong learner.

We can do this. We can create a learning environment that helps kids go about doing what they do best—finding out how things work, picking up new skills, figuring out how things connect up, and learning new ways of doing things.

 

Document Actions