Education Blog Posts

Katy Farber's picture

Parents know that reading aloud and teaching the alphabet to children is vital to their language development. Also, we know sharing interesting and different vocabulary on a regular basis with children promotes their acquisition of new words. 

New research tells us that numeracy skills develop in the same way.  With repeated exposure to numbers and their relationships—verbally, in games, in books and on paper, children develop an important foundation of numeracy understanding. 

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Katy Farber's picture

Sandra Steingraber, mother, scientist, and author of several books about the impacts of industrial chemicals on children and the environment, warns us that we are facing a silent pandemic—which is increasing learning disorders, developmental delays, and special education and medical costs at alarming rates.

In this important article from Orion, Sandra takes us through some of her parenting decisions, starting with selecting a preschool for their daughter. One of the factors was the play structure behind the school. Pressure treated wood like that used in decks and play sets, before 2004, were made with arsenic. Children who played with them frequently over their lifetimes had elevated cancer risks. So she and her husband selected another school. I’m left wondering about all the kids in the first preschool, and all the kids nation wide still playing on old, arsenic containing play sets. Read more...

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