Holiday is over and some schools have reopened for the new
academic year.
While
the long vac lasted, knowledgeable parents allowed their children to enjoy the
holiday full blast by making them to follow their passion. Many school children
relate that they visited historical places, some travelled to the village to
see their grandparents, while others had the privilege of travelling abroad for
the summer.
Well,
all that is over and rigorous academic work will soon set in.
As
parents, you may have paid your child’s tuition, bought the uniform and sundry
other stuffs that will make the new school year a good success.
But
before you give yourself thumbs-up for a job well done, you still have one
crucial step to take: helping to raise your child’s Intelligent Quotient.
“How,” you may ask. Well, here’s how—
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PE is not a waste!
Many
schools these days have done away with the playground. Rather, the available
spaces have been converted to classrooms, all in a bid to show parents
state-of-the-art structures. Little do they know that physical education does
play a significant role in a child’s academic prowess.
If
you are still in doubt, a report published in the Archives of Paediatrics &
Adolescent Medicine should convince you.
Researchers
at the Vrije Universiteit University Medical Centre, EMGO Institute for Health
and Care Research, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, say there’s a positive
relationship between physical activity and the academic performance of
children.
Study
leader, Dr. Amika Singh, says though the pressure to improve test scores may
often mean more instructional time for classroom subjects, with less time for
physical activity, “According to the best-evidence synthesis, we found strong
evidence of a significant positive relationship between physical activity and
academic performance.”
The
scientists advise that being more physically active is positively related to
improved academic performance in children. They note that exercise may help
cognition by increasing blood and oxygen flow to the brain, decrease stress and
improve mood; and overall increase growth factors.
Ditch junk foods
Healthy
eating is still very much in vogue, hence scientists’ warning that foods high
in sugar and saturated fats will not only make your child sick and obese, they
can actually lower your child’s IQ!
In
a study published in the Journal of Epidemiological Community Health,
researchers tracked the eating habits of 4,000 children from age three and
tested their intelligence at age eight-and-a-half.
The
scientists, led by Dr. Kate Northstone of the Department of Social Medicine,
University of Bristol, United Kingdom, discovered that children who ate the
most processed foods, with a lot of convenience food, fat and sugar, had IQ
scores 1.67 points lower than their counterparts whose diets included more
fruits, vegetables, fish and pasta.
So,
make it a habit from now on to fill your child’s lunch box with nutritive foods
such as fruits and other whole foods.
Expose
him to Omega-3
A
new report published in Perspectives on Psychological Science claims that
supplementing children’s diets with fish oil, enrolling them in quality
preschool, and engaging them in interactive reading are effective ways of
raising a young child’s intelligence.
Scientists,
led by John Protzko, a doctoral student at the New York University Steinhardt
School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, conclude that certain
dietary and environmental interventions can be effective in raising children’s
IQ.
Protzko
says, “Supplementing pregnant women and newborns with long-chain
polyunsaturated fatty acids, foods rich in Omega-3, were found to boost
children’s IQ by more than 3.5 points. These essential fatty acids may help
raise intelligence by providing the building blocks for nerve cell development
that the body cannot produce on its own.”
Encourage interactive reading
Again,
the Protzko team advises that by encouraging a child to read, it improves his
intelligence. Technically called “interactive reading,” the scientists say
engaging children in this pastime can boost their intelligent quotient.
So,
instead of telling your child to read silently instead of reading aloud, those
who should know better advise that you let him “disturb” you with his loud
reading!
Give breakfast
Many
parents hurry out of the home without the least thought to the need to prepare
breakfast for their growing babies. This is wrong, as researchers warn that
children who start their days with a healthy breakfast are more focused, better
prepared for the day’s challenges and ultimately get higher grades and test
scores.
A
study conducted by scientists at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts
General Hospital reveals that when children have daily access to a breakfast
that provides them with 25 per cent of the nutrients they need in a day, their
test scores are likely to improve significantly, while level of tardiness will
fall dramatically.
Music empowers
These
days, many schools employ music teachers to teach the subject. Whether or not
the school owners know the implications of this for IQ development, researchers
at the University of Toronto say music lessons boost brain power among
children ages six to 11 years old.
Led
by Glenn Schellenberg, the scientists opine that “correlational and
quasi-experimental studies reveal that music lessons have positive associations
with verbal memory.”
In
layman’s language, what this translates into is that music lessons positively
impact some aspects of development — that is intellectual functioning.
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