I’m always trying to cram bits of learning into my little girl’s head without her realising it’s going in. And I’ve struck gold.
It took my daughter all of 30 seconds to get to grips with her latest piece of technology to come into our home. I can only imagine how dumb she’s going to make me feel by the time she’s in high school.
“I’ll turn it on for you in a minute,” I yell from the kitchen (there’s a lot of yelling from the kitchen in my house), but she’s all over it. “Don’t worry mum, I’ve done it,” she yells back.
Argh, wait for me, I think, used to her playing with an adult tablet that can go anywhere, but by the time I get to the living room, and to her side, she’s busily driving her Toca Train on her Samsung GALAXY Tab 3 Kids.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Samsung. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
My daughter’s four and at preschool. She’s learning letter and number recognition at the moment and she’s going pretty well. But there are kids who are doing better. “Amy can write her name,” Matilda tells me. I resist the urge to point out that A-M-Y is much easier to spell than M-A-T-I-L-D-A, because, of course, I don’t want to be THAT mother. But yes, we’re doing a little bit of practice at home now. Not that I’m worried about it. Oh no.
But she’s little, so nothing can feel like a lesson or you’ll lose her quicker than a puppy in a ball pit. So playing with her tablet using a reading game where you are working with picture-word recognition works really well for her, as does the farm yard number game where she’s having such a good time poking all the little animals that she doesn’t even realise she’s counting*.
Nothing makes me feel more like mother of the year than feeling like I’ve just ‘played’ with my daughter for 30 minutes but really I’ve been sneaking information into her busy little head. Every mother’s dream, right there.
Top Comments
Your little girl is bright and delightful, but I find that today's teens & late teens really need to work on their verbal and social skills (maybe it's just boys). But yes you're right, they've got it all over us, when it comes to technology.
Best thing I did for my daughter to spell her name when she was young was to buy her one of those jigsaws of her name. Her name is nine letters long and isn't easy to shorten.