1,000 Golden Days of a Child
1,000 Golden Days of a Child
The first 1,000 days,
from conception to the 2nd birthday of a child are crucial for the future of any kind of development. These days determine
the progress of
a child’s life, her ability to grow, learn, work, succeed and in the long run the child’s health
stability, eventually the prosperity
of the society in which the
child lives. Whatever environment, whatever
facilities and whatever stimulation the child receives base the child’s development and learning. A
child is born
with 100 million brain neurons. The child’s brain develops through synapses connections
depends on which connects strongly and which not. Synapse strength contributes
to the connectivity and efficiency of the network that support learning, memory,
and other cognitive abilities.
Therefore, a child’s experience not only determines what information enters her
brain, but also influence how her brain processes information. A child’s senses report to the
brain about her environment and experiences and this input stimulates
neural activity. Speech sounds, for example, stimulate activity in
language-related brain regions. If the amount of input increases (if more
speech is heard) synapses between neurons in that area will be activated more
often and on the other hand,
it declines when the child is ignored.
In the period of 0-3 age 80% of the brain
develops and it develops as a result of positive or negative stimuli. Change
and environment both connect to child development. If there is lack of stimuli
the connection will not be strong. Here serve and return relationships with the
child is the most important ingredient. Thus adult response is very important
for brain development and
this is how we support genes and experiences to connect
them strongly. Windows of opportunities in early years open the doors for the child to
develop; opportunities
such as vision, hearing,
habitual way of responding, emotional control, symbolic languages and social
skills are the ways that stimulate
learning.
The interaction
between genes and experiences stimulates learning as mental and physical
development occurs in the environment of care, love, protection and attention.
For instance, when families give their children special care
by loving,
responding to their nutritional and other needs and providing opportunities to
learn. In such environment children
learn to communicate their needs, solve problems and help others by playing and
interacting with persons who care for them. Even at a very young age, children
learn important skills that can
prepare them for the life.
Bonds and relationship
are very important for long term mental and physical health of the child. Love
and care release stress and anxiety in the children. The brain is a social
organ and it develops as the result of social interaction. The brain needs and
relies on experiences. The experiences early in life can
have a lasting impact on later learning, behaviour, and health. A
child’s brain has 10 times more connections than internet. In the few first
year, neurons form new connections
at the astounding rate of 700-1000 per second. These early synaptic connections
form the basis of a person’s lifelong capacity to learn, adapt to change, have
resilience in case of unexpected circumstances, as well physical and mental
health.
Consequently, mother’s
and child health is crucial for active stimulation of learning in the early
stage. A greater level of brain development happens during pregnancy. At the stage of pregnancy and after the child’s birth
a mother must intake enough and hygienic food to fulfill the needs of the child.
Poorly nourished and ill mothers’ babies suffer and are at high risk of
survival. They give birth to malnourished babies. These
babies are 10 times more likely to die as infants and those who survive remain
malnourished and become sick due to infectious diseases.
Modern research tells
that mother’s milk provides the main source of
nourishment during the first year of life. After the age of 4-5 months, a baby needs some additional
foods containing rich protein
and nutrients. The National Health Survey 2007 shows that foods other than
the breast milk begin after
6 and 7 months of age in Pakistan. This indicates
that most of the mothers are not aware of children’s proper diet according to
their age. The lack of education among women is strongly associated with
malnutrition among children which
further cause serious diseases and developmental issues in life. Unfortunately,
in Pakistan 1 in 4 toddlers are not getting enough iron in
their diets. In
such environment the mother feed the child when he/she cries. Having lack of
awareness in child development such parents even do not know the use of
available resources and facilities to meet the basic requirements of child
development.
Considering the
above facts, it is imperative to educate
families and in fact the communities on early development and care. Educators
and teachers need to play their role effectively as
enablers rather than service providers.
As a teacher we have to unfold and dig out the problems and solution of ECD at grass root level.
Here the role
of ECD teacher becomes crucial to
support the child in nurturing and promote learning.
Another most important aspect is to understand ECD as
a process of human development rather than merely a program as it is beyond the
classroom which can be extended from home to the school and to the entire
community.
Keeping all these
aspects in the view parents’ education and awareness in early childhood
development is critical and first key to produce good results. We can make ECD
possible through developing integrating policies of health, education and
social improvement activities. Through such initiatives everyone in the community
can get benefit from investments in early childhood programs that prepares generations towards a better change.
The first and fundamental
principal is to develop policies that are contextually appropriate and based on local needs. Number 2. Develop policy
goals that are specific and achievable and develop plans for an integrated and
Inclusive approach of ECD including aspect of health, education, child
protection services, parents’ awareness and parents’ education.
All activities
must be arranged for young women and men, future couples, pregnant mothers, family
members, teachers and caregivers. The awareness and training must be comprising
Early Childhood Care & Development, health and nutrition of women and child
and child rights etc. The local community representatives should be given
ownership through delegating responsibility for supporting activities at the community
level. Resultantly, focusing the first 1000 days for each child will lay the foundations for
optimal development and lifelong health and wellbeing in the country.
By; Mehr Parwar
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