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Resources
for Infant Educarers
EDUCARING
by Magda Gerber
As an infant advocate over several decades, I have
witnessed many changes in attitudes towards infant care in general and
towards group care in particular. Until recently, the care of infants in
this country has largely been the concern of the family and the family
physician. Only in the last decade or two has the need for providing
alternative care become increasingly apparent. In the fifties group care of
infants was non-existent and looked upon as potentially harmful. In the
sixties, the pros and cons of group care was debated in an emotionally
loaded atmosphere. In the seventies an increasing number of infants spent
six, eight, or more hours each weekday in group care. State and federal
regulations, even when met, do not insure that the infants' needs are met,
too.
In my work of consulting with a great variety of centers,
I have found that while the people in charge of infant centers usually are
well-meaning, child-loving people who want to do a decent job, this rarely
is possible because of the low pay and status of the infant care-giver,
poor, if any, pre and in-service training, very few model centers,
inadequate facilities, constant change in personnel, and so forth. Can any
center meet the needs of infants under such difficult conditions? What are
the infants' needs, beyond those for food, rest, warmth and hygiene? Most
people would respond with the following: love, as demonstrated by rocking,
fondling and body contact;- and cognitive stimulation as demonstrated by an
abundance of objects, teaching materials and lesson plans. These needs have
become largely accepted and most centers try to meet them in different ways.
We who follow the R.I.E. philosophy have our own ways of
meeting infants' needs. R.I.E. seeks to attain a balance between adult
stimulation and independent exploration by the infant. We focus on two areas
of the infant's life: the time spent with the adult who cares for the infant
and the time the infant spends alone freely exploring his environment. Only
a child who receives undivided attention from his educarer during all
routine care-giving activities will be free and interested to explore his
environment without needing too much intervention of the educarer. If
the educarer understands that the infant needs both concentrated
attention while being cared for and time to explore alone, she (he) also
gains time for herself (himself).
In order to highlight the differences between the
attitude of a good average care-giver and a trained educarer I
will compare and contrast the two:
- Whereas a care-giver may rush through routine caring activities
in order to get ready for the more valued time of following a curriculum,
lesson plan, or providing some structured stimulation, the educarer
uses the time that must be spent with the child anyway as a potential
source of valued learning experience;
- Whereas many care-givers rely on infant curricula, books and
packaged programs as prescription to teach, drill and speed up new skills
in the areas of gross motor, fine motor, social/emotional or language
development, the educarer trusts the infants' abilities to initiate
their own activities, choose from available objects, and work on their own
projects without interruption; * Whereas the care-giver teaches and
encourages postures and means of locomotion which the infants are not yet
able to do on their own, thus hampering free movement and exploration and
sometimes even creating bodily discomfort, the educarer provides
appropriate space for the infant to freely initiate his own movements
without interference, thus helping the infant feel comfortable, competent
and self-reliant;
- Whereas the care-giver's attention is focused on the elicited
response to her stimulation, the educarer focuses upon observing
the whole child, his reaction to the care-giving person, to the
environment, and to his peers, thus learning about the child's personality
and needs;
- Whereas the care-giver selects and puts objects/ toys in the
infants' hands, the educarer places the objects/toys so the infant
must make an effort to reach and grasp. The child works towards what he
wants;
- Whereas the care-giver encourages dependency by assuming an
active role, such as rescuing a child in distress or helping him to solve
his problems, the educarer waits to see if the child is capable of
consoling himself and solving his own problems, thus encouraging autonomy;
- Whereas the care-giver may often use bottles and/ or pacifiers
to soothe a crying child, creating a false oral need for food and sucking,
the educarer accepts the child's right to show both positive and
negative feelings. The educarer does not want to stop the crying,
but rather he/she tries to understand and attend to the child's real needs
such as sleeplessness, hunger or cold. If the infant soothes himself by
sucking his thumb, the educarer accepts this as a positive
self-comforting activity;
- Whereas the care-giver often restricts infant-infant
interaction, such as infants touching each other, for fear of them hurting
each other, the educarer facilitates interactions by closely
observing in order to know when to intervene and when not to;
- Whereas, in a situation of conflict between infants, the care-giver
resolves the problem by separating, distracting, or deciding who
should have the toy or object in question, the educarer would
comment "Both you, John, and you, Anne, want that toy." Often, after such
impartial comments, minor conflicts resolve themselves;
- Whereas the care-giver may become aggressive in controlling an
"aggressor," thereby reinforcing the aggressive behavior, the educarer
models appropriate behavior by touching the aggressive child and
quietly saying something like, "Easy, gentle . . . nice."
- Whereas the care-giver may rush to pick up, to rescue and to
console the "victim" of the 'aggressor,' the educarer squats down,
touches and strokes the "victim," saying "Gently now, nice." By
concurrently stroking and talking to both the "victim" And the
"aggressor,'/ the educarer is modeling and consoling both children
without reinforcing a pattern of becoming a "victim".
- Whereas the care-giver likes to have more people or helpers in
the room, the educarer wants to become the steady person to her own
small group of about four infants;
- Whereas the care-giver gets exhausted from picking up one
crying child and putting down another, as if extinguishing one fire after
another, the educarer calmly observes and can often prevent the
"fire";
- Whereas the care-giver may scoop up an infant unexpectedly from
behind, thereby startling, interrupting and creating resistance in the
infant, the educarer always tells the infant before she does
anything with him or her and thus gets cooperation.
All of these examples try to ' illustrate that while both
the care-giver and the educarer love the infant, the
educarer demonstrates love by showing and teaching respect.
Magda Gerber is the Director of Resources for Infant
Educarers.
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