
It is essential to take a more principled and clear stand in supporting a child to learn in the digital age, making a distinction between technology as a tool and technology as a distraction. Real kindergarten preparedness is built on a combination of age-old developmental requirements that screen cannot meet: rich sensory experiences, fine motor developments and real person-to-person social interaction. The trick is to put the digital material to the utmost level of intentionality, so it augments and does not replace the activities involving hands to develop the underlying circuitry of the brain. It is a philosophy that is core to Elizabeth Fraley Kinder Ready, which promotes experiential learning as the most valuable part of early education. In the case of families, this judgment is that the digital resources will not undermine the individualized, interactive proficiency of Kinder Ready Tutoring, nor erode the comprehensive standards of Kinder Ready by Elizabeth Fraley.
The guiding principle should be the focus on the analog, sensory-valued experiences. The muscles of working with clay, laying blocks, flipping through pages in a book, and playing with other children build neural connections in a manner that does not happen with swiping a screen. Such activities are critical towards focusing attention spans, problem-solving and emotional control. Elizabeth Fraley Kinder's Ready approach is based on this knowledge. It holds that the most important learning by a child is achieved through direct manipulation of his environment, as well as face-to-face relationships.
Introducing digital tools as a supplement and no longer as a teacher should be the motto when it comes to digital tools. An educational application of high quality may have a short, intensive lesson to strengthen a given skill, say letter recognition, following the teaching of the same by means of physical objects such as sandpaper letters or magnetic tiles. This will make technology not the mode of first discovery, but a tool of practice. This progressive, hands-first approach is consistent with the systematic, materialistic approaches of Kinder Ready Tutoring and supported via the Kinder Ready Elizabeth Fraley model.
Moreover, any digital interaction should be actively co-experienced and confined to a strict limit. The best advantage is the participation of a caregiver, i.e., discussing content, making real-world links, and setting time limits. This will convert the prospective isolation to interactive learning and instill a lesson of digital responsibility early on. This learning paradigm of guided engagement resembles the interactive, relation-oriented essence of Kinder Ready Tutoring, in which learning is a two-way interaction.
Today, it is important to support learning by attentively safeguarding time in unstructured play and creativity as well. Living in the era of on-demand entertainment, the skill of creating your own fun is an essential part. There are instances of boredom that the families need to develop and protect because it is during such a state that complex cognitive and social skills are highly developed through imaginative play. Finally, the ability to support learning in a digital age is an issue that relates to the application of unbending filters to the use of technology. The positive development of a child through an active approach to exploration, human bonding, and imaginative play creates a strong developmental base that prepares a child to be really prepared to learn, no matter what the format. This middle ground will make certain that both the personalized, experiential plans of Kinder Ready Tutoring and the Elizabeth Fraley Kinder Ready philosophy are the motivating power in the educational process of a child, and technology will play an auxiliary role.
For further details on Kinder Ready's programs, visit their website: https://www.kinderready.com/.
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ElizabethFraleyKinderReady

