preview

Analysis Of Much Too Early By David Elkind

Decent Essays

According to Friedrich Froebel, “Children must master the language of things before they master the language of words.” Author David Elkind wrote an article titled “Much Too Early” about the difficulties children may face when they attend preschool at an early age. His purpose was to inform readers that the idea of children attending preschool would be a bad idea for their academic background in the future. Although children may be very anxious and excited to start school at such an early age, their ability to catch on and develop quickly may be at risk in the end. Elkind’s article was formal and leaned more toward the lengthy side. It was well organized in terms of having titles to acquaint with each paragraph, and the article was also easy to understand. David Elkind did an excellent job of backing up his points by offering studies and statistics for the audience so they can have a view from a distinct perspective other than his own. Although Elkind used few graphics to assist with setting the tone on what his article was going to be about, the two graphics that he did use served a purpose to the point he was making in the article. In the article, Elkind states, “Children are not born knowing information about the natural world such as the difference between cold and hot, smooth and tough, sweet and sour, etc.” Therefore, he feels like it would be risky on children if they are enrolled into preschool before they get the chance to truly develop. Children who attended preschool are having problems once they get older and are put with children who started later than them. Elkind declares this is happening because children are being pressurized to learn a curriculum within an insignificant amount of time and it starts to get very intense for them. Elkind positions to the audience that just because children attend these preschools does not mean that they will have an edge at learning compared to other children that did not attend preschool before their time. To back up his statement, he refers to the longtime staple show “Sesame Street”. This show bridged many social and educational gaps by using enjoyable characters to teach children numbers, colors, and the alphabet. During the time that the show aired

Get Access