Families, communities, and
nations are strengthened when children are encouraged to become doers rather
than watchers. Even though the world has changed around them, children and
their needs have not changed. They still need to learn to create, build,
explore, and ask questions as well as all the other skills that children
learned in past years. It is the job of parents and grandparents to present the
rising generation with options that take them away from video games and movies
and into activities.
Darla Isackson posted an interesting
article titled “Life Is Not a Spectator Sport: How to Get Your Kids Get Out and Play” in The Meridian Magazine. Along with sharing reasons why children need to be
active and giving ideas of what they can do, Isackson gives the following
explanation for what is happening in the world today.
Have children changed in their basic
needs? Have parents changed in their desire to encourage the total development
of the child? Not at all. However, parents and grandparents are just as likely
to be caught up in the “watching” instead of “doing” mode as are the children.
Today when parents “do” something with small children, it seldom involves
really “doing” anything at all. Parents are most likely to suggest they watch
TV together, go and watch a game, go and watch a movie, or go to the zoo and
watch the animals. They rarely sit down and create or produce or create
something with their small children. Instead of singing, they watch others
sing, instead of making up stories they watch or listen to stories someone else
made up. Instead of figuring out how to do something and developing a new skill
they watch someone else perform. Parents have a relatively few precious hours
to teach, train, and encourage the development of children’s minds and hearts.
Yet in today’s society, during those hours, shared
focus on a mutual task may not take place at all. (ideas drawn from various
pages of Meeting the Challenge.)
Isackson suggests that parents and
grandparents help children to learn skills by doing some of the things that
children did before the age of constant entertainment. My eight-year-old
grandson learned to play marbles at Cub Scout camp. This experience led to some
research, which in turn led to a recipe for making marbles. The fun of playing
marbles was increased by gaining more information as well as the opportunity to
create something new. A nine-year-old granddaughter is learning to crochet,
knit, and sew as well as draw and paint. An eleven-year-old granddaughter loves
to write and illustrate stories. Other grandchildren are learning to play
musical instruments.
Along with the above types of “doing”
activities, Isackson suggests that parents teach children how to clean their
rooms rather than just saying, “Go clean your room.” She suggests the following
checklist to help older children complete this task. Obviously, some of the
tasks need to be completed daily and other weekly, monthly, or quarterly, but
doing these tasks teach important skills.
Make bed. Change sheets when
necessary
Pull everything out from under the
bed and put away
Pick up everything on the floor and
put in proper places
Vacuum thoroughly and dust
Straighten closet and drawers. Sort
and discard unused items
Wash window and light fixture
Polish furniture
Isackson suggests that adults
remember that life is much more than simply watching other people do things.
Life is a time of learning and becoming, and it is meant to be active.
This summer let’s remember that life is
not meant to be a spectator sport. We were not born to watch the adventures of
others on the screen of life. We were meant to be the stars of our own life
story. We were born to “DO” much more than “WATCH.” True, much can be learned
from observing, but what is the worth of the lessons if we don’t quickly apply
them in our own “doing”? …
Our challenge as adults is to encourage
and engage in the kind of DOING that fits the criteria listed in the first list
above. [See her article for the list.] This summer, let’s not just watch others
have fun, watch others live and learn and develop skills. Let’s take a child’s
hand and dive into DOING!
This is fantastic counsel! I am
grateful that my children are actively teaching their children to DO things
instead of allowing them to SIT and WATCH other people do things. There is much
to learn in playing and working at home as well as on outings of many different
types. When we teach children to be DOERS instead of WATCHERS, we will help them
to learn necessary skills as well as strengthen our families, communities, and
nations.
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