Continue to discuss parenting strategies with Yangyang’s dad: reading, asking questions, rewarding, etc…

(Con­tin­ued) Dis­cussing with Yangyang’s father the strate­gies for first graders to pass the pinyin test and oth­er top­ics
 
Yangyang’s father:
Hel­lo, Teacher Ajia: I have a few ques­tions for you. Yangyang has been mak­ing good progress late­ly. He just fin­ished learn­ing pinyin. He has no prob­lem read­ing from the book, but he gets con­fused when he’s read­ing it alone. His teacher now has him read­ing pic­ture books with pinyin at home. I’m a lit­tle con­fused. Watch­ing him spell each word, he looks exhaust­ed. He can’t even form a coher­ent sen­tence, and he often gets con­fused. It seems like he’s strug­gling, let alone under­stand­ing the con­tent. I’m wor­ried he’ll lose inter­est in read­ing on his own. He’s real­ly not very patient with this method. I’m won­der­ing if there’s any good way to help him. Are there any books with pinyin suit­able for his sit­u­a­tion?
 
2. After read­ing to my child, I some­times ask him ques­tions, but he’s reluc­tant to answer. Some­times I tell him he must not have been lis­ten­ing care­ful­ly, oth­er­wise he would­n’t remem­ber. Maybe I’m just too impa­tient. The oth­er day I reread Nao­ki Mat­sui’s The Seed of Hap­pi­ness. He does­n’t advo­cate ask­ing chil­dren ques­tions, and that makes sense. How­ev­er, some argue that it’s bet­ter to let chil­dren ask ques­tions or have them answer ques­tions after­ward. Isn’t ask­ing ques­tions more util­i­tar­i­an? Have you ever made your child fall in love with read­ing books on this sub­ject?
 
3. I made a red flag list for Yangyang from the begin­ning of the school year. It was divid­ed into sev­er­al major items, such as com­plet­ing home­work on time, help­ing adults with house­work, brush­ing teeth on time, etc. Each time you com­plete an item, you get a small red flag. After a few days, except for com­plet­ing home­work on time every day, he could­n’t stick to the oth­er things. A few days ago, he said, “Dad, you pay me for my house­work.” I remem­bered the red flag list. Let’s put it this way, if you insist on com­plet­ing one of the items we agreed on every day, you will get a small red flag. A small red flag is worth ten cents, and we will set­tle the bill at the end of the month. Since there was the temp­ta­tion of mon­ey, he has been very active every day. My wife said that this is not okay. Doing home­work is not good.
This is all nat­ur­al, so why would he need mon­ey? This habit isn’t good. But I think it will great­ly boost his moti­va­tion and help him learn about finan­cial man­age­ment. He can use his own earn­ings to buy things he likes. (Also, I want to say that Yangyang is such a thrifty kid. He used to erase and rewrite his home­work note­books, say­ing it would save mon­ey.) Do you think my method is worth­while? Thank you, Teacher Ajia.
 

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Argenti­na: Regard­ing the first prob­lem you men­tioned, it is very com­mon and the solu­tion is very sim­ple and clear.
 

While teach­ers sug­gest “read­ing books with pinyin at home,” this is a good idea, we must under­stand that it’s an exer­cise in learn­ing pinyin and rec­og­niz­ing char­ac­ters, not read­ing per se. This prac­tice can be done mod­er­ate­ly with­out ded­i­cat­ing too much time. At this stage, the two sim­plest strate­gies for guid­ing chil­dren to read are: first, adults should read to them joy­ful­ly; sec­ond, find books whose con­tent and for­mat par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est chil­dren and invite them to read them for fun, whether look­ing at the words or the pic­tures. In addi­tion to pic­ture books, it’s best to find enjoy­able comics and com­ic books, pro­vid­ed the child enjoys them, even if they’re a lit­tle dif­fi­cult. The prin­ci­ple is clear: nev­er turn read­ing into spelling drills or oth­er forms of gru­el­ing prac­tice.
 

Regard­ing your sec­ond ques­tion, regard­ing books that help chil­dren fall in love with read­ing, I think Nao Mat­sui’s “Nao Mat­sui on Pic­ture Books: The Seeds of Hap­pi­ness” and “My The­o­ry of Pic­ture Books” are excel­lent in their own right. While they focus on pic­ture book read­ing, they also con­tain pro­found wis­dom about par­ent­ing and life. I also wrote a book called “Help­ing Chil­dren Fall in Love with Read­ing: A Hand­book for Pro­mot­ing Chil­dren’s Read­ing,” but it’s not specif­i­cal­ly writ­ten for par­ents, and some sec­tions may not be of inter­est to par­ents. In the book’s dis­cus­sion of the prin­ci­ples of guid­ing chil­dren’s read­ing, I pri­mar­i­ly draw on key ideas from books like Tillis’s “The Read­ing Hand­book,” Cham­ber­s’s “Cre­at­ing a Read­ing Envi­ron­ment for Chil­dren,” and Nord­man’s “The Joy of Chil­dren’s Lit­er­a­ture.” All of these books are cur­rent­ly avail­able at Red Niba, but I rec­om­mend start­ing with “The Read­ing Hand­book.” The lat­ter two books are more tech­ni­cal and the­o­ret­i­cal, and can be quite chal­leng­ing.
 

Regard­ing the ques­tion of “whether to ask chil­dren ques­tions after read­ing a book”, I don’t think it’s nec­es­sary to make a gen­er­al and arbi­trary con­clu­sion. How­ev­er, it is basi­cal­ly cer­tain that if you leave a few prob­ing ques­tions for chil­dren every time after read­ing a book, this is one of the com­mon short­cuts to effec­tive­ly and sig­nif­i­cant­ly reduce chil­dren’s enthu­si­asm for read­ing, with few excep­tions. But if I say “you must not ask chil­dren ques­tions”, then I think adults (par­ents, espe­cial­ly teach­ers) will def­i­nite­ly be suf­fo­cat­ed. Because I am also a father, I can deeply under­stand that when an adult stands in front of a child “quite author­i­ta­tive­ly” with­out ask­ing a few ques­tions or say­ing a few words, it is extreme­ly dif­fi­cult, and it may real­ly suf­fo­cate peo­ple to death, haha~
 

Read­ing with chil­dren is both the child’s and the adult’s busi­ness, and it should be enjoy­able for both par­ties, right? Con­stant­ly pes­ter­ing chil­dren with ques­tions makes them unhap­py, which is nat­u­ral­ly not good. How­ev­er, con­stant­ly pro­hibit­ing adults from ask­ing ques­tions also makes them unhap­py (or even suf­fo­cat­ing), which is nat­u­ral­ly not good either. What should we do?
 

So, in prac­tice, I gen­er­al­ly rec­om­mend a more bal­anced approach. Adults should still ask ques­tions, but how and what to ask should be con­sid­ered. For exam­ple, before I have the urge to both­er my child with a ques­tion, I hold back and wait a moment, ask­ing myself the fol­low­ing ques­tion: What is the pur­pose of this ques­tion? I gen­er­al­ly cat­e­go­rize ques­tions into three types:
 

The first type is when you gen­uine­ly want to ask a child a ques­tion, or when you’re an adult and you’re real­ly con­fused (this hap­pens to me a lot), or you’re just curi­ous and want to under­stand what the child is think­ing. These ques­tions are top-notch, so feel free to ask more. Just be sin­cere and don’t act like an adult. Don’t be ashamed to ask!
 

The sec­ond type involves ques­tions you ask when you’ve found some­thing inter­est­ing and feel you have a unique per­spec­tive, hop­ing to catch your child’s atten­tion and show off in front of them. These ques­tions are con­sid­ered mod­er­ate and require care­ful ques­tion­ing, and a less aggres­sive atti­tude (this has been a recipe for fail­ure), as chil­dren may have their own, per­haps even bet­ter, opin­ions. Of course, these so-called “ques­tions” are pri­mar­i­ly about shar­ing the joy of read­ing. Chil­dren will be more recep­tive to them if you engage in an equal exchange and avoid imper­son­at­ing adults.
 

The third type involves ques­tions asked out of con­cern that the child has­n’t under­stood and want­i­ng to test them, or know­ing they already under­stand and want­i­ng to rein­force their impres­sion, or know­ing they don’t under­stand and want­i­ng to show off their prowess. These ques­tions are of the low­er order, and the lat­ter is espe­cial­ly so. It’s best to refrain from ask­ing these kinds of ques­tions, even if you’re tru­ly choking—and in fact, so far, there haven’t been any such cas­es. How­ev­er, if you do man­age to ask one or two of these ques­tions, don’t feel guilty or wor­ried. Trust your child’s resilience. Haven’t we all been there? We’ve been vic­tims of this kind of par­ent­ing for so many years, and haven’t we sur­vived just as well?
 
But, Con­fu­cius taught us: Do not do to oth­ers what you do not want oth­ers to do to you. — Try your best and don’t make it a sec­ond time.
 
Regard­ing the third ques­tion, it nat­u­ral­ly reminds me of a lit­tle sto­ry.
 

This is prob­a­bly a joke. There was an old man who lived in a house near a square. He was gen­er­al­ly a lit­tle afraid of noise, but what he feared most was the dis­card­ed bot­tles and cans in the square. Chil­dren pass­ing by on their way to and from school loved to kick and play with them, and the harsh, irreg­u­lar noise was unbear­able for the old man. He want­ed to run out and stop them, but calm­ing down seemed point­less. So he pon­dered and final­ly came up with a bril­liant plan.

The next day, he met a few boys who seemed to be the lead­ers of the chil­dren and enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly told them that he loved the sound of chil­dren kick­ing cans. He want­ed to invite them to kick cans every day and give them a dol­lar a day. Of course, the chil­dren agreed. They loved kick­ing cans any­way, and now some­one was pay­ing them, so why not? So they came every day to kick cans, and the old man actu­al­ly paid them.

But a few days lat­er, the old man came to them, look­ing a lit­tle wor­ried. He said the stock mar­ket had dropped that week, and he was a lit­tle tight on cash, but he still real­ly want­ed to hear the kids play kick the can. Could they offer a dis­count, fifty cents per per­son per day? The kids were a lit­tle unhap­py. “How could there be a dis­count for some­thing like that?” But it was bet­ter than noth­ing, so they con­tin­ued play­ing.

A few days lat­er, the old man stopped them in a dis­tressed tone, say­ing that the stock mar­ket had crashed and he was bank­rupt, but he real­ly want­ed to hear that beau­ti­ful sound and asked if they could con­tin­ue to kick the can for free. The chil­dren were furi­ous and said, “Tsk—who would want to kick the can with­out pay­ing?” From then on, the sound of kick­ing the can was rarely heard in the square.
 

Lao Tzu teach­es us: “Do not hon­or the vir­tu­ous, and the peo­ple will not quar­rel; do not val­ue rare goods, and the peo­ple will not steal; do not show what is desir­able, and the peo­ple’s hearts will not be dis­turbed.” Apply­ing this prin­ci­ple to the issue of chil­drea­r­ing is also very enlight­en­ing. Peo­ple have very nat­ur­al things, which are inher­ent­ly joy­ful. How­ev­er, once con­cep­tu­al dis­tinc­tions are made, once they are linked to inter­ests and val­ues, they begin to detract from their val­ue.
 

This isn’t to say that I think spir­i­tu­al rewards like putting up red flags or apply­ing red flow­ers, or mate­r­i­al rewards like pay­ing for house­work or cal­cu­lat­ing work points, are bad or some­thing we should­n’t do. Quite the con­trary, I do them myself from time to time. We get 1–2 yuan per dish­wash­ing (depend­ing on the dif­fi­cul­ty) because that’s the envi­ron­ment we live in; it’s the “nature” we cur­rent­ly inhab­it.
 

However—and I think this is par­tic­u­lar­ly important—we should not ignore the harm of this method. I think the most fatal harm of this method is that it may cause chil­dren to lose the joy of it and find it dif­fi­cult to achieve peace of mind by strength­en­ing deep prac­tice.
 

Sun Tzu teach­es us: “If you do not know the harm of employ­ing troops, you do not know the ben­e­fits of employ­ing troops.” Sol­diers must be employed, but only by under­stand­ing their harm can we prop­er­ly grasp the appro­pri­ate mea­sures, there­by max­i­miz­ing their ben­e­fits and min­i­miz­ing their harms.
 

For exam­ple, let’s talk about spe­cif­ic tasks, like house­work. While we have a clear­ly marked price for house­work in our house, there are a few addi­tion­al prin­ci­ples. For exam­ple, chores that are your own respon­si­bil­i­ty don’t count; the mon­ey earned must have a clear pur­pose (for exam­ple, my daugh­ter said it was for mis­cel­la­neous expens­es, work­books, or a gift for a friend, and I whole­heart­ed­ly agree with all of this); we rec­om­mend set­ting up a self-man­aged account; and we espe­cial­ly encour­age com­mu­ni­ty ser­vice, which is fun! — Indeed, my daugh­ter often claims to do it for free, and she enjoys it immense­ly.
 
Aris­to­tle taught us: The essence of life lies in the pur­suit of hap­pi­ness! — I under­stand that this is the most impor­tant and dif­fi­cult part in edu­cat­ing chil­dren.
 

For exam­ple, cook­ing, a house­hold chore, is not enjoy­able if it’s sim­ply a neces­si­ty for sur­vival. It requires some form of reward, like red flags, red flow­ers, or wages. But chores them­selves can also be joy­ful. It’s said that the renowned direc­tor John Woo enjoys spend­ing time in the kitchen cook­ing when he’s not film­ing. If you can appre­ci­ate that some­thing is inher­ent­ly joy­ful, then any spir­i­tu­al or mate­r­i­al rewards become com­plete­ly unnec­es­sary, even an insult or a poi­son that erodes hap­pi­ness.
 

But how can we make chil­dren real­ize that read­ing itself is hap­pi­ness, learn­ing itself is hap­pi­ness, tak­ing care of one’s own life itself is hap­pi­ness, doing house­work itself is hap­pi­ness, life itself is hap­pi­ness, being alive itself is hap­pi­ness… How can we make them real­ize this?
 
This is a dif­fi­cult prob­lem, a very dif­fi­cult prob­lem, because, have we expe­ri­enced it our­selves?
 
Regard­ing the third ques­tion, here’s what I think. Fel­low car­ing fathers, let’s encour­age each oth­er.