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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Miller's Mind training for children Book 1, by
-William E. Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Miller's Mind training for children Book 1
- A practical training for successful living; Educational
- games that train the senses
-
-Author: William E. Miller
-
-Release Date: May 30, 2017 [EBook #54814]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MILLER'S MIND TRAINING ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MFR, David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MILLER'S
- MIND TRAINING
- _for_
- CHILDREN
-
- _A Practical Training
- for Successful
- Living_
-
- _Educational Games
- That Train
- the Senses_
-
- WILLIAM E. MILLER
- _AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER_
- Alhambra, California.
-
-
-
-
- BY
- WILLIAM E. MILLER
- ALHAMBRA, CALIFORNIA
-
- AUTHOR OF
- _The Natural Method of Memory Training_
-
- COPYRIGHT 1920
- COPYRIGHT 1921
-
- WILLIAM E. MILLER
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- INCLUDING FOREIGN COPYRIGHTS
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS--BOOK ONE
-
-
- Page
-
- A First Word to Readers 7
-
- Training the Senses 9
-
- Game of Hide the Watch 11
-
- Results of Sense Training 12
-
- To Develop the Sense of Touch 16
- The Game of the Button Bag 17
- The Game of Matching Cards 18
- The Game of Insets 18
- The Game of the Rag Bag 19
- The Game of the Dry Goods Clerk 19
- The Game of Who Is It? 20
- The Game of Weighing 20
- Measuring 21
-
- Training the Ear 22
- The Game of Whispering 23
- The Game of Tapping 23
- The Game Speak and I'll Name You 23
- The Game of Silence 24
- The Game of Drop It 24
- A Musical Exercise 25
- The Game of Blind Man's Ears 25
- The Game of Telephoning 26
- The Bell Game 27
- The Game of Stop Thief 27
- The Table Game 28
- Care of the Ears 28
-
- Training the Sense of Sight 29
- Strive for More Detail 30
- Training the Eye to Measure 32
- The Game of Measuring 33
-
- The Sense of Taste and Smell 37
-
- Using Two of the Senses 38
- Exercise for Two Senses 38
-
- Improvement from Conscious Effort 40
-
- The Faculty of Visualization 41
- A Visual Test 41
-
- Visual Process Natural 42
-
- Training the Mind's Eye 43
- The Picture Test 43
- Test for Quick Reaction 43
- Test for Color Reaction 44
- Test for Order 44
- The Letter Game 45
- The Number Game 47
- Practice with Geometrical Figures 48
- Out of Door Game 49
- Immediate Visualization 50
-
- Training of Younger Children 51
-
- Developing the Observation 52
-
- Value of Observation 55
-
- The Neglected Faculty 56
- Picture Cards for Observation 59
- Counting from Mind's Eye Pictures 59
- The Game of Quick Counting 61
- The Game of Visual Counting 62
- Reproducing the Visual Picture 63
- The Game of Color Cards 63
- The Game of Picture Cards 64
- The Seeing Game 65
- The Game of Detective 66
- A Game at the Dining Table 66
- The Change About Game 67
- The Game of Observation 67
-
- Training the Sense of Location 68
- The Game of Guide 69
- The Game of Guiding Home 69
- Make Play Profitable 70
-
- Attention and Concentration 72
- Exercise for Prolonging Attention 73
- Divided Attention 75
- The Degree of Attention 77
- Expectant Attention 77
- Cure for Diverted Attention 78
-
- Parent Is Child's Interpreter 79
-
- What Is Concentration? 80
-
- Exercise for Concentration 80
- The Construction of a Home 81
- The Farmer and His Farm 82
- The Farmer and His Crop 83
- The Growing Plant 83
-
- The Imagination 85
- Test for Visual Reproduction 86
- A Universally Useful Faculty 87
- Children's Falsehoods 88
- Reality of Illusions 89
- Imagination a Curse or Blessing 90
- Dissipating the Imagination 90
- Exercises for the Imagination 91
- The Story Games 91
- The Game of Creation 92
- The Picture Gallery 94
-
- The Power of Suggestion 97
- Indirect Suggestion 101
- Indirect Positive Suggestion 101
-
- Health Habits 105
- Deep Breathing 106
- Drinking Water 107
- Rest and Sleep 108
- Thinking Health 109
- Ambition Pulls 111
-
-
-
-
-A FIRST WORD TO READERS
-
-
-Many requests from parents for a simple method of training children to
-think and remember have prompted this series of books on "Mind Training
-for Children."
-
-Play is the child's great objective and this is capitalized in
-the methods used in presenting this subject. There are over fifty
-interesting games and as many exercises, all of which are based upon
-scientific principles. These will not only interest and amuse the
-children, but will result in the development of their senses and
-faculties. This will lead naturally to the improvement of the memory.
-
-In the last book all this advancement is applied to the child's studies
-and school problems. Parents should read these books and use the ideas
-according to the ages of the children. Older children can read and
-apply the principles for themselves, but should be encouraged and
-guided by the parents.
-
-Here is a great boon to mothers who need assistance in entertaining the
-children in the house or out of doors. For rainy days and children's
-parties there is a never-ending source of pleasure and continual profit
-in these Mind Training Games.
-
-No equipment is required. All games and exercises are so planned that
-they are easily made of materials already in the home. The making of
-the games will interest the children for hours.
-
-Sense training is fundamental to profitable education.
-
-Memory is the storehouse of all knowledge--see that your child has a
-good one.
-
-You can give your children a wonderful advantage by playing these games
-with them. They have the indorsement of educators. They are scientific,
-but simple and "lots of fun."
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
-TRAINING THE SENSES
-
-
-All through life you are accumulating knowledge, and storing it away
-for future usefulness. This knowledge becomes yours through one
-process, which is a series of impressions carried to your brain by the
-nerves connecting it with the sense organs of your body.
-
-The future value of this knowledge will depend largely upon the
-accuracy of the first sense impression. If the sense impression is dim
-and indefinite the resulting knowledge will be uncertain and useless.
-If the sense impression is inaccurate the resulting knowledge will be
-an error and cause a mistake in judgment. The senses are the tools, by
-the use of which the mind accumulates the knowledge which it uses in
-memory, thought, judgment, imagination, and all the mental operations.
-
-Professor W. Prior says: "The foundation of all mental development is
-the activity of the senses."
-
-The first step in mental growth is the making of impressions on the
-brain by the senses. The senses are the instruments by the use of which
-all knowledge is acquired.
-
- =Sense training is the logical beginning of all Education.=
-
-You give your child an education to help him to succeed in life. First
-give him sharp tools--keen senses--that he may get the best results
-from the time spent in study.
-
-An understanding of the proper use of the senses will enable you to
-make these impressions lasting--instead of fleeting.
-
- =Lack of ability to properly use the senses is a handicap in life
- and a subtle foe to success.=
-
-In the beginning all the brain does is to store the simple sense
-impressions. The baby sees his mother many times before he recognizes
-her. The eye nerve carries to the brain the picture of the mother's
-face and stores it there. Soon the brain perceives the similarity and
-the child recognizes her. The fact that in some way the brain retains
-the first, second, third, etc., impressions becomes the foundation of
-recognition.
-
-If the sense nerve failed to carry the image of the face there would be
-no comparison and no recognition. Without sense impression there can be
-no knowledge. Imperfect sense impressions can only result in imperfect
-knowledge.
-
-Each set of sense nerves carries its impressions to a different area of
-the brain. Each set has a distinct and localized memory. The ear memory
-is the auditory memory. There is the gustatory memory of taste; the
-olfactory memory of smell, and the tactual memory of touch.
-
-The visual memory is the most accurate and lasting. The nerves
-connecting the eyes with the brain are many times larger than those of
-the other sense organs. Psychological tests have also proven the eye to
-be the most accurate of all the senses. Next to the eye comes the ear
-in both strength and exactness.
-
-
-Sense Training Games
-
-The training of the senses, important and necessary as it is, can be
-accomplished in a most entertaining and pleasant manner. The playing of
-games, so necessary in the life of children, can in most cases be used
-as the agency to gain this result.
-
-
-Game of Hide the Watch
-
-You can entertain your children for an hour with this game and at the
-same time, even without their knowledge, be training one of their most
-important senses.
-
-Go into a quiet room and hide a watch where it will be out of sight but
-in a place where the ticking will be plainly audible. If the children
-are small it will be well to start with a small clock, or a watch which
-ticks loudly. Now let the children come into the room and, standing
-perfectly still, try to locate the watch by hearing it tick. Let them
-move around, but very quietly, so as not to disturb the others; or let
-all move at one time.
-
-When one of them has located the watch allow that child to remain and
-assist you in hiding it for the others. A record can be kept to see who
-finds the watch the most often. One child must not be allowed to move
-noisily, or in any way disturb the efforts of the others. See to it
-that they use their ears and not their eyes; it will even be well to
-blindfold them.
-
-
-Results of Sense Training
-
-That the senses can be trained every one will at once admit. The world
-is full of examples, as the Indian savage with his keen sight and
-hearing. You may think this a natural born ability but there are many
-examples to prove the contrary. The American scouts, some of whom have
-gone into the Indian country when they were grown men, have become
-almost as proficient as the Indians themselves.
-
-This fact of the unusual ability of the Indian is true today as well as
-in the story periods of the past. On a recent camping and canoeing trip
-through the lakes of Canada, it was a common occurrence for the Indian
-guide to say, "Washkeesh," meaning deer. No one in the party could
-see the animal, but the Indian would point out the exact spot, and as
-the party canoed silently along the shores the deer would soon become
-visible to all.
-
-This training of the Indian was brought about largely by necessity.
-It was required for the preservation of his life. The same is true of
-the white man who has gone into the Indian's country. If we were all
-driven by the same necessity we would have the same keenly developed
-senses.
-
-Prof. Magnusson says: "There is affecting our senses what may be called
-the disease of civilization. Civilized man does not have to use his
-senses." Let the realization of the importance of the ability spur you
-to conscious effort to secure this result for your children. It can be
-done by playing the games which are to follow--it is of great value.
-
-Prof. Gates has demonstrated that by exercising one of the senses we
-actually build up brain matter. A child who is helped to cultivate
-the sense of sight will not only make more brain cells in the visual
-areas but will also make more brain generally; for the sense of sight
-correlates with all other areas of the brain. This is a result well
-worth striving for.
-
-There are many other examples in the different trades of today. The
-Tea and Wine tasters have a very fine sense of taste and smell. The
-jeweler has a well developed sense of hearing so that he can detect
-irregularities in the ticking of a clock that are imperceptible to most
-of us. Makers of telescope lenses complete the smoothing of the surface
-by rubbing them with the fingers, being able in this way to detect the
-slightest roughness. The blind have a very fine sense of feeling and
-hearing. Deaf people often have a keen sense of sight.
-
- =Necessity and Desire are the parents of all progress and
- development.=
-
-You will notice that in all of these cases there are these two
-impelling motives which have caused this great improvement. Create
-in the child the desire to be unusual in this regard. Show him that
-the highest success of life necessitates this development. Also that
-in every case it comes as the result of individual effort. The one
-possessing this unusual capacity acquired it only as the result of his
-own continued practice. The senses cannot be developed in a day. They
-CAN be developed, however, if you will make any reasonable effort.
-
- =The child will attach most value to that which gives him the
- greatest pleasure.=
-
-This is a fact which you must keep in mind throughout all your efforts
-in child training. Whenever possible make the exercises into games
-and make them interesting. Do not work so long with one idea that it
-becomes tiresome or tedious to the child. Add anything that suggests
-itself to you that will give variety. When the child seems to be losing
-interest or paying only partial attention, vary the game or change to
-some other. In all the exercises it is helpful to note the results and
-keep careful watch of the progress made. Have competitive trials and
-championship records; always keep some incentive for further effort
-before him.
-
-
-Encourage Individualism
-
-Each child should be a rule unto himself. Do not encourage or strive
-for uniformity of desire or result in your children. Let them reveal
-those distinctive characteristics with which they are endowed and then
-encourage and assist them in their development.
-
-A child will excel in some things and possibly be deficient in others.
-He will naturally wish to play most often that game in which he does
-best. Do not deny this game, but use it as a reward, when the child
-does well the thing he most needs. Use the promise to play it as an
-inducement to get him to do the more necessary or difficult exercise
-first.
-
-Even in cases where the children are old enough to use these books
-themselves, parents should keep an oversight of the games used, to
-see that all of their senses, and especially the eye and the ear, are
-developed.
-
-An all around development is most necessary. When parents join the game
-let it be an opportunity to introduce and encourage the most needed
-exercises.
-
- =Training the senses will result in greater ability in all mental
- operations throughout life.=
-
- =A few moments' daily use of the games and exercises in these
- books will attain the result.=
-
-There is one principal instruction, that is--MAKE AN EFFORT--TRY.
-
-Then persist, try again, let failure spur you to greater effort. Only
-he who continues to try, after others have tried and given up, will win
-the prize of success.
-
-
-
-
-TO DEVELOP THE SENSE OF TOUCH
-
-
-The child should be taught to determine the degree of smoothness, size,
-shape, quality (of cloth), and many other things of value by touch. You
-can give an experienced dry goods clerk a piece of cloth and he can
-tell without looking at it what kind it is, and about what grade. This
-is entirely a matter of development upon the part of the clerk. When he
-began this work he could not tell muslin from long-cloth.
-
-Parents will get a good idea of what is going on in the child's mind,
-and the training he is receiving by watching the little fingers work
-in all these exercises for the development of the sense of touch. Try
-the exercises yourself and see what is required to do them accurately.
-In this way you will be better able to help the child. Washing the
-hands in tepid water before the exercises of touch will increase
-the sensitiveness of the fingers. Have the child touch lightly with
-the pads at the ends of the fingers. Increase the difficulty of the
-exercises as he progresses.
-
-=Exercise=--Blindfold the child and hand him articles which are
-somewhat familiar and have him tell, by feeling, what they are. Have
-him describe them. If a knife, what kind of a knife it is. If a box,
-what kind of a box it is--about how long? how wide? how high? If
-you ask the child to give these estimates in inches after removing
-the blindfold have him make the actual measurements. Have the child
-describe the article, giving all the details possible, and find any
-peculiarities or irregularities by feeling.
-
-=Exercise=--Give the child an article with which he is not familiar and
-have him describe it. See how much he can learn by touch alone. Then
-let him see if he can learn any more by sound, by knocking the article
-against something to determine what it is made of, whether solid or
-hollow, etc.
-
-=Exercise=--Give the child, while blindfolded, a book which he has
-recently read and see if he can identify it by the size, shape,
-thickness, and quality of paper.
-
-
-The Game of the Button Bag
-
-From your button bag select a number of different buttons, two of
-each kind. Let the child sort out the pairs and thus become somewhat
-familiar with the sizes and shapes. Then mix the buttons, blindfold the
-child, and let him match the pairs entirely by feeling. Have him lay
-them out in pairs as he matches them. Then take off the blindfold and
-let him see them just as he has matched them, and count for himself how
-many are right and how many wrong.
-
-
-Game of Matching Cards
-
-Take a piece of cardboard and cut it into many shapes, as suggested by
-the illustration below. Make two pieces of each figure exactly alike.
-Let the child match them and see that there are two of each kind. Then
-mix them, blindfold him and have him pick out the pairs by feeling.
-There should be at least 12 sets--more if desired.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Animal Cookies
-
-A similar game to the one above can be played with a box of animal
-cookies. Pour the cookies out on a large plate. Blindfold the children
-and let them select pairs of animals or as many of a kind as possible.
-Let them name the animals by feeling.
-
-
-Game of Insets
-
-The expensive Insets used by the Montessori School can be
-satisfactorily made out of heavy cardboard and accomplish the desired
-result. Take a piece of cardboard of good thickness and draw on it some
-of the figures illustrated above. After they are cut out with a sharp
-knife, smooth the edges so that they will fit easily into the places
-from which they came. The cardboard from which they are cut may be
-fastened to another or tacked to a thin board. The game is to blindfold
-the child, give him the cutouts and by the sense of touch let him find
-the proper hole and fit the piece into it. As the pieces are fitted
-into their places they may be left there until the board is filled.
-This exercise is a little more difficult than most of the others.
-Encourage the child to keep at it.
-
-
-The Game of the Rag Bag
-
-Cut a number of pieces of different kinds of cloth. Show them to the
-child and have him feel of them and become acquainted with the pieces
-so as to know them by name. Blindfold him and give him one of the
-pieces of cloth and have him tell by feeling what kind it is. Put all
-the pieces in the rag bag (any large bag will do). Blindfold the child
-again and let him pick out the kind of cloth you name. See how many
-he can get correctly. Have him choose velvet, silk, satin, calico,
-muslin, broadcloth, etc., using all the common varieties of cloth.
-Children need not be blindfolded if the bag is held so they cannot see.
-Blindfolding increases the curiosity and thus the interest in the games.
-
-
-The Game of Dry Goods Clerk
-
-Cut from the scraps in your rag bag two pieces each of all the
-different kinds of cloth that can be found there. Make the pieces about
-two by four inches and have them all of one size and shape. Let the
-child examine them and match them in pairs. Have him feel of them and
-see that they all feel different. Do not have more than two pieces of
-any one kind of cloth. Pay no attention to color. Now mix the pieces in
-a pile on the table, blindfold the child and seat him in front of them.
-Have him match the pieces by feeling and lay each aside. When finished,
-have the child look at the pairs as matched, counting for himself the
-points won.
-
-
-The Game of--Who Is It?
-
-Blindfold two or three children. Silently select one of the others to
-be identified by the blindfolded children by means of touch. Let the
-blindfolded ones feel of the child--his hair, face, clothes and shoes.
-In this way see which one will first be able to name him. To win this
-game depends a great deal on the child's observation of what the other
-children are wearing. The game of Blind Man's Buff is similar and good,
-but usually has a good deal of sound to assist the one guessing.
-
-
-The Game of--Weighing
-
-Get a pair of scales and let the child weigh anything he wishes. Let
-him learn to accurately judge a pound, then to estimate the weight
-of an article before placing it upon the scales. Teach the child
-comparative weights by lifting articles and determining which is the
-heavier. Encourage him to make a pair of balances with which he can
-balance one object against the other after he has compared them by
-holding one in each hand. Many variations can be easily made of these
-ideas, to help the child to become accurate in estimating weights. All
-practice will be more interesting if there is a record made, and the
-spirit of competition is introduced.
-
-
-Measuring
-
-Give the child a measure--quart or pint--and let him learn to estimate
-the capacity of the different utensils of the kitchen. He should in
-this manner become able to judge accurately the contents of different
-containers. The child should learn to estimate in pecks, bushels, etc.
-This is good exercise and a valuable ability for later life.
-
-Let the games given here suggest new ones to be used; any factor which
-will vary or add to the game is valuable. Keep always in mind the fact
-that the highest usefulness of the games is training the senses to be
-more accurate.
-
-
-
-
-TRAINING THE EAR
-
-
-This is a very important sense; consider its relation to memory and how
-your decisions and judgments are based upon things you have heard or
-thought you heard.
-
-Psychological tests have revealed the fact that the ear of the
-average person is mistaken thirty-four per cent of the time. Think
-of it--one-third of your ear impressions are mistaken. The resulting
-memory, judgment and action must suffer. This is true largely because
-of lack of a conscious effort to develop this important sense.
-
-
-A Test Exercise
-
-Have the child stand across the room and listen for the tick of a
-watch which you hold in your hand. If he cannot hear the tick, advance
-slowly toward him and keep track of the distance at which the child
-first distinguishes the ticking. It will be interesting to test each
-ear separately. Any physical defect in the child's hearing can be found
-by this test. Encourage him to make a deliberate effort to hear the
-watch. Do not be too hasty in moving towards him as he will have to
-concentrate his attention before the tick can be heard. This exercise
-is a good one for the development of attention. Practice with this
-yourself. You will find as your attention wanders that you will lose
-the consciousness of the ticking of the watch.
-
-
-The Game of Whispering
-
-Have the child stand across the room or several feet away. Whisper a
-word and see if he can repeat it. Encourage him to try a little more
-and to be more quiet; then whisper the same word but no louder. Work
-with this exercise, increasing the tone gradually until the child
-distinguishes what is said. Then whisper other words and sentences.
-This exercise can be lengthened and is excellent for the development of
-attention and memory as well as of hearing.
-
-
-The Game of Tapping
-
-Sit at a table and with a pencil or your finger tap upon it a
-certain number of times, during which there are irregular intervals,
-for example--four taps--interval--two taps--interval--five
-taps--interval--one tap.
-
-Now see if the child can reproduce the correct number of taps and
-intervals. This can be varied in innumerable ways. For older children
-tap a familiar tune and see who can recognize it. Let the winner tap a
-tune for the others to recognize.
-
-
-The Game--Speak and I'll Name You
-
-Blindfold one child and have the others sit or stand around him in a
-circle. Turn the blindfolded one around a few times and let him point
-to anyone, saying: "Speak and I'll name you." The child designated, in
-a natural voice says, "Yes, sir." The one blindfolded has two chances
-to guess from the sound of the voice who the person is. If he guesses
-correctly he is released, if not, he must pay a forfeit. The person
-pointed out must be blindfolded and take the next turn. Forfeits may be
-redeemed in any manner desired. The game "Ruth and Jacob," familiar to
-everyone, is a good game of sound.
-
-
-The Game of Silence
-
-For developing self-control and relaxation, have the children practice
-silence. Have them relax and show them that the movement of a foot or
-a hand makes a slight noise. Have them listen to their breathing, and
-then breathe just as quietly as they can. Drop a pin and have those
-who heard it put up their hands. Let them become perfectly quiet again
-and drop several pins for them to count. See who is the most accurate.
-In all your instructions to them only whisper. Do not allow them to
-talk or whisper at all during this exercise. As you use it prolong
-the periods of silence and attention to one sound or idea. This is a
-wonderful exercise for the development of the power of concentration
-and should be played often.
-
-
-The Game of Drop It
-
-Have the children sit quietly in a room; have several different
-articles in your hands and drop them one at a time, on the table. Have
-the children sitting with their backs to the table and determine by the
-sound what you have dropped. For this exercise you can use a bunch of
-keys, coins, pencil, knife, books, ball--anything that is available.
-
-After they have become somewhat acquainted with the articles by sound,
-drop the different objects in different places, moving quietly about
-so that the children can only determine from the sound what you have
-dropped, and where you dropped it. For example, drop the book on the
-rug, the keys on the floor, the pencil on the tiles of the hearth,
-the coin on the table, the keys on the mantel. After each object is
-dropped, see which child can tell what was dropped and where. This will
-teach them to recognize the object and its location by sound. Do not
-overlook the value of competition--keep a score.
-
-
-A Musical Exercise
-
-The child should be taught to recognize tones, and the spaces between
-tones of the scale. Have him stand with his back to the piano and learn
-to tell the difference in the tones that are played. First, use the
-octave, then the one-five-eight. Next the one-three-five eight; then
-the one-two three, etc. Then introduce the half-tones. This exercise
-can be made more difficult according to age and musical ability.
-
-
-The Game of Blind Man's Ears
-
-Have the child blindfolded and sitting quietly on the porch and tell
-all the sounds he hears. The blindfold will add to the interest and
-fun, at the same time insure his dependence upon the sense of hearing.
-Let him tell what is approaching; if persons are walking, how many? If
-a vehicle is coming, how many horses, and what kind of a vehicle? Let
-him learn to distinguish automobiles by sound, large cars from small
-ones, trucks from pleasure cars.
-
-Strive for recognition of the slightest sound, a distant bird, etc. Try
-to estimate the distance from which the sound is coming.
-
-Take the child into the woods, teach him to distinguish the sounds of
-the different animals, and if possible to locate the distance and to
-estimate the location. On the ground, in a bush, or up a tree?
-
-Anything which stimulates the child to hear keenly and accurately is
-of value. Let the exercise be adapted to the time and place. When he
-remarks "How quiet it is here," it is a good time for him to realize
-how many sounds are actually going on around him.
-
-
-The Game of Telephoning
-
-Give each child a pencil and paper and have them sit in a row or in
-different parts of the room equally distant from the spot selected for
-the "operator."
-
-Make a list of words; later on short sentences can be used; have the
-operator take these and sit about twelve feet from the children. Let
-the operator whisper "Hello," just loud enough for the children to
-hear distinctly. The children can raise their hands when they "get the
-connection," or hear the "Hello," but should not be allowed to speak
-during the game.
-
-The operator will then whisper the words in the list slowly, using the
-same volume of sound as in the "Hello," giving time between words for
-each child to write them. At the conclusion correct the lists, each
-child being scored for the number of words heard correctly. During this
-game all instructions should be given in whisper, and perfect quiet
-maintained among the children.
-
-
-The Bell Game
-
-Have all the children sit quietly in one room while some one takes
-a small bell and goes to some other room, hall or any other part of
-the house and rings the bell softly, just loud enough to be heard in
-the room where the children are seated. See which child can tell most
-accurately the location where the bell was rung. Allow the child making
-the closest guess to go out and ring the bell.
-
-
-The Game of Stop Thief
-
-Place a table in the center of the room, preferably one with doors on
-two sides, or at least more than one door. On the table place a bell,
-bunch of keys or other article difficult to pick up without making a
-noise.
-
-Have all but one of the children blindfolded and seated at the end of
-the room farthest from the doors. The child not blindfolded is the
-Thief and leaves the room. When everything is perfectly quiet the Thief
-tries to enter the room, get the article from the table and get out
-without being heard.
-
-If a child hears the Thief, he calls "Stop Thief," and if he accurately
-locates the position of the thief he takes his place.
-
-This game will teach the children to move quietly as well as to improve
-their hearing.
-
-
-The Table Game
-
-After the meal and while enjoying a few minutes around the table have
-the children close their eyes while you take a spoon or fork and tap
-softly upon some dish or article on the table. See who can tell by
-hearing what the article is and where it is. See who is most accurate
-in locating the spot where the sound is made.
-
-Other interesting games to be played at the table will be found under
-the sense of Sight and faculty of Observation.
-
-Remember it is the effort that counts--just to listen will tend to
-sharpen the sense of hearing. Well developed senses are the result of
-repeated efforts upon the part of their possessor. Try--keep on trying.
-
-
-Care of the Ears
-
-Teach the child to respect and value the sense organs as possessions
-of great worth and to care for them properly. Do not allow any kind of
-abuse, especially of the ears and eyes. Do not try to wash too far into
-the ears, the inner ear is fully protected by nature and does not need
-cleansing. Wash as far as the child's finger will reach and no farther.
-
-
-
-
-TRAINING THE SENSE OF SIGHT
-
-
-This sense has been endowed by nature with special ability and
-capacity. The nerves connecting the eye with the brain are eighteen
-times larger than those of any other sense. Their capacity to impress
-the brain is therefore many times greater. At the same time nature
-has duplicated the sense of sight and we have the mind's eye, or
-the faculty of visualization, by which we can reproduce the visual
-impression, or picture, of the thing which we have seen. This faculty
-is one of the important foundations of memory development as you will
-see in future chapters.
-
-We are probably more conscious of defects in the operation of the sense
-of sight because of the many opportunities for comparison with others.
-Children may differ considerably in their vision but any unusual
-condition should prompt a consultation with a specialist.
-
-Because of the movement possible in this sense organ and the delicate
-muscles which control it, there is the possibility of improvement
-by muscular exercise which does not exist in the other senses. The
-following exercises will strengthen the eye muscles. They should be
-practiced by persons of all ages. It has been found during operations
-that some of the eye muscles have been exercised so little that they
-have become almost incapable of use.
-
-These exercises are simple, and can be practiced at odd moments, that
-would otherwise be wasted.
-
-First--Move the eye horizontally as far as you can to the left and then
-to the right. Continue this until there is a feeling of fatigue. No
-physical exercise should be continued beyond that point.
-
-Second--Move the eyes vertically as far as you can, up and then down,
-trying to extend the range of vision. Continue this alternately until
-you feel fatigue.
-
-Third--Roll the eyes from right to left and then from left to right in
-as large a circle as possible.
-
-These exercises will keep the eye muscles in a healthy condition. See
-to it that the child does not abuse his eyes; that he does not strain
-them; always has plenty of light and that it falls upon the page, or
-work, that he is doing. Do not overlook indications of eye trouble,
-eye pains, inflamed lids, continued recurrence of styes, blood-shot
-eyeballs, or pain back of the eyes, all should have the attention of a
-doctor. "A stitch in time saves nine."
-
-
-Strive for More Detail
-
-There is the greatest difference in the amount of detail which the eyes
-of different persons gather from a glance at an object. Some will only
-see a tree; others in the same time will see a tree with spreading
-branches, small irregularly shaped leaves, with small black berries and
-a rough vertically marked bark. Children should be trained to notice as
-much detail as possible. Development along this line becomes a basis
-for many other mental operations which will be discussed later on.
-
-
-Exercise for Detail
-
-Place yourself with the child where you can look out on the landscape.
-Pick out some object, tell him what it is, and have him look until he
-finds it. Then let the child pick out some object that he thinks will
-be difficult for you to find. It may be a bird, a red flower, or a
-hoop. As he develops pick objects farther away, smaller or partially
-hidden.
-
-
-Another Good Exercise
-
-Have the child look at a house and give you all the detail that he can
-see. Call the child's attention to the things missed so that he sees
-the reason for making an additional effort. The same exercise can be
-followed with any object, a tree, an automobile, or an animal. When in
-the house use a picture on the wall, a table, a book case or a coin.
-You will find that the longer the child looks at the object the more
-detail he will see. The aim is to get him to notice and mention the
-details as quickly as possible. After some practice he will be able
-to mention them as rapidly as he can speak. This can be made into a
-competitive game when there are several children. Keep score of the
-number of the details each can write on a slip of paper in a given
-length of time.
-
-
-Training the Eye to Measure
-
-The ability to accurately measure with the eye is a thing that a great
-many people find very difficult, if not almost impossible. You are
-continuously finding opportunity to use such an ability. A little
-conscious effort will work wonders in this regard and children should
-not be allowed to grow up without being trained to intelligently
-estimate measurements. In this training begin with larger measurements
-and from that work to the finer ones as rapidly as the child can
-progress.
-
-
-First Exercise
-
-Have the child determine which of two trees in the distance is the
-closest or use any other objects in the landscape. Walk towards the
-trees to prove the matter. Point out things of interest to encourage
-the child's observation of nature.
-
-
-Second Exercise
-
-Give the child a foot rule and let him become acquainted with its
-length. Then with his fingers on the table have him indicate the
-distance which he believes to equal that of the length of the rule. Lay
-it between the child's fingers. Practice until he knows accurately how
-long a foot is. At the same time and for variety he can practice with
-a half foot and an inch. Have him compare objects with a foot rule and
-determine whether they are longer or shorter. Then let him measure the
-objects. Allow the child to check the measurements himself, this will
-increase his definite conception of the length of a foot.
-
-
-The Game of Measuring
-
-Let the child with his eye, and without a rule, measure the length of
-the table, of the book case, the side of the room, or the height of
-a door. Have him do this by eye measurement and not by guess work.
-Teach him to start at one end and select a point which he judges to
-be one foot from the end and then to advance the eye to a point one
-foot from that and so on, counting as he goes, "one, two, three and a
-half"--whatever he believes is right. Then have him take the foot rule
-and check his measurements accurately.
-
-In the same manner the child should be taught to know and to be able
-to measure with the yard stick. With it, of course, measure larger
-objects, as the length of the house, the width of the porch, the
-distance from the house to the sidewalk, the width of the street, the
-height of the shed, etc. Teach the child to recognize the distance of a
-block, a half mile or a mile, and the size of an acre.
-
-Unless you have had some practice in work of this kind, you will
-find yourself busy keeping ahead of the child. You can get excellent
-practice and development which will be of value to you, by entering
-into these exercises. Make it a point to become thoroughly interested
-in the work yourself, as it will insure continuation and increased
-good for the child. Remember the interest increasing value of
-competition.
-
-While training the child's eye to measure, excellent practice will be
-found in determining comparative length of lines. The illustrations
-below will show some of the ways in which the lines can be made
-confusing. The child should be given enough drill in this exercise so
-that he learns to judge the things as they are, and not as they seem.
-
-Have him look at Figure 1 and decide which is the longer line, a side
-of the square B or the diameter of the circle A. Then have him measure
-carefully.
-
-In like manner compare the height of the two rectangles in Figure 2.
-Which line is longest in Figure 3--AB, CB, or BD? Which vertical lines
-are tallest in Figure 4--those between AB or BC?
-
-In Figure 5 which line is longest, A, B or C?
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Good practice can be had in judging the size of boxes by comparing
-the length of one box with the width of another, or any similar
-measurements. In each case the measurements should actually be made so
-that all error can be corrected.
-
-In the same way practice with size and thickness of books. Let the
-child estimate them by inches so that he learns to determine accurately
-the difference in thickness. The carpenter can readily tell the full
-inch board from the seven-eights boards by looking at it or by feeling.
-His ability to do this is the result of practice.
-
-The size of type is a good thing to practice with, as the irregular
-outlines of the type make it quite confusing. A sample book of type can
-be gotten from any printer. From this the child can also be taught to
-become familiar with the common type faces. This knowledge he can use
-to good advantage in later years.
-
-The child should be taught a definite length of step for the purpose
-of measurement. In proportion to his size he can learn to step off two
-feet or a yard. He should also know the length in inches of his shoe
-for the purpose of checking shorter measurements.
-
-Have the child know his height and estimate the height of trees,
-buildings, etc. These estimates can be checked by computing the
-proportion of the length of the shadow thrown by the tree and using the
-proportion.
-
-=Example=--If the child is five feet tall and his shadow measures three
-feet, the shadow is three-fifths of his height. If the shadow of the
-tree measures fifteen feet, the height of the tree is twenty-five feet.
-
-
-Further Development of Sight
-
-There are two important faculties which are dependent upon the
-operation of the eye for usefulness and accuracy. They are
-Visualization and Perception. The games which are given later for the
-improvement of these important mental operations will also develop the
-sense of sight.
-
-It will be better to use these later exercises where double results can
-be accomplished. Give all the time possible to the games on pages 59 to
-69.
-
-
-
-
-THE SENSES OF TASTE AND SMELL
-
-
-For most of the mental operations the three senses already treated are
-the more important ones. There are some trades in which the senses of
-taste and smell are also important. These can be cultivated readily by
-exercises of any nature that stimulate an effort on the part of the
-children. Many ideas will suggest themselves to you from those given
-for the other senses.
-
-It is advisable to do a good deal of the practice blindfolded so as to
-separate entirely the sense of sight, and force dependence upon the
-senses of taste and smell.
-
-These two senses are very closely allied. Try the experiment of
-determining the difference in tea, coffee, milk and water while the
-eyes are covered and the nose held tightly closed.
-
-The degree to which these two senses can be developed is illustrated by
-the proficiency which is shown by experts and testers who grade tea,
-coffee and tobacco.
-
-The usefulness of their development is to a large degree only of value
-to those engaged in these lines of trade. The opportunity for their
-development comes rarely except in connection with work in the trades,
-and for that reason will not be dealt with at any length here.
-
-
-Using Two of the Senses
-
-There are times when the ability to use two of the senses with
-reasonable accuracy at the same time will be of value. It is not
-possible for either of the senses to produce perfect attention while
-working in conjunction with one another. We can attend to only one
-thing at a time and do it well, but "Divided Attention" is possible.
-Under the chapter on Attention and Concentration, on page 75, you will
-find an explanation of "Divided Attention," which should be read before
-going farther with these exercises.
-
-
-Exercises for Two Senses
-
-Combine any of the previous exercises for Eye and Ear, Ear and Feeling,
-Eye and Feeling, etc., but do not attempt two exercises of the same
-sense or use two of the same order.
-
-At first the attention will alternate between the two exercises, but by
-persistence the child can learn to carry on two exercises at the same
-time.
-
-Watch an operator in the central phone stations, she listens to the
-party calling, watches the board over which other conversations
-are passing, and pulls and shifts the plugs, all at the same time.
-Operators of many machines in factories learn to carry on two and more
-separate operations at one time.
-
-Combine the Insets for the sense of feeling on page 18 with the Number
-Game or the Letter Game on page 45, or with the exercises for visual
-counting on page 59. Let the Insets be held close to the body so as
-not to be easily seen, or have them worked under the table, or covered
-by a cloth.
-
-Use a similar combination of any of the sense exercises or games. Try
-many variations of the idea given on page 75 under Divided Attention,
-using different verses and problems to suit the age of the child.
-
-Have the child write a familiar verse while listening to the reading of
-a story and see how much he can tell after the verse is finished. See
-that the writing continues during the reading, that is, that he does
-not stop writing to listen, then write again.
-
-Take the letter cards of the Letter Game, page 45, and arrange a series
-of six, having these covered. Give the child a paper and pencil,
-uncover the series of letters and simultaneously read an equal series
-of digits. After the reading cover the letters and have him write as
-many as possible, first the letters and immediately following the
-digits. Next time write the digits first and the letters second.
-The result of this test will reveal the comparative quality of the
-child's eye and ear memory, as memory must of course enter into this
-exercise. If the sounds of the digits are lost before the pictures of
-the letters, the eye memory is strongest. This is usually the case, but
-some children will retain the sounds easily and lose the picture of the
-letters.
-
-The sense which proves most useful should be depended upon for
-accuracy, but there should be a continuous effort to develop and
-strengthen the weaker one.
-
-
-Improvement From Conscious Effort
-
-The child may be normal in all his senses and able to gain an average
-success in life without much conscious effort given to improving them.
-It will require very little effort, however, to greatly develop the
-capacity of the different senses and thus increase the success which he
-will gain, and greatly reduce the effort necessary to attain it. While
-effort and use develop, neglect causes disintegration.
-
-The fact that the eye, for example, needs development is illustrated
-by the limited usefulness of this organ in infants. Professor Compayre
-tells us that babies see only objects in front of them, not to the
-right or to the left, and only objects that are at short range.
-
-Your present capacity in the use of this sense organ, and the accuracy
-with which you use it, is the result of the development of past years.
-Conscious effort upon the part of your children will lead them to more
-rapid development, and to the possibility of far greater power and
-usefulness.
-
-The value of this improvement is apparent to you, but not to the
-child. The benefits to be derived will be largely dependent upon your
-leadership and encouragement in making the effort. While the children
-are seeking amusement, see that they combine it with these games and
-exercises which will accomplish some improvement that will be permanent
-and valuable to them later on.
-
-
-The Faculty of Visualization
-
-The sense of sight has been wonderfully endowed with a duplicate power
-which we have come to call the mind's eye. With this visual faculty we
-produce some very important mental operations. We must first become
-conscious of this faculty and learn to use it intelligently and then to
-broaden its scope and increase its power to deal with details.
-
- =Visualization is the mind's eye reproduction of an impression
- made by the sense of sight.=
-
-When the name of Abraham Lincoln is mentioned you can see his face in
-your mind's eye. Hesitate a moment and become really conscious of this
-reproduction of Lincoln's face in your mind. See the details of the
-picture, the deep set eyes, the furrowed skin, the sad expression, etc.
-
-
-Another Visual Test
-
-In the same manner your mind can reproduce an unlimited number of
-pictures. Anything which you have once seen with the physical eye can
-be reproduced again in the mind's eye.
-
-Make a few tests of this fact, if it is not well known to you. For
-example,--
-
-See a pasture with a creek flowing through, willows hanging over the
-water, the green grass on the banks, and the stock grazing there. See
-several different kinds and sizes of animals, note their color, what
-they are doing. Add to the detail of the picture.
-
-To close the eyes and thus to eliminate the more distinct impressions
-of the physical eye, will assist you in visualizing any picture.
-
-
-Visual Process Natural
-
-We are all born with this ability to visualize or see imaginary mental
-reproductions of things which we have seen before. By the use of the
-imagination we combine parts of these pictures into new ones and thus
-are able to construct a mind's eye picture which may never have existed
-in fact.
-
-Children possess this faculty in a marked degree; they use it
-continuously and unconsciously. They can also see their visual picture
-much more clearly than their parents can, unless they have continued
-to use the faculty consciously. Many children amuse themselves by the
-hour in playing with imaginary playmates, and will talk to them as
-interestedly as if they were really present. To the child they are
-present, he actually sees them and also visualizes the conditions under
-which he is playing.
-
-The child should be given a conscious understanding of the mind's eye
-picture and what is meant by visualization. Teach him that when you
-ask him to visualize, you mean for him to see clearly the mind's eye
-picture of the thing referred to. The first exercises in visualization
-are for the purpose of developing a clear visual picture.
-
-
-Training the Mind's Eye
-
-The following tests and games will reveal the lack of speed and
-accuracy in the operation of the visual faculty. The repetition of
-the tests will result in an improved ability; vary and continue them
-and you can quickly experience improvement in the availability of the
-faculty.
-
-Exercises which tend to quicken the action, broaden the range of
-vision, and increase the amount of detail retained, are most valuable.
-
-
-The Picture Test
-
-Select a good sized picture which is strange to the child, in which
-there are several persons surrounded by the furniture of a room, or
-any similar setting where there are a number of objects. Allow him
-to give one quick glance at the picture and then see whether he can
-recall definitely just how many persons were in the picture? Whether
-they were men, women or children; and locate definitely the position of
-each person. The first glance should not exceed one second. Now let him
-look at the picture again for not more than five seconds. See how many
-objects he can name, check them up to see that he is accurate. Also
-notice how many objects are mentioned which are not in the picture.
-
-
-Test for Quick Reaction
-
-Prepare a strip of cardboard about three inches wide and fourteen
-inches long. Get as many colors of paper as possible, cut them into
-strips of unequal width and paste them on the cardboard so that each
-color will be from one to three inches wide, according to the number
-secured.
-
-Stand across the room holding the back of the strip towards the
-children, then turn it over so that they get one clear glance. This
-glance should not exceed the length of time it takes you to count
-rapidly one-half the number of colors. There should not be less than
-six colors on the slip, in which case you count from one to three.
-After this first quick glance see who can tell accurately HOW MANY
-colors there are on the slip. Let each write down the number his mind
-registered without checking up to see if he is correct.
-
-
-A Test for Color Reaction
-
-Now turn the paper over again so that they see the colors about twice
-as long as the first test. Then have them write a list of the colors
-that are on the paper. After they have written all the colors that they
-saw, have them take the following tests, before checking up the lists.
-
-
-A Test for Order
-
-Allow a third glance at the color strip while you count ten, and have
-each begin at the left hand end of the strip, noting the arrangement of
-the colors, and see if they can write accurately the order in which the
-colors appear on the card.
-
-The first test is for quick reaction of the mind. The amount that
-they are able to observe in a given length of time will depend upon
-the rapidity with which their minds react. This test is designed to
-determine the rapidity of the mental reaction. About thirty-five per
-cent of those who take it are able to get the correct number, where the
-number of colors is not more than seven.
-
-The second test is designed to determine the ability of the mind to
-hold the color impressions. About twenty-five per cent are able to
-retain the impression of the seven colors.
-
-The third test combines the power to retain the color impression with
-the ability to retain the correct order. Experience shows that not over
-ten per cent are able to give the order accurately.
-
-Similar tests repeated will give a great amount of exercise and soon
-result in a perceptible increase in the power to accomplish the desired
-results.
-
-
-The Letter Game
-
-Prepare a series of white cards about 2 X 3 inches, larger for larger
-groups, on which are painted the letters of the alphabet in large black
-type.
-
-For this test select a convenient spot, such as the mantel, window
-sill, or table edge, and place six letters upright and side by side,
-but do not have the letters spell a word.
-
-Each child should be supplied with paper and pencil. All should hold
-the pencil above their heads. Upon a signal allow the children a
-five-second glance at the letters. When the five seconds have elapsed
-give the command "Write," at which each child will write the letters
-in proper sequence. When they have had ten seconds in which to write,
-give the command "stop." During the time for writing the letters the
-cards should be covered. Now the cover can be removed and each allowed
-to check the result.
-
-Begin with the arrangement of about six letters and gradually increase
-the number and complexity of arrangement so as always to give the child
-something to strive for.
-
- =Only that which requires effort results in growth. Those things
- for which we strive are of most value to us.=
-
-A few examples for the letter game--
-
- M D L T R X
- X O M E R S
- E A M N R T V
- T E X R L O S
- A X M E V A L R
- Y A C O P T E L
-
-Later arrange some double line combinations, and increase the
-complexity as the ability develops.
-
- Y--E--O--P X--O--J--R M--P--S--Q
-
- E--M--T--A B--Z--Y--E R--E--T--W
-
- L--V--D--H
-
-In some combinations use letters which make the semblance of a word
-and later some which spell a word. Notice how quickly and easily the
-combination is remembered when it conveys sense or something definite
-which the mind can grasp. For example--
-
- T--E--X--O A--M--I--T C--O--C--O
-
- B--R--A--S C--R--E--P J--U--B--S
-
- F--I--N--O
-
-
-The Number Game
-
-In the same manner in which you made the cards for the Letter Game
-prepare a set on which are numbers instead of letters. Follow the same
-rules for the Number Game, using rows of numbers instead of letters.
-
-First use a row of single digits, increasing it until you have used
-nine or ten. Then change and arrange a column of two digits, as
-illustrated below.
-
-Later for variety you can combine letters and numbers. In some
-arrangements leave blank spaces requiring the child to leave the blank
-in its proper location when reproducing his mental picture.
-
-
-A Few Examples for Guidance
-
- 23 50 2 5 1 7 2 906 4
- 46 27 9 6 8 1 4 5 27 16
- 19 48 3 7 4 6 1 2 0 010 372
- 43 14 0 5 1 9 3 5 4 6 9 5680
-
- X 7 3 7 6 A 9 E X 5 0 T4 AX
- 9 E 4 B A 7 X 6 4 B C 1 6E 96
- 1 O B X T O M 1 4 9 2 10 D7
-
-A series of squares, circles, triangles, etc., can be used. These
-exercises can be varied in any manner and made as long and as
-complicated as is necessary to keep the child striving to make an
-effort to accomplish more. Keep a time limit, remember the value of
-competition, championship scores, etc.
-
-
-The Colors of a Room
-
-Have the child look at one side of the room, then look away and tell
-all the colors he saw there in pictures, draperies, etc. Have him look
-at a certain picture for about five seconds and turn away and see how
-many of the colors in it he can recall.
-
-Use a row of books on the shelf for another test. Have the child tell
-how many colors he saw in the row, and, if possible, how many books.
-
-
-Practice With Geometrical Figures
-
-First secure some geometrical figures. Take for example a five-pointed
-star, have the child look at it carefully, then close his eyes and
-reproduce its form and size in a clear, visual picture. Let him
-look at the drawing and see if he can improve the clearness and
-definite proportion of his mind's eye picture. Now have him take a
-sheet of paper and draw this picture as he sees it in his mind, and
-when complete compare it with the original for accuracy in size and
-proportion. Let him close his eyes several times and get just as
-definite a mind's eye picture as possible before he attempts the
-drawing of the figure. Practice with figures of this kind, gradually
-increasing their complexity.
-
-
-Use Other Simple Objects
-
-Instead of the geometrical figures of the previous exercise, take some
-simple object, such as a coin, a key, a watch charm, or a book. Follow
-the same plan as above. Have the child make a complete mind's eye
-picture, then try to draw it.
-
-
-Color Practice Valuable
-
-Secure a number of colored objects, such as sheets of paper, or book
-covers, or candy boxes, anything which is colored. Let the child study
-the color carefully, then reproduce it in his mind's eye. First he must
-work with single colors, then combine two or three in a group, and
-reproduce them in his mind's eye. In following this exercise he will
-develop an accurate color memory.
-
-
-Out-of-Door Games
-
-Select a certain tree and let the child look at it intently for a few
-seconds, then ask him to close his eyes, or look away, and describe the
-tree to you. Try to get him to see clearly all the detail in his mind's
-eye picture, as you did in the former exercises for the physical eye.
-
-
-Use Entire Landscape
-
-In the same way have the child visualize the landscape. Let him look at
-it intently for a few moments, and then, with his eyes closed, describe
-it. The description which the child gives will reveal the amount of
-detail in his mind's eye picture. Try again, and see how much he can
-add at the second trial.
-
-
-Immediate Visualization
-
-The rapidity of visualization can be greatly increased by effort and
-training. There is great value in this ability, and it can be attained
-by shortening the interval during which the object or exercise is
-visible to the eye.
-
-After the children have learned to form a definite, accurate picture,
-try to shorten the time in which they see the objects. Strive until
-they can take in the whole at a glance. The detail will continue to
-develop after the eyes are closed. In the Letter and Number Games
-gradually shorten the time given until they can reproduce the entire
-row at a glance. Such effort will quicken the action of the brain area
-of sight.
-
-The story is told of a woman who so developed this ability that she
-could secure a picture of the page of a letter in one glance and read
-it from the visual image. She became a well-known government agent in a
-foreign country, an internationally known spy.
-
-All of the exercise given for the development of the sense of sight
-can be used for visualization and later for observation. These two
-important faculties are closely related to each other and both
-dependent upon the eye. Later on you will see that the most used of all
-the faculties--Memory--is in turn largely dependent upon all three.
-
-
-Training of Younger Children
-
-Up to eight years of age the child should be trained principally in the
-use of his senses and in making clear mind's eye pictures. The parent
-should have the definite aim in mind of increasing the child's stock of
-knowledge, and of the later value of these efforts. Show him everything
-you can, and take time to explain. Things are new to the child, even
-though they are very common to you. This is the age when he acquires
-his knowledge of things without being so much interested in their
-relationship to each other.
-
-A great deal which is explained to children is forgotten, because they
-did not sense it--that is, they do not impress it upon the mind by many
-and varied sense impressions. Simply to hear the answer to the question
-is not sufficient. You can tell a child what a rectangle is, but he is
-very apt to forget. If, after you have explained a rectangle to the
-child, you have him go around the room and find all the rectangles that
-he can--such as windows, doors, books, etc., and then draw different
-sizes of them, he will never forget.
-
-
-
-
-DEVELOPING THE OBSERVATION
-
-
-The next step of development, after forming clear visual impressions,
-and closely allied to it, is the development of the faculty of
-observation. The eyes see, but the brain perceives. The sense organs
-bring a sensation to the brain where, by the act of perception, it is
-classified or identified as being like certain other objects and filed
-away in its proper place.
-
-Recognition goes a step farther and places this object alongside of one
-particular mental image, which it resembles.
-
-Standing by the gate in the twilight you see an object coming down
-the road. As it approaches you Perceive that it is a cow. As it comes
-closer you Recognize it as Neighbor Jones' cow. You Perceive that it
-is a cow, but you Recognize her as a certain cow, different from all
-others.
-
-It is a fact that the eye may be perfect, and the nerve connecting it
-with the brain may be in good working order, and yet no impression
-may be received by the brain. Injury to that area of the brain which
-receives the impression from the eye may cause total blindness; at
-the same time the eye and nerves connecting it with the brain may be
-physically perfect.
-
-When the brain is not injured, the same result is brought about by lack
-of Attention. The eye can look straight at an object and you do not
-perceive it. The brain does not accept any impression of it.
-
-Attention is necessary that the sense impressions may be properly
-perceived and recognized; and this completed mental operation is
-commonly called Observation. Trained senses that react quickly make
-possible quick perception and recognition. The result is quick,
-accurate, and complete observation. Observation requires knowledge and
-it develops definite knowledge, but most people are poor observers.
-Help your children to be definite in their knowledge and to know what
-they know. How many can tell the different trees by name? How many legs
-has a spider, a fly, a bee, a butterfly?
-
-It is a strange fact that the poorly educated are the best observers.
-Do not lose sight of the necessity of helping the child to form the
-habit of observation. It is the basis of common sense. Do not let him
-grow up ignorant of the common knowledge and experiences.
-
-The faculty of observation is also the basis of science and of the
-success of specialists in every line. The story is told of a young
-man, who, having made up his mind to become a naturalist, went to a
-celebrated teacher in that line of study. The professor set the young
-man at work drawing a picture of a fish. The picture was soon finished
-and carried to the teacher for inspection, who, without looking up,
-said: "Draw it again." This seemed foolish to the young man, but he sat
-down and drew a new and better picture, which he again carried to the
-teacher for approval. This time the professor told him to go back and
-improve it and to wait until he should come to inspect it. The young
-scholar returned, did some more work on the picture and then pushed it
-back and waited. The professor did not come and so he started wandering
-restlessly around the room, thinking he had been forgotten.
-
-Soon he became interested in studying the fish he had been drawing; he
-noticed several peculiarities of the eye which he added to his picture.
-This led him to a more careful study, and other details were noted and
-added. He then decided he could draw a better picture, so started all
-over again. After days had passed, the professor came in and glanced at
-the picture which the young man then realized was still only partially
-complete. For one year this young scholar was kept busy studying and
-drawing the fish, then the old professor told him: "You have learned
-the greatest lesson of the scientist, observation." This young man was
-Agassiz, who became America's foremost naturalist.
-
-Observation usually occurs where there is a motive. Do not ask the
-child to develop it, but induce him to play games and to strive to
-excel in contests which require observation.
-
-
-Value of Observation
-
-This is one of the faculties which we use continuously, but have given
-very little thought to its conscious improvement. Every judgment
-rendered in business life is largely dependent for accuracy upon this
-faculty.
-
-You may intend investing money in a piece of real estate. You go out to
-look at it. What you see on this trip of inspection is a large factor
-in your decision. Your ability to observe all existing conditions will
-go a long way towards determining whether or not your judgment in
-buying this property is correct. If the surrounding land is higher, and
-you do not observe this fact, you will probably discover, when winter
-comes, that you have purchased a mud hole.
-
-Two men go to inspect a piece of mining property. Mr. A decides to
-invest, while Mr. B decides not to. In talking over the situation later
-on A inquires of B why he did not invest, and finds that B saw many
-things about the location of the property which he did not see at all.
-
-In every decision of life we depend largely upon our observation; upon
-the things we see. A keen observation is of great help to the salesman
-in finding a point of contact with the prospective buyer. When he
-enters the man's office his eyes are keen and alert. He sees the golf
-bag or tennis racquet in the corner, or a book on the man's desk, the
-title of which he can read at a glance. These things reveal to him the
-things in which this man is interested.
-
-If all faces look alike to you you will of course call them all by the
-same name. Your friends are all different in their appearance. It is
-your observation which detects this difference. You may have thought
-that Mr. Jones and Mr. Smith look very much alike, but when you see
-the two side by side you are surprised that you ever thought they
-resembled each other. Such cases are not at all rare, and show that the
-observation has not been as keen and accurate as it should have been.
-
-
-The Neglected Faculty
-
-Observation can be improved easily and quickly. This is one of the
-faculties which is used so habitually that we have overlooked its
-importance and almost entirely neglected its improvement. The following
-pages will give some tests by which you can determine the child's
-power of observation and which will convince you of the need of its
-development, and also suggest some simple games by means of which you
-and your children can improve this important mental faculty.
-
-It is a great aid to observation to have the ability to place upon the
-brain a physical eye picture which is so clear and distinct that later,
-when you reproduce the picture in the mind's eye, you still see the
-details accurately. To develop this power of visualization will help
-to develop the ability to observe. The exercises in the development
-of observation which follow will also improve the visual power of the
-mind's eye.
-
-
-Method of Developing Observation
-
-The story is told how the French magician Houdin trained the
-observation of his son. They would go down the street together and stop
-in front of a shop window. The father and son would both take a good
-look at the contents of the window, and then walk on a little farther
-and stop and write on a pad all the objects they could recall. Then
-they would go back to the window and compare the lists, and go on to a
-second window and do the same thing. This exercise was followed until
-the boy had developed an unusual ability to remember what he saw.
-
-When the father was performing his magical feats on the stage of Paris
-he would ask people from the audience to come up onto the stage and
-deposit any articles which they chose upon the table until there were
-forty in all. The boy, blindfolded, was then brought onto the stage,
-led up to the table, and, after the blindfold was removed, allowed one
-glance. He was then blindfolded again and led to the front of the stage
-with his back to the table. He would without hesitation name each of
-the forty objects. This was considered magic, mental telepathy, etc. It
-_was_ magic--the magic of practice.
-
-Practice will work wonders for you and your children. The method
-followed by this magician is one of the best exercises for developing
-this faculty. The time you put in walking the streets is mostly wasted
-as far as mental development is concerned. As you and the children
-pass a store window look closely at the articles in it and as you walk
-along see how many each of you can recall definitely. At first you will
-not be able to name very many. Practice in this way several times a day
-will soon enable you to recall the majority of things that you see.
-Continual practice will result in your becoming an adept.
-
-The same kind of practice can be indulged in on streets where there are
-no store windows. Look at the front of a house and see how definitely
-you can describe it after you are by. How many windows has it? Can you
-see the color, trimmings, the style of windows, doors, porches, and
-all the details clearly? Practice until all can do this. Then observe
-the yard until you can describe the approximate size, the arrangement
-of the shrubbery, walks, flower beds and trees. While walking with
-the children continuously use these ideas. Call their attention to a
-certain house and when you have passed ask questions regarding what
-they have observed.
-
-An excellent method of developing observation is to recall the definite
-location of the furniture in the different rooms of the home, the
-articles that are on the top of the dresser or library table.
-
-In going to the home or office of a friend look around the room once
-carefully, then look out of the window or at the floor, and recall the
-furniture and other details of the furnishings. How many pictures are
-on the walls, where are they and what are they?
-
-
-Picture Cards for Observation
-
-Secure a group of pictures which have considerable detail and a variety
-of objects such as often appear on calendars, large magazine pictures,
-and advertisements, etc.
-
-Put a single picture upon the wall for observation for a period of a
-few seconds. Let each child write the answers to a series of questions,
-each being numbered. They can be answered verbally if the group is
-small.
-
-Have the list of questions prepared and numbered. If the picture is of
-a house and yard have questions like the following: How many chimneys?
-How many windows upstairs, downstairs? How many porches? What color
-is the house? the trimmings? How many trees, bushes, flower beds? Is
-there a fence? Is the door open or closed? Is there any person in the
-picture? Any animal?
-
-
-Counting From Mind's Eye Pictures
-
-[Illustration: GROUP 1.]
-
-Take a piece of paper, or a child's slate, place a simple group of
-small circles, as illustrated in Group One. Let the child look at this
-group for five seconds. Turn the slate over and have him count from his
-mind's eye picture and tell how many circles are in the group. Then
-have the child draw on the other side of the slate or on another piece
-of paper the circles as nearly in the same position as possible.
-
-See that he gets the advantage of two tests from this exercise, one
-the counting from his mind's eye picture and the other to be able to
-reproduce the group in the same positions as shown on the other side of
-the slate.
-
-[Illustration: GROUP 2.]
-
-Make another group of mixed crosses and circles as shown in Group Two.
-After looking at it for five seconds, have the child tell you how many
-circles and how many crosses there are. Have him draw a picture of them.
-
-[Illustration: GROUP 3.]
-
-Use a group of combined circles and squares as illustrated in Groups
-Three and Four. As the child becomes able to count and reproduce
-accurately, increase the difficulty and complexity of the exercises.
-For variety use triangles, rectangles, octagons, stars, etc., as in
-Group Four.
-
-[Illustration: GROUP 4.]
-
-
-For Visual Reproduction
-
-Divide a slate or a sheet of paper into four, six, nine or twelve
-sections. Beginning with four and increasing the number as the child
-progresses. Draw in each section some picture, number, letter or
-object, as illustrated. Let the child look at those which you have
-arranged and then close his eyes and look away and tell what is in each
-of the squares. If he is old enough, let him take a piece of paper and
-reproduce the squares and their contents. For variety the squares can
-contain all letters, all numbers, or all objects.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The Game of Quick Counting
-
-Have a handful of small sticks or matches and lay a number in a row on
-the table. Let the children stand with their backs to the table and a
-few feet away from it. After you have arranged the sticks go several
-feet away from the table and say, "Ready!" The children then go to
-the table, count the sticks, run to you and whisper their answer. The
-object in your being away from the table is to keep the others from
-repeating the answer of the first child when they have not finished the
-count for themselves. From a simple beginning of a straight row of a
-few sticks, the game can be developed to any degree of complexity, so
-that it will tax the powers of the most alert and developed mind. The
-children will soon be able to glance at the group of sticks and count
-them from their mind's eye picture while they are coming to you and not
-have to stand at the table while counting them.
-
-Lay the sticks in groups, make them into figures, into small piles,
-double lines of different length, etc. A few different groups are
-illustrated below--use matches, tooth picks, or any small articles.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The Game of Visual Counting
-
-Take the same game described above for Quick Counting and have the
-children see the figure or pile of sticks for just a moment, then cover
-them and let them count from their visual picture and tell the number,
-rather than by the actual count as before. They can also have a handful
-of sticks in their hands and each try to arrange a group of sticks
-which is the duplicate of the one they have been observing.
-
-The game of dominoes is good for small children in helping them to
-count quickly and accurately. Use a row of dominoes instead of sticks
-and have the children count the number of spots from their mind's eye
-picture.
-
-For variety use any objects, let the child look at a flag and count the
-stars. Have him count the number of squares in a colonial window; the
-number of books on a shelf; the number of sections in the radiator.
-Anything of this kind can be easily used. Give him only a glance, do
-not allow time enough for an actual count. In each case let the time
-allowed for each exercise be less than required to count the objects.
-
-
-Reproducing the Visual Picture
-
-Show the child a vase, or the picture of one that is odd in shape, a
-water pitcher, or an Egyptian water bottle. Let him have a good look at
-the object, then take it away and let him describe it in detail, or,
-better still, have him draw it. Drawing is an excellent exercise for
-the development of muscular control and will-power.
-
-In the same way let children observe the decorations of a building, the
-design of the windows, the design and style of the caps and bases of
-the pillars, and then draw them.
-
-Older girls should be taught to observe so as to be able to describe
-accurately, and to draw in detail, suits and dresses; draperies and
-furnishings. This is also an excellent opportunity for color study.
-Boys can observe, describe and draw the outlines of boats, automobiles,
-and furniture, and anything that interests them. An excellent book to
-help the child in learning to draw is one entitled, "When Mother Lets
-Us Draw," by E. R. Lee Thayer.
-
-
-The Game of Color Cards
-
-To develop Observation and Memory of location, and relation of objects,
-get eight cards of any size, from one to three inches square, each of a
-different color. Colors of decided contrast are best. Number the cards
-on the back from one to eight. While the child is not looking arrange
-the cards in a double row, writing the number of each card on a slip
-of paper. The numbers should be in two rows and in the exact order in
-which the color cards are to be arranged. Call the child and let him
-look twenty seconds at these cards. The time can be shortened as the
-ability develops. Now mix the cards and let him try to arrange them as
-they were.
-
-The one taking the test should do this by making a picture of the
-colors as they appear, holding them in mind as he arranges the cards.
-This is excellent practice for persons of all ages. Some can do it
-accurately at the first trial, others will have a poor record at the
-beginning, but as usual _persistence_ will win and the ability will
-grow rapidly.
-
-The Score.--The numbers, as you have previously written them on the
-slip, will give the original order. After they have been arranged by
-the one taking the test, turn the cards and check by the numbers. Each
-card in its correct place entitles him to one point. Any number can be
-decided upon as a game. The first one reaching that number of points by
-correct arrangement wins.
-
-If colored cardboard is not handy the cards can easily be made by
-painting one side with a child's water color paints or by using
-crayolas.
-
-
-The Game of Picture Cards
-
-This game will develop observation and location. Make a series of
-eight, ten, or twelve cards about 2x3 inches in size, on one side
-number them as in the color game, and on the other side draw the
-outlines of simple objects, as a hat, tea kettle, shears, box, fan,
-book, owl, hen, dog, etc. These pictures can be cut from a paper and
-pasted on the cards; small picture cards, or picture postals may be
-used.
-
-Arrange the cards in two rows. You can begin with four or six cards
-and later, after these have been used with comparative accuracy, add
-more. Keep a record of the arrangement by the numbers on the back of
-the cards as in the Color Game. Allow about twenty seconds for the
-observation of the cards and their positions, then shuffle them and
-arrange them in the original position if possible. Score the same as in
-the Color Game.
-
-
-The Seeing Game
-
-Take the child into some room with which he is not familiar, and let
-him walk through the room slowly, then go out and make a list of
-everything he can remember. Now let him look through again and see what
-he can add to the list.
-
-Walk a block down the street and have him make a list or tell you of as
-many of the things which he saw as possible. Whenever possible return
-for a second look so that the child may see and realize the many things
-that he has omitted.
-
-The story of the experience of the magician Houdin and the method which
-he used for developing the observation of his son can easily suggest a
-number of interesting, and as you have learned, very profitable games.
-
-
-The Game of Detective
-
-Place a dozen objects on a table and let the child look at the table
-from twenty to thirty seconds and then leave the room. While gone
-change the position of two objects. Have him return and tell what
-changes were made. Where there are two or more children let the one who
-first observes the change remain and make the change for the others.
-The number of objects changed can be varied. But those out of the room
-should know how many changes are being made. At first the objects
-changed should be returned to their original positions, before the
-second change, so that the mental picture is the same each time. Later
-they can remain in the position to which they were changed so that
-there is a new relationship to be retained in mind each time.
-
-
-A Game at the Dining Table
-
-After a meal, while sitting at the table, let the children take a
-careful look at what is upon it and then close their eyes. Ask the
-location of different things and see how many they can remember
-accurately. While their eyes are closed take something off the table
-and hide it. See which one can first tell what is removed. Return it
-and next remove some other article. Let the child first telling what
-was removed be the one to remove the next article, and so on, or take
-turns around the table.
-
-
-The Change About Game
-
-Let all the persons playing the game look over the furnishings of the
-room and then all, but one, go out. The person remaining can change
-the location of one article but nothing must be removed. When the
-alteration is made the others may return. The first one to detect the
-change must remain and make the change for the others. At first the
-changes should be made of larger articles as the chairs, pictures,
-pillows, etc. Later smaller ones can be used as vases, doilies, books,
-bric-a-brac.
-
-A time limit can be placed upon the observation of the room and also
-upon the time allowed for detecting the change made. A score can be
-kept among smaller children rather than to allow them to make the
-changes.
-
-
-The Game of Observation
-
-Gather a group of small articles and place them on a table. Begin with
-not less than twenty articles and increase the number as those making
-the test become accurate. Have the children gather around the table and
-look intently at the objects upon it, striving to make a picture of the
-group in their minds. After they have looked at the table for thirty
-seconds cover it and have them write a list of all the articles they
-can recall from their mental impression. The one writing the longest
-list is the winner.
-
-It is well to allow them a second observation of twenty seconds after
-they have written the first list and see how many more they can add to
-it. After the child has written all that he thinks he can, have him
-close his eyes and see the mind's eye picture of the top of the table
-and in this way concentrate on the picture. You will find that in most
-cases this will recall to mind other objects, they will gradually
-become definite in the picture and can be added to the list. Few
-people are able to write more than twenty objects from a one minute
-observation of a table containing thirty, but there are some who can
-do much better at the first trial. These are usually persons who have
-been engaged in some line of effort which causes the development of the
-faculty.
-
-This is an excellent mental exercise and should be repeated as often
-as you can induce the children to play it, adding to the articles and
-changing some for variety. Play this at the children's parties. Older
-persons enjoy it as well as the younger ones, especially after they see
-how difficult it is.
-
-
-Training the Sense of Location
-
-One valuable application of the habit of attention and observation is
-that it develops the memory for places. The keen, observing woodsman is
-not easily lost. Some people can be lost a few blocks from home simply
-because they do not observe where they go, the objects which they pass,
-or the relation of one building or corner to another. Impress the
-importance of this application of observation upon the child. Teach
-him to pick landmarks. Show him how the Indian or woodsman blazes a
-trail as he goes through an unknown country. Teach the child to notice
-the roads, fences, trees, houses and buildings as he walks. Teach him
-the directions and how to find them.
-
-
-The Game of Guide
-
-Take the child for a walk. Tell him that the next day you are going
-to see if he can take you for the same walk. Have him observe the
-different places you go. After you have been home for an hour or so
-let the child go over the walk in his mind and review it visually so
-that he will be able to take you the next day. Review is necessary for
-a permanent memory, and this act will help the child to realize the
-importance of forming the review habit.
-
-
-The Game of Guiding Home
-
-Take the child for a walk and double back over your track and see if
-he will recognize the fact that he has been there before. Take him to
-the same place by different roads and let him guide you back home. When
-you are ready to go home after a walk let the child play the game of
-taking you home. He will enjoy this and it will develop independence
-and the ability to get home alone if such a necessity should arise.
-Occasionally ask him what direction you are traveling and in which
-direction his home is located. When the corner is turned have him tell
-the new direction.
-
-
-Make Play Profitable
-
-In your play with the child make it a point to choose some game which
-will develop his senses and faculties. You can amuse him as easily
-and at the same time be accomplishing a great good. Do not put this
-matter off "until you have more time." Use a little time each day, if
-only five minutes. You are bound to experience to some extent the same
-result as a friend who said: "I started in with this thing for the good
-of the kids, but I find the kid who gets the most out of it is dad."
-
-Rudyard Kipling, in his book "Kim," gives an instance of the
-Observation Game played by Kim and a trained native youth. Lurgan
-Sahib exposes to the sight of the two boys a tray filled with jewels
-and gems, allowing them to gaze upon it a few moments before it is
-withdrawn from sight. Then the competition begins, as follows: "There
-are under that paper five blue stones, one big, one smaller, and three
-small," said Kim in all haste. "There are four green stones, and one
-with a hole in it; there is one yellow stone that I can see through,
-and one like a pipe stem. There are two red stones, and--and--give me
-time."
-
-But Kim had reached the limit of his powers. Then came the turn of the
-native child.
-
-"First are two flawed sapphires, one of two ruttees and one of four, as
-I should judge. The four ruttees sapphire is chipped at the edge. There
-is one Turkestan turquoise, plain with green veins, and there are two
-inscribed--one with the name of God in gilt and the other being cracked
-across, for it came out of an old ring, I cannot read. We have not the
-five blue stones; four flamed emeralds there are, but one is drilled in
-two places, and one is a little carven."
-
-"Their weight?" said Lurgan Sahib, impassively.
-
-"Three, five, five and four ruttees, as I judge it. There is one piece
-of old greenish amber, and a cheap cut topaz from Europe. There is
-one ruby of Burma, one of two ruttees, without a flaw. And there is a
-Ballas ruby, flawed, of two ruttees. There is a carved ivory from China
-representing a rat sucking an egg; and there is last--ah ha! a ball of
-crystal as big as a bean set in a gold leaf."
-
-"Kim is mortified at his bad beating, and asks the secret." The answer
-is: "By doing it many times over, till it is done perfectly, for it is
-worth doing."
-
- =Conscious and accurate sense impressions are essential for
- definite knowledge.=
-
- ="He who knows and knows that he knows, he is wise, follow him."=
-
-
-
-
-ATTENTION AND CONCENTRATION
-
-
-There is no greater heritage which you can give your child to aid in
-his mental development, character building, and success winning than a
-trained ability to control his attention and concentration. In fact, to
-the degree in which he is able to do this, will he be able to control
-himself and later to control others. The ability to do these two
-things is a part of the capacity of every successful man. Every effort
-that you will put forth to aid the child in the development of these
-faculties will repay you in many ways.
-
-Attention is the application of the senses to the subject in mind.
-Attention controlled and prolonged is Concentration.
-
-The opposite, absent-mindedness, is simply involuntary or uncontrolled
-attention.
-
-The principal aid you can give the child is to teach him how to
-induce and control attention and to know its enemies and how to avoid
-them. Attention may be discussed under several different heads, but
-we shall confine ourselves to aids in inducing it. It must be led,
-not compelled or driven by will force. You may exert all the force
-you possess to center your attention upon one object for a prolonged
-period, but in spite of all you can do it will soon wander.
-
-It is said that the longest period of time in which a mind will attend,
-without rest, to one subject, is a few seconds. At the end of that time
-there must come consciously or unconsciously, a period of relaxation.
-
-William James, the psychologist, says that "doing work which requires
-concentration is like driving a hungry horse along a road lined on
-both sides with green grass. If left to himself the horse will stop to
-nibble. It is only by continual jerking and urging that he can be kept
-moving forward."
-
-"In the same way the mind is inclined to wander. There must be
-conscious ability upon the part of the individual to urge it along and
-keep it busy at the task in hand."
-
-The first stimulus to the attention is change. Prof. James says: "No
-one can possibly attend consciously to an object that does not change."
-A continual and unvarying sound soon makes no impression, you become
-used to it so that your mind no longer pays any attention to it. A
-picture may be very interesting but if you gaze at one object in it
-steadily you will soon go to sleep.
-
-
-Exercise for Prolonging the Attention
-
-Take a sheet of paper and draw a heavy square upon it. Pin this upon
-the wall in front of you. Gaze steadily upon the square and see how
-long you can keep your mind upon it. Do this several times and you can
-become acquainted with the period of time during which you can hold
-your attention without change. The knowledge of the length of this
-cycle can be a guide of how rapidly to introduce change as a stimulus.
-
-Now gaze at the square again, introducing a change before your
-attention has wandered. Look at the square, then at the different
-sides, the corners and the space inside. See it in different colors,
-see the square frame of one color and the center of another, change
-the combinations. Let the center be formed of irregular shaped discs
-of different colors and see them change places, forming new figures.
-See the frame as a picture frame and with imaginary pictures in it. See
-the pictures change and the objects moving. Let it be a moving picture
-screen and imagine the pictures moving there.
-
-Let the square be the fence of a farm, set it all laid out in fields
-with the buildings, the stock and all the work that is going on there.
-While doing this make a continual change and attend to the different
-details of the picture at different times.
-
-Keep up this exercise as long as you can hold your attention without
-wandering. Then start again and try to prolong the period in which you
-can control the attention. Let the movement of the conscious attention
-be more rapid if necessary to hold it fixed upon the picture.
-
-Practice with the pictures on the wall and direct your attention from
-one detail to another, always changing before the attention wanders,
-keeping it absolutely under your control.
-
-Attention to be perfect must be directed to one thing at a time. It
-must be centered and not scattered. Perfect attention is a rifle, not
-a shotgun. You can best stimulate attention by use of one sense at a
-time. At the same time see to it that the other senses are relaxed and
-at rest.
-
-
-Divided Attention
-
-It is possible to divide the attention but then it can not be of
-the highest quality. Try the experiment of doing a simple problem
-in arithmetic and at the same time say a familiar verse, as
-"Humpty-Dumpty." Again try to write the lines of "Mary had a little
-lamb," while you say aloud the lines of "Humpty-Dumpty." While you did
-succeed in doing the first you do not succeed in doing the second. This
-experiment should be tried by all children to show them the effect of
-dividing the attention and of how it may be done when necessary, but
-only to a certain degree. The difficulty of the verse and problem can
-be accommodated to the age of the child.
-
-The attention may be divided between two objects or acts if they call
-for the use of two different senses or are different in their order.
-You can not divide your attention between two acts of the same order,
-as two arithmetic problems, one mental and the other written, or
-between two operations of the same sense. You can not listen to two
-quartets singing at the same time, but you can attend to one and smell
-some flowers at the same time and do both fairly well. While using one
-of the senses for fixed attention train the others to relax.
-
-
-The Degree of Attention
-
-This will depend upon the strength of the stimulus or force which
-excites it. The sense of sight is the strongest of all the senses and
-therefore can exert the strongest stimulus, and should be used in all
-possible cases. In the exercises with the square the changes are all
-visual and they continue the strongest stimulus.
-
-Another strong stimulus can be induced by the feelings of either
-pleasure or displeasure. Happy, joyful anticipation or fear, horror, or
-disgust will arouse the attention.
-
-Familiarity also aids the attention because of the feelings which it
-incites. Visual pictures which contain familiar scenes are better and
-all changes introduced should be of familiar ideas in order to take
-advantage of this fact.
-
-The more you embrace in the attention the less penetrating it will be.
-Do not try to take in the whole picture or object all the time, but
-change from one detail to another, centering the attention on one at a
-time and thus building the perfect whole.
-
-
-Arouse Your Interest
-
-Always become interested in the thing to which you are striving
-to direct your attention. Boys have no difficulty in paying close
-attention and remembering the ball score and the batting average of the
-players but to ask them to pay as strict attention to a lecture on an
-uninteresting subject is asking the impossible. The compelling element
-of interest has been taken away.
-
-This is a great lesson for all parents and teachers; if the results of
-fixed attention are to be expected, the interest must be supplied and
-maintained, by natural or imaginary means.
-
-
-Expectant Attention
-
-Prolonged expectancy is a great aid to holding the attention. The
-element of curiosity is a great impelling force in the child and
-even in adult life. This can be taken advantage of in prolonging the
-attention.
-
-The element of expectancy also affects the results of attention. The
-thing you expect is the thing most easily found. If you wish to aid a
-friend who is searching for a lost article you first learn as nearly
-as possible just what it looks like, so that you may know what you are
-expected to find.
-
-=Exercise.=--In the following lines count all the 5s.
-
- 5 0 3 4 2 6 5 7 4 6 7 8 9 8 0 7 6 8 7 5 4 3 5 7 6 5 4 3 7
- 93758432657374596870234265834985672230986574
-
-Notice how readily the other digits pass before your eyes in more
-or less indistinct rows, but the 5s stand out more clearly. This is
-caused by your expectancy, your attention is fixed upon this one digit
-and cares nothing for others. Count the 9s and note the change of
-expectancy. Use any selected letter in this paragraph for additional
-practice.
-
-
-Cure for Diverted Attention
-
-It is not the easiest thing to learn to control and to prolong the
-attention, but it is one of the most important. Great results are never
-easily accomplished. Easily diverted attention is a contributing cause
-of failure in every undertaking and if allowed to continue, will become
-habitual absent-mindedness. See to it that your child does not acquire
-this unfortunate handicap.
-
-The cure for diverted attention is to enter whole-heartedly and wholly
-into everything that you do, no matter how trivial it may be, do not
-change or lose your enthusiasm over it until fully completed. If you
-discover something more desirable, put it aside for the time being and
-attend to the thing started, until you have finished.
-
-Learn to use better judgment about what you start, and when started,
-never change. It is the tendency to change which you are striving to
-overcome.
-
-When one thing is finished go directly and enthusiastically to the
-next, without hesitation or indecision. If uncertain, learn to make a
-decision and go through with it to the end, and then do the better
-things which may have suggested themselves after starting.
-
-
-Parent Is Child's Interpreter
-
-These are immensely valuable lessons for children. Younger children,
-whose habits are more easily formed can not realize the importance of
-it so that the responsibility must rest upon you, the parents. See to
-it that right habits are formed and wrong ones avoided or corrected if
-they now exist. They will thank you for it many times in later years.
-Repeat any of the exercises given for sense training and prolong them
-for development of attention and concentration.
-
-An unusually successful physician tells how his mother developed his
-conscious attention. Each time she told him to do something or sent him
-upon an errand she would require him to repeat to her just what she had
-told him to do. If he could not he had to stand and think it over, and
-if he had not paid good attention he was punished.
-
-Sometimes he was given instructions and when he had left the house was
-called back and required to repeat in detail where he was going and
-what he was to do and say. By this method he learned to pay attention
-and thereby to remember well. In the practice of his profession he used
-this idea, requiring the parent or nurse to repeat his instructions
-for the care of the patient and the use of the medicine, in this way
-avoiding omissions and improving the result.
-
-Follow this plan and help your children to learn to pay attention and
-to remember when told once.
-
-
-What Is Concentration?
-
-An uninterrupted continuation of the flow of thought and undivided
-attention is concentration. It is the result of a well-regulated
-and controlled thought process. It is accomplished by patient and
-persistent effort. It is a reward of the highest value. There is
-no real effort connected with it, but you become so engrossed and
-interested in your thought that you are conscious of nothing else.
-Everything else is excluded and your whole consciousness is concentered
-upon one thought.
-
-One moment's complete concentration will go farther toward the mastery
-of a lesson or solution of your problem than much time spent in idle,
-disconnected thought.
-
-This is a faculty not easily mastered, but when once harnessed and
-under your control has the greatest constructive power.
-
-
-Exercise for Concentration
-
-The following exercises are valuable for prolonged periods of
-concentration, for developing the visual faculty, and exercising the
-productive imagination. They will prove of great worth to adults in
-helping with the construction and definite visualization of their life
-ideals and business problems. By this process you can easily learn to
-direct concentrated thought power to the bringing about of your plans
-and ideals.
-
-
-The Construction of a Home
-
-Visualize a forest, into which some lumbermen are coming. See them
-cutting the trees, sawing them into mill lengths, and donkey engines
-drawing them to the railroad. They are loaded and hauled to the mill,
-where they are converted into lumber. See as much detail as you know of
-the mill processes.
-
-The lumber is loaded on cars, shipped to the city, unloaded in a lumber
-yard, sold and hauled to the spot in the city where a house is to be
-erected. Follow the erection of the house, watch all the details of its
-construction until fully completed and the occupants have moved in and
-established their home. Furnish the house, each room separately, and
-arrange and cultivate the grounds.
-
-This exercise can be continued as far as you desire to prolong the
-period of concentration. Add all possible detail which will depend upon
-the amount of knowledge which you possess along these lines. Some parts
-of the work you will be able to follow in detail, others you may know
-little about. If there is some other kind of construction that you are
-more familiar with you can use it in order to make the visualization
-definite.
-
-See to it that your concentration is complete, do not allow your
-mind to wander. Keep this picture moving so as to hold the complete
-attention, become interested in the development of each process.
-Prolong the period of concentration as far as possible.
-
-This and the following exercises may be too complicated for your
-children, according to their age, but some of the simpler ones should
-be begun as early as eight years. The length and detail increasing with
-the ability and knowledge.
-
-Remember that the children should be gathering knowledge by sensations.
-Those parts of the former picture, of the Construction of a Home,
-with which they are unfamiliar, should be brought to their attention.
-Describing the processes to them is good, but far better for them to
-get the original sensations for themselves. Take them to the forest, to
-the mill and lumber yard. Let them go where a house is being built and
-spend as much time there as possible. Parents should be purposefully
-adding to their children's stock of knowledge.
-
-
-The Farmer and His Farm
-
-See a settler going into an unsettled country and beginning the
-construction of a farm. Watch him build his cabin, clear the land,
-break the virgin soil and put in the crops. See the development
-of the home, the well, the fences, barn, sheds, enlargement of
-fields, bringing on of stock, the harvesting of crops, building of
-greater barns, the new home, settling of the community. Continue the
-development of the farm as much in detail and as far as you can.
-
-
-The Farmer and His Crop
-
-Visualize the first breaking of the field in the spring, the
-preparation of the soil for sowing, bringing of the seed corn from
-winter storage, the planting, cultivating, and growth of the crop.
-Watch the ripening, the cutting, shocking, husking, hauling and storing
-into barns.
-
-Now follow the corn to the mill and through the processes of
-manufacture until it arrives on the table as corn flakes, syrup or corn
-bread.
-
-Do this with the other crops. Follow the wheat until it is bread. The
-buckwheat to the steaming hot cakes. The same can be done with the
-stock on stock farms. The different kinds of farming can be used for
-variety. The great wheat farms present different pictures from the
-usual diversified ones.
-
-The fruit orchard presents an interesting picture to work with. The
-spraying, the cultivating, irrigating, and all the process from the
-blossoming to the picking, sorting, packing, transportation and sale.
-
-This same plan can be followed with all industries and manufacture of
-any article. Take the ore from the mine to the steel in the building
-or battleship. The oil from the well to gasoline in the auto tank. The
-automobile from metal, wood, leather and rubber to the picnic in the
-woods.
-
-
-The Growing Plant
-
-To visualize the growth of a seed or plant is interesting and helpful.
-Prepare the soil, plant the seed, see the little hair roots start
-out from the seed, the first green sprout, the breaking of the soil,
-the gradual growth, the leafing, branching, budding, and flowering.
-Hold your mind upon all pictures which you are visualizing. Direct it
-consciously, do not let it wander. Use motion, color, vividness of
-detail, everything that will aid concentration.
-
-For this exercise younger children can use the making of a kite,
-building of a sand castle or doll house; a Hallowe'en party; a trip to
-the woods. Let him start with the well-known and familiar and lead him
-up to the unknown, which will develop a desire upon his part for more
-definite knowledge of the subject.
-
-The chief factor in observation and in acquiring knowledge is Attention
-and Concentration. These can be produced by curiosity and the desire to
-excel, which is found in the love of competition and the game spirit. A
-good example of concentration is found in the juggler or acrobat on the
-vaudeville stage or in the circus. The ability to concentrate will grow
-with the doing of the exercises and playing games such as are mentioned
-here.
-
-Any exercises or games which will result in improved ability to
-concentrate and pay attention are valuable. Play the games with the
-child, use any method or idea which suggests itself if it gets results.
-Give the child a conscious realization of the possession and value of
-this power. See to it that he continues to develop it.
-
-
-
-
-THE IMAGINATION
-
-
-Even in the simple exercises for the development of the senses you
-have been continuously required to draw upon the child's imagination.
-Most children are blessed with a vivid, active imagination and use it
-continuously in their play and self-entertainment. The reason that this
-wonderful faculty is so useless to the average adult is largely caused
-by a misunderstanding of the faculty on the part of the parent and
-perhaps the teacher.
-
- =Imagination is the reproduction, in mental images, of those
- sensations which have previously been experienced.=
-
-Most children use both reproductive and the productive imagination
-easily. There is, however, considerable difference in the amount of use
-and benefit which they derive from it.
-
- =Reproductive imagination is reproducing the literal copy of the
- sensations.=
-
- =Productive imagination is the forming of a new image made up of
- elements from previous images.=
-
-There is natural individuality in imagination and a difference in
-method and in inclination to use the faculty. Some children reproduce
-vivid images which are to them real and impressive and by the use of
-which they amuse themselves for hours. Others reproduce indistinct
-images which have no attractiveness, are dim, uncertain, and of little
-value or consequence.
-
-Do not expect the imagination of two children necessarily to operate
-in the same way, and above all, do not insist upon the same results.
-If you wish to know what the difference is in this faculty of visual
-reproduction you can use some definite test, such as the one following.
-
-
-Test for Visual Reproduction
-
-The Preparation--Take particular care in the arrangement of the
-breakfast table in certain known order, so that you will later be able
-to know exactly what was on it and where it stood. Put on the table
-some article of distinct color. If there is any question of your being
-able to check accurately the arrangement leave the table as it is for
-an hour or so after the meal.
-
-The Test--Some time after the family have left the table, not less
-than an hour and preferably longer, ask each child separately, and
-not in the hearing of the others, how the breakfast table looked that
-morning. Let the child tell in detail what he can of the appearance of
-the table, or if old enough let each write a description. The ease
-with which this is done, the amount of definiteness displayed, and the
-vividness with which the child reproduces the table will be an accurate
-indication of the quality of images used in his imagination.
-
-
-A Universally Useful Faculty
-
-Some have held the notion that imagination is a faculty useful only to
-actors, artists or poets. This is untrue. Some parents have discouraged
-and even killed the imaginative faculty in their children, because they
-did not wish them to follow either of the above professions.
-
-Your child will be the greatest credit and satisfaction to you if
-he becomes that for which his natural endowment and inclination is
-strongest. It is a great mistake for parents to drive a child to grow
-up according to some previously conceived plan or professional choice
-of their own. Parental wisdom and duty are to find out what the child
-is especially endowed for and to guide him in taking advantage of these
-natural gifts, and at the same time inducing a general development in
-other lines.
-
-Because of past misunderstanding or lack of understanding of its
-importance in every line of effort, including science, engineering,
-and every business development, many parents have discouraged their
-children in the use of their imagination. Every leader in commercial
-and industrial life is a man who has learned to use this faculty.
-Without it he could not make great progress. Other men as brilliant
-as he have lagged behind because they have never cultivated their
-imagination or allowed themselves to be led by it. You should do
-everything possible to encourage and to guide your children in the
-conscious use of this faculty.
-
-
-Children's Falsehoods
-
-Many parents are distressed because of the tendency on the part of
-young children to tell untruths, "stories" about what they have seen
-or heard. This tendency is more marked in some children and occurs
-in the younger years before the senses and faculties are thoroughly
-under control. There is nothing dangerous about this, it is more often
-than not the result of a vivid imagination in which the visualizations
-appear real. The fusion of ideas and illusions sometimes cause the
-story to be "so awful."
-
-In most cases the child will outgrow this tendency and if carefully
-and wisely watched over nothing detrimental will come of it. It is
-an indication of a strong imaginative faculty which, if guided and
-trained, will later be of immense value to him. Children who have a
-tendency to this "story telling" should not be punished for it. They
-should be given to understand that these are imaginary stories and
-should not be told as the truth. They will, of course, appear real to
-the child, but he will gradually learn to distinguish between the real
-and the imaginary.
-
-Two children, both with vivid imaginations, were allowed and
-encouraged in telling all kinds of imaginary stories, and playing
-imaginary games, but were taught to discriminate between these and the
-truth by the use of the word "really." If one began to wonder if the
-things the other was telling were true and actually happened, he would
-ask, "Was it really, sister?" "Oh, no, not really," was the reply, and
-the game or story proceeded. In this way the children developed the
-faculty and were taught to respect the truth.
-
-
-Reality of Illusions
-
-There may be many individual peculiarities about your child's
-imagination and his "story telling inclination," but these should not
-induce you to be severe or to forbid them unless you have studied the
-subject of the imagination carefully, or secured competent advice.
-
-You attend the entertainment of a magician, and during the whole
-evening your senses are deceived. The magician uses the inclination
-of the mind to illusions in making his tricks possible. He throws a
-ball into the air a couple of feet and catches it. Then he throws it
-higher and does the same several times, the last time he goes through
-the same motion without the ball and nine-tenths of the audience will
-swear that they saw it actually disappear in the air. If we with years
-of experience in sensation and thought are so easily deceived can you
-justly punish a child for yielding to the same mental tendencies?
-
-
-Imagination a Curse or Blessing
-
-All normal children possess the faculty and its use will bring them
-blessing and success if properly guided. The direct opposite is true.
-If the child is allowed to form the habit of using his imagination
-carelessly and negatively it will be harmful to an extreme degree.
-
-Positive imagination which suggests happy, cheerful and successful
-thoughts and actions should be praised and encouraged.
-
-Negative imagination which suggests danger, accident, sickness, loss
-and failure, should be discouraged and immediately replaced by thoughts
-which are positive in quality. Imagination allowed to dwell upon
-morbid, revengeful, ethically forbidden, or immoral ideas is harmful
-physically as well as morally. "He who has imagined an action 'has
-committed it in his heart.'"
-
- =There is no greater truth than--"As a man thinketh in his heart
- so is he."=
-
-Imagination is the fountain head of thought and therefore the source of
-words, action, personality and character. Help your child to control
-the whole trend of his life by carefully governing the operations of
-his imagination.
-
-
-Dissipating the Imagination
-
-Here is a danger point, "Day dreaming, idle flights of imagination,
-building air castles are of little value, and dangerous in that they
-tend to develop the habit." If indulged in to excess they constitute
-a foolish waste of time. Occasional flights of this kind should not
-be dealt with harshly, but any tendency to persist in them should be
-stopped.
-
-Reading of books which are wild flights of imagination often constitute
-a harmless form of recreation for persons who are confined for long
-hours at routine work, or engaged in hard physical labor. Children do
-not need this extreme class of reading and should not be allowed to
-indulge in much of it.
-
-
-Exercises for the Imagination
-
-First strive for clearness in the reproduction and ability to keep
-the images separate. The reproduction of letters and figures in the
-exercises for visualization on page 46 will accomplish this result.
-
-Problems in mental arithmetic, if visualized, are of great value in
-that the correct solving of them requires vivid and separate images.
-Work for fullness of detail, the picture frame suggested on page
-74 offers an excellent opportunity to do this while exercising the
-constructive imagination. While fixing the attention upon the square
-you keep the element of change going by use of the imagination in
-picture making. Put into this picture all the detail possible, add
-everything you can think of and then strive to create still more.
-
-
-The Story Games
-
-Read the child a story or description of some well-known object, then
-have him tell it as nearly as he can reproduce it. Now have him tell
-it again and add every bit of detail, every new circumstance and
-condition which he can create for himself.
-
-Read half of a story to the child and have him go on from where you
-leave off, making his own imaginary ending for it. Then read the
-conclusion to show him how the author's imagination differed from his.
-
-Most of the exercises and games given for the development of
-Visualization and Attention call the imagination into action. These
-three faculties are so closely related that they can not be treated
-entirely separate. Any exercise previously given for the first two will
-develop the imagination as well.
-
-These faculties of Visualization, Attention and Imagination combine
-in the operation of the great faculty of Memory, which is to be the
-subject of the Second Book. Exercises given there will result in
-further development of the imagination.
-
-
-The Game of Creation
-
-Prof. Gates is credited with being the first to use the following idea
-for guiding the constructive imagination in producing new ideas. He
-has in the past few years used it so effectively that there are more
-than one hundred articles now manufactured under the protection of
-patents by the United States Government, and scores of others are being
-perfected.
-
-Make a list of all the things in the room, then select one object and
-combine it with the rest of the list and see how many new ideas will
-result. This is using the constructive imagination, creating a new
-whole from familiar parts. Example--
-
-Floor, table, ceiling, wall, window, glass, casing, frame, stove, pipe,
-damper, oilcloth, cover, rug, boards, paint, plaster, paper, picture,
-frame, bench, chair, couch, morris chair, curtain, rod, lace, book,
-paper, magazine, Victrola, plant, flag, etc.
-
-Select table, and by combining it with the other objects we will see
-how some new combinations have been created, and perhaps we will create
-some ourselves.
-
- Table--wall, suggests a table disappearing into the wall, as used
- in small apartments.
-
- Table--oilcloth, a common article.
-
- Table--cover, also common.
-
- Table--rug, Oriental rugs are often used for table covers.
-
- Table--boards, the extension dining table.
-
- Table--chair, the combination used in dairy lunches.
-
- Table--book, the library table.
-
- Table--Victrola, a combination manufactured by the Columbia
- Company.
-
- Table--flag, suggests the flag as a table cover.
-
-The longer the list the greater the possibility of finding some new
-and useful idea. Business men use this idea constructively. Woolworth
-combined the 5c and store, and made his fortune. Ingersol combined the
-Dollar and Watch. A boat, paddles, and a steam engine resulted in the
-first steamboat.
-
-There is no limit to the illustration, it is everywhere apparent and in
-many things that you use. Every new invention or short-cut in business
-will result from a new combination of existing concepts. We are now
-manufacturing alcohol from sawdust, rubber from wheat. When shall we
-stop?
-
-Play this game with the children. They will enjoy it and learn how
-progress has been made and gain new and valuable ideas. An active lad
-was confined to the house with a broken leg. His mother started him
-playing this game and by its use he has discovered many new games. This
-time it suggested kite--window, and soon, with the assistance of a
-neighbor boy, he was flying his kite out of a window.
-
-
-The Picture Gallery
-
-In the great home of the mind there is a room of unusual importance
-which can be known as the picture gallery. Here the great artist
-Imagination hangs the products of his efforts. Picture after picture
-is painted by this wonderful faculty and hung in this gallery. Each of
-these pictures becomes a force exerted upon the individual in whose
-mind it is hung. Thought and Desire wander in this gallery incessantly,
-and gaze upon the pictures there, using them as patterns for their
-efforts in future. From these pictures they get their incentive and
-inspiration.
-
-The young child's picture gallery is a wonderful room with clean,
-white walls waiting for the artist to take up the task of painting and
-hanging the pictures. This artist is young and inexperienced and easily
-influenced and guided by one older and more accurate.
-
-The parents should realize that this gallery is going to be rapidly
-filled with pictures, and that the choice of these pictures can
-be almost entirely under their control. You can help your child's
-imagination paint clean, wholesome pictures that will result in helpful
-and constructive influence upon his life. But remember that these
-pictures ARE BEING HUNG, whether YOU take time to help in the work or
-not.
-
-If the pictures are negative in influence, or those suggested by wrong
-companions and vulgar thoughts, the result will show itself sometime in
-the future. The life will sooner or later reproduce these pictures in
-personal character and action.
-
-Pictures which are objectionable can be replaced, or covered over by
-attractive ones, which will be helpful and lead Thought into right
-paths and create Desire that will be a future blessing. Remember, it
-is far more difficult to replace a negative picture than to paint
-a helpful one before the other has made its impression. It is very
-important that you place your picture first.
-
-Imagination is the architect and his plans are hung upon the walls
-of this picture gallery, where other faculties use them for building
-the character and personality of the child. His future circumstances,
-success, or failure, will be the result of this law of nature. The
-contents of this picture gallery are great and powerful causes which
-help bring about the desired result.
-
-If this truth can be sufficiently impressed upon the mind of parent
-and child, both will co-operate in an effort to hang the right kind
-of pictures in the gallery and the result will be a finer and more
-successful life.
-
-Every parent should make it a duty to hang in this gallery beautiful
-pictures of all the ideals which they wish to see fulfilled by
-their child. Besides the ideals of growth, character, purity, etc.,
-there should be such pictures as a home; a life of useful service;
-financial independence, and a happy old age. The details are a matter
-of individual choice and should be filled in as the years pass by the
-growing understanding and ambition of the child.
-
-
-
-
-THE POWER OF SUGGESTION
-
-
-Everything that the child experiences exerts an influence upon his
-future. It suggests a tendency to thought or action. Once the thought
-or act is indulged in, it has started the formation of habit. One act
-will not create a habit, but one act will tend to induce the child to
-act again in the same manner rather than go contrary to it or to vary
-the method. Repeated action forms a habit, for habit is defined as a
-tendency of the mind to do again what it has done before.
-
-Habits, of course, vary in their strength, but you must realize the
-importance of the fact that the first repetitions are the important
-factors, because they are the habit's beginning. If the child's
-tendency is wrong do not delay changing it. Tomorrow may be too late.
-There is no certain age at which child training should begin. It is
-never too soon. The earlier you begin the easier it will be, and the
-more pleasure and satisfaction you will derive from your children.
-
-The story is told of an anxious parent who went with a six-year child
-to the Bishop. The mother told at great length of the difficulty she
-was having with the child and asked what the proper age was to begin
-training him. The Bishop's reply was: "My dear woman, you are six years
-late."
-
-Parents who procrastinate or delay correcting wrong tendencies and
-instilling right ones because "the child is too young to know better,"
-or "it's too soon to train him yet," will awaken to find that they have
-formed a wrong habit and that the child will soon be trying to train
-and rule them.
-
-There is no method of child training as helpful as that of Suggestion.
-Inducing the child by directly spoken words to think and believe that
-he is, and that he does, what you wish him to be and to do. This is
-known as Direct Suggestion. This is the most difficult form to use, as
-it may arouse antagonism, in which case no favorable result will be
-secured. It is better to postpone the use of Direct Suggestion until
-some time when you can sit down quietly and talk to the child, holding
-him in your lap and first preparing his mind by story or quiet talk
-of positive and constructive nature. Then make the Direct Suggestion
-in a clear, definite statement. Do not stop to argue or to impress
-the suggestion by moralizing. Prepare the soil of the child's mind,
-plant the seed (the Direct Suggestion), cover it over and leave it to
-germinate there. You do this by once clearly stating the ideal and then
-passing on to some other talk or story. Do not allow the child to argue
-the statement of the Suggestion. This is fatal to its germination.
-Have him in a passive mood in which he is listening to all that you
-say, and after you have given the Direct Suggestion and planted the
-seed, pass on to something else before he starts a train of contrary
-thoughts in his mind.
-
-If he resists and denies your statement before you can lead his mind
-on, the soil was not properly prepared. Do not be discouraged, try
-again. Never be discouraged or give up, if you expect to gain results
-by the use of Suggestion.
-
-After you have succeeded in planting this seed-thought in the child's
-mind, cultivate it. Do not neglect it, but return to it and emphasize
-the thought at another time, and gradually induce him to think of it in
-a positive manner. Tell an imaginary story which depicts the positive
-side of your seed-thought, and let him know it is of him you are
-thinking.
-
-Always be positive--never negative. Always state the thing you want
-as it =now= is. Make it present tense--not even future. In suggestion
-there is no place for don't, can't or any other negative statement. Do
-not refer to the negative condition which you are striving to overcome.
-Do not say, "Your headache is better." Leave out the headache and say
-only, "You are better." A transitory term as--is becoming, or a future
-term as--you will be, or a questionable effort as--try to do, should
-not be used. Make your statement always positive, present tense, and
-completed. As for example: "This is mama's big, strong boy." "My boy
-always tells the truth." "My boy is strong and he is always kind."
-"John is a gentleman, he is kind to his sister." "Sarah loves her kitty
-and is kind and gentle with it."
-
-The story of the Scotch wife will illustrate the effect of making
-negative statements. The husband was starting off on Saturday night
-to the village. John had a weakness, and knowing this the wife stood
-on the doorstep calling after him, "John, don't go near the saloon."
-"John, don't go near the saloon." "John, don't go near the saloon."
-With the best of intentions she kept repeating this as long as she
-could make him hear. John needed help, but if you will stop to think a
-moment you will see that the wife had continuously impressed upon his
-mind "the saloon," and, true to her fears, John returned home at a very
-late hour and in a sad condition.
-
-Suggestion to be of value must get beyond the critical and analytical
-activity of the conscious mind and become placed in the sub-conscious.
-If the conscious mind denies the statement, either audibly or to
-itself, the sub-conscious is not influenced. The most profitable time
-to plant these positive seed-thoughts is just before the child "drops
-off to sleep."
-
-The sub-conscious mind, which is influenced by the suggestion, never
-rests. It is the mind which controls the breathing, heart beat and
-other "sub-conscious action" of the body. It is working all the night
-through. If you fall asleep thinking in happy anticipation of some
-pleasure tomorrow you will awaken in the same happy, buoyant condition
-of mind. Often you have to think a moment to ascertain the reason for
-your happy mental condition, then you remember, "This is the day of the
-picnic." This shows how the sub-conscious has retained all through the
-night the thought which was placed there just before the conscious mind
-sleeps.
-
-Take advantage of this fact and strive to place a positive,
-constructive thought upon the sub-conscious mind of your child just
-before sleep. It will be held and built into character and physical
-development all through the night.
-
-
-Indirect Suggestion
-
-This method is usually most effective because it is applied at times
-and in a manner which tends to overcome any tendency to negative
-influence of the conscious mind. All have seen the pitifully bashful
-child whose mother takes every opportunity to tell the visitors, =in
-the child's hearing=, how bashful she is. To the child she says: "My,
-you are the most bashful child I ever saw." The former statement made
-to the visitor, is a negative indirect suggestion; the latter, the
-statement to the child, is negative Direct Suggestion. Both of these
-tend to increase the child's bashfulness. They will never overcome it.
-
-
-Indirect Positive Suggestions
-
-Two parents are sitting in a living room talking; the child is playing
-in the next room, or even on the floor of this one. Without paying any
-attention and with the apparent intention of the child not hearing,
-the mother, in an undertone, says to the father: "Have you noticed how
-improved Sarah is of late; she is kind and thoughtful of her kitty,
-she loves it more and is so kind and gentle with it?" Father replies:
-"Isn't that nice; she is a dear, kind, gentle child." The parents go on
-talking about other things not noticing the little girl.
-
-If you were where you could observe you would see the child stop her
-play at the mention of her name, listening intently, and thinking about
-what has been said. Most likely she would find her kitty and come back
-loving it and demonstrating the result of mother's suggestion.
-
-This indirect method of sowing seed-thoughts is most effective, and
-will correct errors and form right habits and character, much more
-rapidly than correction, argument, or punishment. The possibilities
-of the use of suggestions in child training are limitless. There are
-many cases where miraculous results have been secured by intelligent,
-devoted mothers.
-
-In the matter of health and overcoming of detrimental habits there is
-no greater power than that of positive Suggestion intelligently used.
-Every up-to-date and thoroughly progressive physician realizes the
-power of the positive thought over the human body. During the epidemic
-of Influenza which swept through the Army Camps where the boys were
-being trained for overseas service, all the available ministers were
-called into a large hospital to minister to the sick and dying. Before
-being allowed to go among the sick soldiers they were gathered together
-and given a talk by one of the head surgeons. One of the instructions
-was this: In all talking with the sick there must not, under any
-circumstances, be any mention or reference to death, the possibility of
-death, or of any condition after death. Every thought and word must be
-of health, recovery and what they are going to do after recovery. This
-must be followed in conversation, letter writing for the sick, and in
-prayer with them. This is an example of the modern acceptance of the
-value of positive suggestion in cases of sickness.
-
-In matters of Child Training it is of the utmost value. Dr. Stanley
-Krebbs, in his book, "The Law of Suggestion," which every parent should
-read, tells many interesting examples of its use. "A little girl had
-formed the habit of telling lies in order to attract attention. When
-this fact was learned it was made the key of her recovery. It was
-lodged in her mind that her lies caused people to avoid her, to dislike
-her; but that if she were truthful she would make people like her,
-would make friends and attract a great deal more attention than in any
-other way. Simple! but successful."
-
-Quoting again from Dr. Krebbs, "Take an extreme case, Belford Russell
-Lawrence, the boy criminal, testified at twelve years of age, that
-among other things, his mother had often said to neighbors, referring
-to him: 'That devil will hang yet.'
-
-"As a general rule children are what their elders expect them to be.
-
-"As a general rule we adults are what our fellows expect us to be."
-
-The story is told of a boy who was no student and hated school, he
-even disliked to read. One time when there were guests at dinner there
-arose a discussion of a certain point of history. The boy had just
-studied this fact in school and was able to set the entire group right.
-On several occasions later his mother repeated this fact to friends,
-in the boy's hearing, always ending with the statement: "You know
-Johnny is quite a historian." Up to that time he had had no interest
-in the study, but believing that others considered him an authority on
-the subject he got busy and studied up on it. He afterward became a
-historian and a professor in one of the large universities. He just had
-to make good, to keep up with his mother's expectation, and he did.
-
-Take every opportunity to tell others about the good points of your
-children and the characteristics that you want them to have. Do this
-when the children can hear you. Tell it to others and the child will
-not disappoint you.
-
-The subject should be studied by every parent. There is no attempt
-made to cover it in these pages, but merely to give a hint of its
-possibilities in the hope that the parent will learn to use this power
-constructively and wisely.
-
-
-
-
-HEALTH HABITS
-
-
-Habits are a great part of life. The forming of proper ones should have
-more attention than is usually given to them. Habits is a tendency
-of mind to do that which it has done before. When considered in this
-simple way habit becomes one of the great forces in our lives. It is by
-taking advantage of this fact that we are able to develop rapidity and
-efficiency in movement. This shows itself in playing games or musical
-instruments and in later life in the operation of machines in office
-and factory.
-
-Every child begins to form habits with his first actions. He has his
-individual way of dressing, which is simply the result of having
-repeated this method several times. Each repetition adds to the
-strength of the habit.
-
-To correct a habit it will be necessary for you to suggest a new method
-and see to it that it is repeated a sufficient number of times to
-become the stronger tendency. No habit is or can be formed without the
-element of repetition.
-
-Realizing that children are forming habits which will follow them
-through life should suggest to the parent the importance of consciously
-guiding the child in their formation. Do not allow careless,
-inefficient, dawdling methods to become fixed. Of course, these may in
-later years be changed to more efficient methods by the child himself,
-but it will be at the expense of considerable effort and loss of time.
-On the other hand, many children will not correct the habits and will
-be handicapped by them all through life.
-
-There are certain simple regulations of health that are of vital
-importance to the life success of every one and the parent should
-attend to their becoming habits while the child is small.
-
-Mental efficiency and accuracy are quickly influenced by bodily
-conditions. Poor health or physical inability are never accompanied
-with 100% mental efficiency. You may at once think of some examples
-of men of high mental caliber who were deficient and handicapped
-by physical disability. This is sometimes the case, but it is an
-exception, and an illustration of success won, in spite of difficulty.
-Think of what such an indomitable spirit could have accomplished in a
-more perfect physical body.
-
-
-Deep Breathing
-
-One of the strong influences on health is that of purifying the blood
-in the lungs. Plenty of fresh air is necessary for this purifying, and
-insufficient or impure air supply in the lungs will send the blood back
-to the heart only partially cleansed.
-
-Teach the child to stand erect, to consider his position when sitting,
-and at all times to demand fresh air. Do not be afraid of an open
-window, always have good ventilation, especially in sleeping rooms.
-Give the child a simple exercise for deep breathing and help him to
-use it until he has formed the habit of taking several deep breaths of
-fresh air immediately upon arising in the morning; each time he goes
-out of a building into the open air; and many times during the day.
-Singing, running, skipping, jumping rope, etc., are all good exercises
-to stimulate deep breathing. See to it that the child breathes through
-the nose.
-
-
-Drinking Water
-
-Many chronic troubles result from the simple neglect to supply the body
-with sufficient water. An average grown person should have two quarts
-of water a day and more in warmer weather. The lack of any habitual
-time for drinking this water usually results in not getting it at all.
-Continued disregard of the craving of the body for water, because "it
-is not convenient to get it" at the time, will result in the cessation
-of this natural demand. Many persons have said, "I don't require that
-much water; I never drink but a glass or two." Inquiry will reveal the
-fact that these persons are usually sufferers from constipation or some
-other chronic trouble. Drinking a proper amount of water will cure many
-cases of constipation.
-
-To be sure that the child gets sufficient water adopt some systematic
-time for drinking. A glass before meals is beneficial to digestion.
-It stimulates the flow of the digestive juices. Drinking during meals
-is not injurious under one condition, that is that no water is taken
-while you have any food in the mouth. Clear the mouth of food and then
-drink, do not wash your food down. Be careful not to take cold water
-soon after eating hot food, there is danger of cracking the enamel of
-the teeth. A habit should be formed of drinking a glass of water when
-washing in the morning; wash the stomach as well as the face and hands.
-
-An average meal requires moisture equal to about five glasses. This is
-drawn from the system if not supplied with the meal. A glass of water
-before and one after each meal is an aid to digestion rather than a
-detriment. Make this a habit. It is a convenient time to furnish the
-amount of water required by the body, and more than the two glasses is
-better than less.
-
-If the child is troubled with constipation or an approach to it see to
-it that he gets a copious supply of water and you will find the trouble
-relieved.
-
-
-Rest and Sleep
-
-As long as you can continue the practice do not allow the children to
-get "too old" for an afternoon rest. Even if he can not sleep, to lie
-down and relax will be of very definite value to health and bodily
-resistance of disease. If you are encouraging the cultivation of "the
-silence" and periods of constructive thought this can be combined with
-the rest period.
-
-Rest and relaxation should be synonymous. To be able to relax
-thoroughly is of great value in the strenuous years of later life
-and should be cultivated and become habitual when young. In order
-that the child's sleep shall be of utmost value teach him to practice
-relaxation upon lying down and always doing so before falling asleep.
-This, coupled with a positive mental attitude, will make his sleep most
-profitable.
-
-Never allow the child to go to sleep in anger or fright. Take time to
-change all negative mental conditions to positive ones before you leave
-him. Unless unavoidable he should not be punished before retiring. The
-mental attitude in which he falls asleep will continue through the
-night. Experiments have proven that fear, worry, hate, etc., produce
-an actual poison in the blood and it affects the bodily condition, of
-course. Blood taken from a man while in a fit of anger and injected
-into a rabbit will kill the rabbit almost immediately. These facts are
-not new but they need to be taken more into consideration in training
-children.
-
-
-Thinking Health
-
-There is no doubt in anyone's mind in these days that conditions of
-mind influence conditions of the body. Positive and constructive
-thinking will aid health. Your study of the subject of suggestion
-shows this to be true and the results are beyond doubt.
-
-In cases of sickness suggestion will be found of great help. To suggest
-that the child will be "better in the morning"; to suggest that he
-"is better, he looks better, he acts better," etc. All these positive
-thoughts are helpful. This is a deep subject and parents should give it
-some careful thought and investigation.
-
-In cases of epidemics do not allow the child to think that he must be
-taken by it. Suggest the opposite and induce him to think that he is
-not going to be sick, this mixed with a generous amount of common sense
-in general health conditions and reasonable caution will prove helpful
-to say the least.
-
-All of these subjects together with those of foods and right eating,
-which are very important, have been thoroughly covered by many experts
-and should have the careful attention of parents. Use the best methods
-possible to improve the child's physical condition, which will in turn
-increase his mental efficiency.
-
-Unusual conditions of mind or body which are not understood by the
-parent should not be allowed to "drift along" or to see if "they may
-not be outgrown." Seek the advice of a reputable physician and save the
-possibility of regret.
-
-That, "A stitch in time saves nine" is doubly true of a child's health.
-
-
-Ambition Pulls
-
-From his earliest years your child is shaping his career. What he does
-today wields a strong influence on what he will do tomorrow. The sooner
-you realize this the better his chances of final success.
-
-Ambition is a great impelling force, encourage its development in your
-children. With strong ambition they can get farther than with greater
-ability but lacking in ambition.
-
-A boy sat on a fence holding a kite but not watching it as boys usually
-do. A gentleman, in passing, was attracted to the boy and noticed that
-he was blind. This aroused his curiosity as to what pleasure a blind
-boy could get flying a kite, so he asked him: "Do you enjoy flying the
-kite?" "Yes, sir," was the prompt reply. "But you cannot see it." "No,
-sir; but say, mister, I can feel 'er pull."
-
-So is ambition, you can't see it, but "you can feel 'er pull."
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
- Italicized words are surrounded with underscores: _italics_
- Emboldened words are surrounded with equals signs: =bold=
-
- There are inconsistencies in the Table of Contents regarding chapters
- and sections. The Table of Contents is presented as it appears in the
- original.
-
- Obvious spelling and punctuation errors have been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Miller's Mind training for children
-Book 1, by William E. Miller
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