The campaign will encourage parents to talk, read, and sing to their young children—to get them learning vocabulary and literacy skills from birth.
“Perhaps children are more open-minded about such experiences and do not yet accept as impossible what our society deems to be so, not accepting skepticism,” wrote child psychologist Athena A. Drewes, Psy.D., and Sally Feather, Ph.D., in an article for the Rhine Research Center.
The campaign will encourage parents to talk, read, and sing to their young children—to get them learning vocabulary and literacy skills from birth.
“Perhaps children are more open-minded about such experiences and do not yet accept as impossible what our society deems to be so, not accepting skepticism,” wrote child psychologist Athena A. Drewes, Psy.D., and Sally Feather, Ph.D., in an article for the Rhine Research Center.