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EXTREME PARENTING
Does the Baby
Genius Edutainment
Complex enrich your
child's mind or
stifle it?
Alissa Quart
Atlantic Monthly,
July/August 2006
Common wisdom holds
that it is wholesome
and American to give
children the best
chance for success: to
fill their rooms with
lush playthings, to
adorn their walls with
bright alphabet
letters and their
plates with
mercury-free salmon.
Lately, however, the
pursuit of advantage
has taken an extreme
turn. Not long ago,
words like gifted and
precocious were
applied mainly to
older kids who read a
lot, calculated in
their heads, or took
more than the average
number of after-school
classes. (I was one of
them.) But in recent
years, as a new
child-enrichment
business has marched
into babyhood, right
through infancy, and
even into the womb, it
sometimes seems as
though any parent who
doesn't aspire to have
his or her child show
early evidence of
"talent" is somehow
being less than fully
American.
The vast giftedness
industry has expanded
to include such
disparate phenomena as
the teaching of baby
sign language, the IQ
testing of toddlers,
and the proliferation
of video programs like
the Baby Einstein
series. (Never mind
that Einstein himself
was a late bloomer; he
didn't speak until he
was three, and no one
thought him "gifted.")
Specialized camps and
competitions are now
enrolling the youngest
of children; classes
include soccer for
three-year-olds and
Broadway Babies for
starlets of only six
months.
I call it the Baby
Genius Edutainment
Complex, the first
stage of the American
passion for making
gifted children. It
reflects a faith that
if babies are exposed
to enough stimulating
multimedia content,
typically in tandem
with equally stirring
classes, bright
children can be
invented.
Parents who press
their children to
succeed do so in hopes
of preparing them for
an adulthood of high
achievement.
Economically anxious,
many parents see their
children's
accomplishments as a
sort of insurance
against the financial
challenges of old age;
high-achieving kids,
this logic goes, will
become high-earning
adults, and therefore
be better able to help
Mom and Dad pay for
the assisted-living
facility in a few
decades. And, of
course, kids can be a
handy vehicle for
combating status
anxiety: even if your
net worth is failing
to keep up with the
Einsteins" next door,
you can still take
solace in the fact
that while the
Einsteins' son is
barely speaking in
complete sentences,
your son is already
reading Heidegger.
But with so much
competition for
everything from
preschool to summer
camp to college,
children must work
harder and train more
extensively than ever
to out-achieve their
equally avid young
rivals. It's into this
nexus of anxiety and
aspiration that these
new brainy-baby
products have flooded,
promising
scientifically
demonstrated mind
enrichment for your
children. But the line
between activities
that nurture and those
that merely waste time
(and money) is not
always so clean Which
raises the question:
Whose purpose does all
of this aggressive
early learning serve?
Until 1997, there was
no such tiling as Baby
Einstein. Six years
later one American
child in three had
watched a Baby
Einstein video, seeing
such ostensibly
mind-developing scenes
as the one, in Baby
Van Gogh, where a
puppet called Vincent
van Goat trots through
the six primary colors
as they appear in van
Gogh's Starry Night
and Wheat Fields With
Reaper at Sunrise.
Some parents may have
also exposed their
children to competing
products: the So
Smart! two-disk set,
suggested for infants
of nine months and up,
features interactive
alphabet games an
infant can play on the
TV screen, using the
remote control while
the V. Smile video
game system promotes
itself for toddlers
with the slogan "Turn
game time into brain
time."
DVDs with characters
like Vincent van Goal
may be cute, but their
selling point is that
they offer their young
viewers a great deal
more than
entertainment The Baby
Prodigy DVD claims to
give your child "A
Head Start in Life!"
The disc's back copy
reads; "Did you know
that you can actually
help to enhance the
development of your
baby's brain? The
first 30 months of
life is the period
when a child's brain
undergoes its most
critical stages of
evolution
Together
we can help to make
your child the next
Baby Prodigy!"
Walt Disney, Warner
Brothers, and other
studios have spent the
last decade developing
children's programming
with an educational
component (Disney owns
Baby Einstein). Toy
companies have also
entered the fray:
Fisher-Price, for
example, a major DVD
producer, is a
subsidiary of Mattel.
Videos and DVDs for
preschool-age children
earned $500 million in
2004 and overall
sales of educational
toys increased by 19
percent. As Dennis
Fedoruk, president of
Brainy Baby, says,
"There's a bumper crop
of new kids each
month, after all."
The Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex
owes its explosive
growth to more than
just savvy marketing;
it also has roots in
actual scientific
research. The
popularity of DVDs
with classical music,
pinwheels, and
colorful imagery was
incited by
infant-development
theories that became
fashionable in the
early 1990s. As Liz
Iftikhar, founder and
president of Baby
BumbleBee, puts it,
the kid-vid biz
emerged on the back of
the "Mozart Effect."
In 1993, Gordon Shaw
and Frances Rauscher
researchers at the
University of
California at Irvine
conducted a study in
which a group of
college students
listened to ten
minutes of a Mozart
sonata a relaxation
tape, or silence. Then
the groups took a
paper-folding-and-cutting
test. Those who had
listened to Mozart
reportedly performed
better than those who
had not, Shaw and
Rauscher concluded
that listening to
Mozart improved the
students' short-term
spatial thinking. In
1995, a slightly
different study by the
same researchers
yielded similar
findings.
It wasn't long before
someone proposed that
the results could
apply to infants. (Zell
Miller, then governor
of Georgia, pushed his
state to send a
classical-music
cassette or CD to
every newborn.) Video
companies seized on
the idea that
classical music played
to infants, or even to
fetuses, would improve
their ability to
reason. In 1995, they
started to make videos
for babies, usually
with a classical-music
component, and touted
them as beneficially
stimulating. One music
impresario, Don
Campbell, trademarked
the term Mozart Effect
and used it to sell
what he called
"educational" CDs for
infants and books.
But here's the catch:
according to the
effect's doubters, no
psychologist or
musicologist has been
able to persuasively
duplicate the result
that Shaw and Rauscher
described. Kenneth
Steele, a professor of
psychology at
Appalachian State
University, was one of
the scholars who tried
several times and
failed He eventually
became the notion's
greatest critic,
publishing half a
dozen papers debunking
it, chief among them
"Prelude or Requiem
for the ""Mozart
Effect'?" in Nature
magazine in 1999. To
date, the Mozart
Effect has failed to
be replicated in
scientific settings on
at least a few dozen
occasions. Even
Rauscher, although she
stands by her
findings, has been
amazed by the
appropriation of her
work for corporate
ends. In a 1999
television debate,
Rauscher agreed with
Steele, saying,
"There's no scientific
data suggesting that
playing Mozart to
babies is going to
make them 'smarter'."
None of this, however,
has stemmed the spread
of the Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex
far from it. The
complex has only
expanded since the
mid-1990s, building on
the claim that the
creation of infant
prodigies can now
begin in the womb.
Brent Logan, the
president of BabyPlus
and author of Learn
Before Birth: Every
Child Deserves
Giftednes, promises
that his prenatal
sound-delivery system,
a speaker unit that a
pregnant woman wears
in a fabric pouch
strapped to her
abdomen, will produce
a higher-than-average
IQ. The key to his
pitch appears to
follow the logic of
inversion: infants in
Romania who are
deprived of stimuli
suffer as adults, he
notes, and thus
infants in America who
are stimulated by a
product like his will
blossom. "Babies and
children enriched with
BabyPlus," his
company's ads claim,
"are more relaxed at
birth, with eyes and
hands open, crying
little"; they "reach
their milestones
earlier" and "have
longer attention
spans." The pitch
preys on parents'
fears that their
children might not hit
milestones early, or
even at the "normal"
time.
The claims made by the
producers of these
DVDs and similar
products may seem
absurd, but the
impulses that drive
parents to purchase
them are
understandable. The
wish to raise
flourishing children
is as old as
humankind. Today's
Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex
yokes together two
concepts of infant
betterment: first,
that parents can help
a child develop many
skills and aptitudes
that are not inborn;
and second that if the
child isn't launched
on the route to
super-achievement in
the first years of
life, he or she will
be doomed forever to
mediocrity or worse.
As this notion of a
compressed time frame
for baby-genius
cultivation has become
more widespread over
the last ten years,
parents have become
much more susceptible
to sales pitches for
flash cards, DVDs,
toys, and games that
promise to provide
"just the right level"
of stimulation.
Educational
stimulation has not
always been the
primary aim of
children's playthings.
Until the twilight of
the nineteenth
century, what few toys
children had were made
at home, usually by
hand. Diminutive
replicas of babies,
women, and furniture
enabled children to
engage the larger
world at their level
that of small bit
players. Such toys
were meant to help
pass the time, not to
create genius.
The turn of the last
century saw a rise of
mass-produced toys
designed for solitary
play. Milton Bradley
(founded in 1864),
Parker Brother?
(1888), and Playskool
(1928) were the first
three toy companies to
specialize in
"education games." The
teddy hear emerged in
Brooklyn in 1902 and
soon became faddish;
it was thought to spur
children's emotional
growth. Lincoln Logs
(invented in 1917 by
John Lloyd Wright son
of the architect
Frank), Crayola
crayons (first
produced in 1903), and
Erector sets
(introduced in 1913)
all signaled an
increase in time spent
indoors by the
children of newly
prosperous families. A
notion of playthings
that helped children
grow up was on the
rise, but these toys
did not claim to
promote a child's
acuity. (In an article
in a toy trade
magazine in 1927,
dolls were termed an
"Antidote for Race
Suicide," in that they
would encourage white
girls to reproduce.)
Around this same time,
the educator Maria
Montessori designed
toys to teach math
concepts and declared
that pupils would
learn willingly if
their schoolwork were
more like play.
Montessori's ideas
caught on among some
educators, but also
sparked much debate
about the nature of
toys. Academics
championed free play
and urged industry
executives to make
better-quality toys
that appealed to the
imagination.
But many toys still
left little for young
minds to conjure with.
By 1957, the cultural
critic Roland Barthes
was decrying his era's
playthings as products
of "chemistry not
nature." He was
horrified that there
were "dolls which
urinate" and other
toys "meant to prepare
the little girl for
the causality of
house-keeping, to
'condition' her to her
future role as
mother." These toys,
Barthes wrote, "are
meant to produce
children who are
users, not creators."
He was enunciating
what was to become a
central tenet of
scholars of play:
self-directed play is
superior, and toys
that invite children
to improvise and
imagine are better
than those that are
passive and
preprogrammed.
The study of toys
reached a high point
during the seventies
with Erik Erikson's
books Childhood and
Society and Toys and
Reason. Erikson
created a
developmental
timeline, starting
with "autocosmic
play," in which
infants play with
their own bodies, and
going on to a toy "microsphere,"
followed by the "macrosphere"
of play with other
children. Erikson
underlined that
playing with toys is
apart of identity
formation, and
insisted that a
child's world of
manageable toys should
be interfered with as
little as possible.
By the 1950s, toys had
become short-term and
expendable: Davy
Crockett hats and the
like spin-off gear
from television show's
or children's movies.
This isn't to say that
the "maturational"
function of toys
vanished. Lego won a
large following as an
"instructive game" in
the late fifties and
early sixties, and
when the ultimate
maturational
television program,
Sesame Street, debuted
in 1969, a line of
educational toys
followed in its wake.
The lessons of Sesame
Street were strongly
influenced by Maria
Montessori's
educational
philosophy, and from
the beginning the
show's producers, the
Children's Television
Workshop, worked hard
to connect with young
children and their
families in low-income
areas. In fact the
show was viewed as an
extension of the 1960s
War on Poverty, and
was funded in part by
the Department of
Health, Education, and
Welfare.
Some of the early
debates that swirled
around Sesame Street
are echoed today in
the debates over the
Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex,
The program's critics
argued that young
children benefit from
playing inventively on
their own, rather than
watching television.
But there is a crucial
difference between
edutainment DVDs and
Sesame Street: the TV
show was not intended
for babies, while
today's DVDs are made
explicitly for
children two and under
And now even Sesame
Street has an infant
DVD line.
Many infant DVDs are
hawked with dubious
information about
time-limited
opportunities for
learning. Some
products prey on
parental fears,
invoking the specter
of infant brain-cell
death. Charles Zorn, a
neuropsy-chological
education specialist,
told me that he often
has to reassure
parents that
brain-cell counts are
not a measure of a
child's intelligence,
knowledge, or ability
to learn. The brain
deliberately makes too
many, then lets a
bunch wither; which
ones wither depends on
the environment the
newborn encounters.
Cell death is actually
part of the
development process.
"When you learn to
read, you are killing
cells to create a
pathway," Zorn says.
Indeed, reducing
infant brain-cell
death is
counterproductive;
cell death is a way
the nervous system
refines its circuits.
But nervous parents
are not inclined to
make such fine
distinctions. And the
industry does its best
to blur these
distinctions anyway.
"Parents know about
that preschool window
of opportunity it's
very narrow," says
Dennis Fedoruk of
Brainy Baby. "Parents
want to maximize
results in their
children without
causing their children
trouble. Listen, you
can't turn back the
hands of time. Once
they enter
kindergarten, they
can't have the window
of opportunity any
longer. It's too late"
Karen Foster, CEO and
founder of Athletic
Baby, points to Tiger
Woods as she tells me
that her Athletic Baby
Golf and Athletic Baby
All-Star DVDs help
parents give their
kids a head start.
"Everyone has heard
about Tiger's
imprinting from an
early age by his
father," she says.
"The earlier the age,
the more successful
they will be." Foster
gives the standard
edutainment-complex
line: if infant
deprivation yields
negative effects,
these "enriching"
products must
inversely produce a
positive effect.
"BabyPlus helps with
imprinting," claims
Brent Logan, CEO of
BabyPlus, "And soon,
the imprinting window
shuts off for the
pre-infants." These
pitches could make
most any parent
nervous. ("I do
believe that the brain
has a certain clump of
neurons firing, and
that by the time [my
baby] is five, it will
be too late," one
woman, an educated
professional who
consumes these
products avidly, told
me. "It sounds
panicky, I know, but
if those neurons are
dying off
You have to
get in there (hiring
the first three years.
If my baby doesn't use
it with a stimulating
game or class, he is
going to lose it.")
But are these pitches
accurate? To start
answering this
question, one needs to
separate the popular
ideas of "crucial
stages" and
"imprinting" and
"brain plasticity"
which is today's
scientized buzzword
for "ability to learn"
from the science and
cultural history
underlying them.
Americans have long
sought to control
natural processes,
demonstrating both our
faith in the human
ability to harness
nature and our
obsession with using
time shrewdly. When
the Swiss psychologist
Jean Piaget toured
American universities
in the 1950s,
describing the
cognitive stages
children pass through
as they mature,
audience members
wanted to know how
they could make their
children go through
those stages faster.
(Piaget was not
pleased.) In the last
decade or so, this
emphasis on early
development has been
touted by celebrity
foundations like Rub
Reiner's Parents'
Action for Children,
whose slogan is "The
first years last
forever." This,
coupled with the
findings of several
studies and an
aggressive federal
information campaign,
has generated rising
awareness of the
crucial zero-to-three
period.
But recently scholars
have cast doubt on
this time frame as an
absolute. William
Greenough, whose
much-publicized
studies of brain
development in rats in
the eighties helped
pave the way for the
current obsessions
with sensory "stimulus
in infants, is a
vehement critic of the
new overemphasis on
early learning. His
research supports the
idea that the brain
continues to he
plastic still
developing after
infancy. Indeed, many
neuroscientists now
deny that even adult
brains lose
plasticity.
"It's important to
point out that windows
of development do not
slam shut, as the
earliest versions of
[Parents' Action for
Children] and the
Birth to Three
movement suggested"
says Bradley Schlaggar,
a pediatric
neurologist at
Washington University
in St. Louis. One
implication of that
claim, he says, is
that "when the
development window?
are thought to slam
shut, parents may feel
that the case is
closed, and must try
again with the next
child."
Schlaggar and many of
the other
neurologists,
cognitive scientists,
psychologists, and
child-development
specialists I spoke
with questioned the
idea that educational
toys or DVDs
accomplish what their
makers claim. In a
study by a University
of Massachusetts
researcher, a sample
group of infants
learned to use a
puppet from a live
teacher, white another
group studied a video.
The tots who had a
teacher learned to use
the puppet
immediately, but the
infant video-watchers
had to view the
instruction six limes
before they learned
the same skill. As
Charles Nelson, a
professor at Harvard
Medical School and a
preeminent scholar of
the infant brain, puts
it, "There is no proof
of the value of the
early-enrichment toys
and videos in terms of
brain science."
A number of scholars
also argue that the
idea of hard-and-fast
"critical periods" is
overplayed. For one
thing, there is a
difference between
brain functions that
are
"experience-expectant"
(which are bound by
critical periods), and
those that are
"experience-dependent"
(which are not). For
instance, the brain
requires that the eyes
be exposed to light so
that vision can
develop properly. This
must take place at a
particular point in
the development of all
infants it is
experience-expectant.
Experience-dependent
learning, by contrast,
is environmentally
conditioned learning
a language or an
instrument, or making
a dumpling. This sort
of learning is less
governed by time. As
John Bruer an
education consultant
and the author of The
Myth of the First
Three Years, puts it
"critical periods are
less likely for traits
and behaviors
that
are unique to the
experiences of
individuals, social
groups, or cultures."
According to Fred
Dick, a developmental
cognitive
neuroscientist and a
lecturer in psychology
at the University of
London, starting early
to learn a second or
even third language
can be a good thing.
But "early" doesn't
mean in infancy.
Furthermore,
language-study DVDs
tend to offer only
disconnected words,
and typically a child
must be exposed to a
language continuously
to acquire it Teaching
a language to two or
more children in
person, at any age,
may well be preferable
to using videos,
because a normal
environment with
another child "holds
more information than
any multimedia film,"
Dick says. Studies
have shown that the
ability to learn the
grammar of a second
language doesn't begin
to decline until
puberty quite a
while after the age of
three.
Academics who study
cognition also
question the value of
prenatal enrichment
products. Gary Marcus,
a professor of
psychology at New York
University and the
author of The Birth of
the Mind, says that
while it is possible
to learn something in
the womb, it isn't
good to give a fetus
too much stimulation.
And given the paucity
of long-term research
on the subject it's
hard to gauge what
would be
over-stimulating: "We
don't know enough
about early brain
development to say."
It's one thing if
these products are
ineffective. But what
if they're actually
damaging? A number of
scholars have started
to investigate whether
children who have
grown up watching
educational videos
have actually been
hurt by their intense
orientation to
television. (In May, a
child advocacy group
filed a complaint with
the Federal Trade
Commission, arguing
that Brainy Baby and
Baby Einstein product
labeling should
include the American
Academy of Pediatrics'
warning that children
under two shouldn't
watch any TV.) One
study found that
today's high level of
indoor activity and
play even if it
involved "learning"
banned children's
young bodies and
minds. (The study was
financed by Wisk
Laundry Detergent
perhaps in an effort
to promote grass
stains.)
Despite these negative
findings, and for all
the fuzziness of the
product-makers'
claims, even the most
sophisticated parents
can be drawn to
edutainment for
babies.
"There are some
guarantees with these
products," says Lynne
Varner, a
forty-two-year-old
newspaper columnist
who lives in Seattle,
"My son may not see
all the colors in the
prism every day. He
may go outside and see
a green tree one day
and a roaring bus the
next day, but I have
to hope that nature
and life offer
everything to him. I
want our child to
always be doing
something that
stimulates him. And so
does everyone I know."
Varner's accumulation
of educational toys
started with Baby
Einstein and grew to
include Baby BumbleBee
toys purchased at the
Imaginarium and the
now-defunct Zany
Brainy. The stores and
products made
reassuring promises
that her kid was going
to be smart, she says:
Baby Einstein markets
itself this way to the
"όber-parents" she
knows.
On Amazon.com, parent
reviewers likewise
emphasize that
displaying these
videos is part of
their responsibility
to adequately
stimulate their
children. "My
1-year-old is growing
into a Brainy Baby,"
writes one. "How many
[babies] can tell you
what an orangutan is,
or the difference
between a circle and
an oval, or that the
color of our van is
'silver'? My son could
from watching these
videos!"
Of course, many
parents don't entirely
trust the pitches from
the companies. Lynne
Varner recognizes that
they aim to capitalize
on her worst fear:
that her child will
fall behind. But she
still buys the
products. Many
parents, like Varner,
buy them even as they
remain skeptical about
their claims. They
don't want to fail to
do the right thing for
their kids. They want
them to have every
edge.
It seems to me that
the Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex
also arises from a
simpler fear than
those about lost brain
cells and missed
opportunities. The
edutainment products
are, at bottom, meant
to reduce unproductive
time to prevent
idleness and stave off
boredom. But what
exactly is boredom for
a child? "One of the
most oppressive
demands of adults [is]
that the child should
be interested," writes
Adam Phillips in On
Kissing, Tickling and
Being Bored, "rather
than take time to find
what interests him.
Boredom is integral to
the process of taking
one's time."
Some experts even
argue that a certain
amount of boredom is
important for
children's
development. Fred
Dick, the
developmental
cognitive
neuroscientist, says
an infant's caregivers
should obviously
attend to a child but
not feel obliged to
provide constant
stimulation. But in
the new, improved
infancy, taking one's
time waiting for
desire to awaken
goes against the
grain.
One specialist in
educating gifted
children suggests that
for an infant,
watching a waving
adult finger or
playing with a set of
keys can be just as
stimulating as the
whirling dervish of
rainbows on a Baby
Einstein DVD. Such
simple pleasures,
which adults find
boring and this is
part of it: we can't
remember how easily we
were once entertained
are often just what
infants need.
In the Baby Genius
Edutainment Complex,
the palliative for
child boredom is
always a new product
and it can seem that
price is no object. In
effect, these products
are mostly intended
for the reasonably
well-off. The Leapster
Multimedia Learning
System is $70.
BabyPlus runs to $150.
The by-now-classic
Baby Einstein videos
Baby Mozart, Baby
Bach, Baby Beethoven,
Baby Einstein Language
Nursery, and Baby
Einstein Language
Discovery Cards come
as a special boxed set
at $69.99.
Like other elements of
childhood for the
precociously gifted
private or home
schooling,
over-structured
activity, and
proto-professional
training edutainment
products are part of a
system that divides
children into haves
and have-lesses. The
infants inculcated
with the early-reading
DVDs and flash cards
are supposed to deploy
their early advantage
to get ahead of other
reasonably affluent
children. For those
who can afford them,
the DVDs and toys are
just the beginning.
After all, the
educational-toy-and-video
industry is a gateway
into the larger
giftedness culture;
it's the start of the
voyage on which
America shapes its
children into
champions.
~~~~~~~~
Alissa Quart is the
author of the
forthcoming Hothouse
Kids: The Dilemma of
the Gifted Child
(Penguin Press), from
which this article is
drawn.
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