http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/5216/25/Was-Einstein-born-a-genius-.aspx

  

Issue No.1181, 23 January, 2014      22-01-2014 02:34PM ET

Was Einstein born a genius?

Gihan Shahine listens to advice on how to raise smarter children

 
When Noha Al-Sahrawi, the mother of three young children aged eight, seven and 
five, was told her first newborn had Down’s Syndrome, she decided she would not 
give up. Initial shock soon gave way to an inner wealth of energy and 
persistence that turned Al-Sahrawi herself into a special mother.

She abandoned a career in journalism and went to the US to study brain 
development at the Glenn Doman Institute for the Achievement of Human 
Potential, and applied what she learned there to her own three children. Her 
Down’s Syndrome daughter is now aged eight, and, thanks to such techniques, she 
is integrated into a mainstream school.

“People are born with eight sorts of intelligence, and each sort has special 
techniques that a mother can use to boost it in the first years of a child’s 
life.” That’s the message Al-Sahrawi tries to convey to all ambitious mothers 
and not just those of children with special needs.

As an ardent believer in the idea that a mother can help make a future genius, 
Al-Sahrawi has turned her home into a haven for techniques that may yield a 
potential Beethoven-to-be, a budding Da Vinci or a would-be Einstein.

Smelling fresh paint coming out of Al-Sahrawi’s home, passers-by could be 
surprised to find out that the workers at the helm are her own small kids, 
helping out with making new plans for their rooms and painting them as part of 
a technique to develop their visual and spatial intelligence.

Pass by Al-Sahrawi’s home, and you may well be treated to the sound of Mozart, 
or other composers of classical music, and the recitation of the Quran as both 
have been found to help develop the mathematical and musical intelligence of 
children and develop the auditory pathways in the brain.

Go inside, and you might be heralded with a set of colourful blocks of 
different shapes and sizes dotting the reception area where the children are 
asked to match them with others placed in their bedrooms — yet another 
technique to help them boost their spatial and visual intelligence.

It’s time for bed, and Al-Sahrawi starts telling stories to her kids, asking 
them “what if so and so had happened instead” in an attempt to boost their 
critical thinking.

“Sometimes I let the children relax in the open air and contemplate the sky or 
invite them to look at different paintings and identify the differences in what 
they see,” Al-Sahrawi says with a smile. “They may end up as artists, designers 
or engineers. Who knows?”

She adds that her five-year-old son has, for instance, already memorised a 
whole chapter of the Quranin three months without a mentor. “All I did was to 
make him listen to the tape every night during the first hour of his sleep when 
the brain is said to be still functioning,” she said. “Now he knows it off by 
heart.”



SCIENTIFIC FINDINGS: Although the question of whether it is possible to raise a 
child’s intelligence using such techniques has been a controversial one among 
experts, the good news is that there is almost a consensus among scientists 
that parents can at least help to boost their children’s mental abilities or 
help them reach their maximum mental potential by following a set of simple 
techniques and strategies.

US neurologist and author of Raise a Smarter Child by Kindergarten David 
Perlmutter insists that a child has the opportunity to acquire up to 30 IQ 
points from birth until age three.

Scientists agree that newborns are born with about 100 billion brain cells. 
Each brain cell sends and receives electrical signals and creates connections 
among them that through repetition turn into networks. “These networks (often 
called wiring or circuitry) allow a child to think and learn. By the third 
birthday, your toddler’s brain will have formed about 1,000 trillion 
connections,” write experts at the website babycentre.com.

The worrying point is that these connections can either become permanent if 
used repeatedly or can be left to wither if they are neglected. “Everything you 
do with your toddler, from playing to eating, walking, reading and singing 
helps jump-start his brain,” advise experts at babycentre.com. “As you expose 
your toddler to new sights, sounds and sensations, you open his mind up to a 
bigger, more exciting world.”

Perlmutter also insists that it is up to parents to ensure that their child 
actually gets extra IQ points in the first three years of his or her life “by 
following simple advice, such as breastfeeding for at least a year, limiting 
early television exposure and investing in musical training for young kids.”

Other experts also suggest that it is during the first 10 years of a child’s 
life that the brain continues to form trillions of connections when it is the 
most malleable it will ever be.

“With each new skill _ whether it’s playing the violin or learning Mandarin — 
the brain develops important connections that influence other abilities, like 
maths and verbal skills or the ability to empathise with other kids,” suggest 
experts at babycentre.com.

The good news for parents is that it doesn’t necessarily “take a genius to help 
a child reach her intellectual potential — just a loving, involved parent,” 
according to babycentre.com.



FEEDING THE BRAIN: Experts also agree that proper nutrition not only helps to 
develop the body, but can also help to feed the brain. The World Health 
Organisation, for instance, has published studies suggesting that breastfeeding 
helps boost a baby’s intelligence.

A recent study also found that breakfast was essential for school children and 
that “regular breakfast-skipping was associated with poorer school attendance 
and tardiness, less verbal fluency, and more parent- and teacher-related 
behaviour problems.”

“Children’s brains need glucose to function well, and food is usually converted 
into glucose that powers their brains and enhances their memory skills and 
scholastic achievements,” the study explained.

But the type of food the children get is also important. Experts at 
babycentre.com advise mothers to avoid highly sweetened breakfast cereals, for 
instance, because they give kids “a short-lived sugar high, resulting in the 
inevitable crash.” Instead, they advise a “breakfast meal containing complex 
carbohydrates and protein, which gives the brain a slow infusion of glucose for 
better brain function.”

The advice is based on a study published in the US journal Physiology and 
Behaviour, which found that children who ate oatmeal for breakfast performed 20 
per cent better on a map-memorisation test than their sugary-cereal-munching 
counterparts.

It was also found that better-nourished children generally function more 
effectively on a cognitive level. Children should get a nutritional balance of 
foods that provide a high yield of vitamins and minerals.

Citrus fruits like oranges and grapefruit, which contain vitamin C are advised 
to improve memory and performance; eggs are high in a memory-building vitamin 
called choline; fish contains important brain-building fats; vegetables and 
fruit in general are rich in antioxidants that can help protect brain cells 
against damage, as well as potassium which helps prevent mental fatigue; lean 
meats (beef and poultry) are high in iron, the deficiency of which impairs 
learning and memory; whole-grain and iron-fortified cereals are excellent 
sources of carbohydrates, which are required for sharp mental performance.

Experts also advise parents to avoid highly processed foods that are high in 
sugar and fat because studies suggest that these can affect the mental 
performance of children.

“In a well-publicised study of one million schoolchildren enrolled in the New 
York City school system, IQ scores improved by 14 per cent after additives, 
dyes, artificial flavourings and colour were removed from their lunches,” 
writes babycentre.com



MUSIC AND READING: Recent research also suggests that music can help enhance 
children’s cognitive abilities.

“The areas of the brain called upon when your child learns music may enhance 
the regions of the brain that involve reading, maths, problem-solving and 
spatial reasoning,” says Joseph Piro, an associate professor at Long Island 
University in the US, in a study published on babycentre.com.

Studies suggest that learning music can help children become better learners by 
helping the brain get efficiently wired when it comes to memory and attention.

A so-called “Mozart effect” also suggests that any kind of music may boost 
certain types of cognitive performance. Al-Sahrawi says recent studies have 
suggested that listening to classical music, or the recitation of the Holy 
Quran, have been found to stimulate creativity in children and to boost their 
musical intelligence.

Experts agree that reading to children promotes everything from language skills 
to longer attention spans to active imaginations. And it’s never too early to 
start. “According to researchers at the University of Chicago,” says 
babycentre.com, “reading to a baby creates valuable brain cell connections that 
will remain in place for the rest of their lives.”

Research has shown that children who are read to at home as preschoolers are 
better able to learn how to read when they get formal instruction in school. 
Reading exposes children to print, letters, and new vocabulary. It also teaches 
children that ideas and stories can come from the printed page — in other 
words, that books are sources of information, according to babycentre.com.

In general, the research suggests that early introduction to different arts and 
crafts can help to boost children’s creativity and learning abilities.

“The arts enhance the process of learning,” says Eric Jensen, a researcher and 
author of Arts with the Brain in Mind. “Kids who are taught art perform 
stronger academically, are able to retain information longer, have more 
confidence and better-developed independent-thinking skills,” Jensen says.



PLAYING SPORTS: It’s a well-known fact that having a sound body can entail 
having a sound mind.

Physical activity in general boosts blood flow to all parts of the body, 
including the brain. When the brain is supplied with more freshly oxygenated 
blood, concentration, thinking speed and complex reasoning are all enhanced. 
Some studies even suggest that aerobic exercise stimulates brain growth and 
enhances children’s attention and ability to learn.

“Children who are physically active perform better in school — a finding that 
has been confirmed by more than 50 years of research,” concludes babycentre.com.

But it is not just organised sports that help. It has also been found that free 
play promotes better learning, memory, and the growth of the cerebral cortex. 
Research suggests that free play also enhances the development of language, 
spatial intelligence and mathematical skills.

Toys can be instrumental in developing the mental abilities of children, and 
the good news is that many of the most old-fashioned and least-expensive toys 
have been found to be among the best developmental toys that can help kids 
exercise their creativity and explore cause-and-effect relations in the 
physical world.

Research suggests that playing with blocks enhances spatial skills, maths 
skills, problem-solving ability, and verbal skills, for example. Chess and 
crossword puzzles have also been found to be among the developmental games that 
help improve powers of concentration, perception and reasoning.

In his book It’s just my Imagination, American psychologist Rich Keeling even 
encourages children to depend on the kind of “simple props” that can be found 
in their homes to entertain themselves and to use their minds to create and 
imagine what is possible.

“The child uses these props to dream about his future,” Keeling writes. 
“Perhaps he will grow up to be an author holding a book signing, an astronaut, 
or a famous musician. The possibilities are both more practical and more 
expansive than the more limited video-game scenarios.”



EXPLORING THE WORLD: Another technique is to travel to new places, including 
local museums, and to introduce your child to different cultures through 
reading stories and cooking different recipes at home.

Al-Sahrawi engages her children in planning their trips and in general 
discussions, and she does not hesitate to use dinner time as an opportunity for 
mental stimulation.

“All this helps children on the cognitive level, and engaging them in 
discussions helps them develop emotional intelligence, gain confidence and grow 
as better problem-solvers,” she advises.

Kirim email ke