Preschooler

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By preschool we mean a child from 3 to 6 years of age (i.e. 3 calendar years). At the end of this period, most children are able to start school.[1]

Motor development[edit | edit source]

  • there is further refinement, improvement of movement coordination, greater agility and elegance of movement;
  • a four-year-old child runs well, runs nimbly down stairs, jumps, hops, climbs a ladder, jumps off a low bench, stands longer on 1 leg, can throw a ball;
  • he eats independently, undresses and dresses himself, puts on his shoes and tries to tie his laces; needs only a little help when toileting; he can wash his hands well and can bathe himself under supervision; likes to "help" with simpler household chores and complete small assigned tasks;
  • drawing: a three-year-old child can imitate the different direction of the line (vertical, horizontal, circular) according to the model, draws a cross; a five-year-old imitates a square, a six-year-old a triangle;
  • drawing of a person: first roughly depicts the head, legs and main parts of the face (mouth, eyes) - a "cephalopod", a five-year-old child also draws the torso with limbs, but the body proportions are still random.[2]

Speech development[edit | edit source]

  • speech, vocabulary and sentence structure are improved;
  • at age 4 uses approximately 1500 words and intelligible sentences of 5 words;
  • at age 6 uses about 2,500 words and comprehensible sentences of 6-7 words;[3]
  • first uses coordinating conjunctions and before the end of the 3rd year also subordinate clauses ;
  • interest in spoken language is growing - three- and four-year-old children can already listen to short stories for a longer period of time;
  • a three-year-old usually knows some nursery rhymes;
  • the development of speech enables the development of knowledge about himself and the surrounding world - a three-year-old child usually knows his full name, tells his gender when asked, correctly identifies the main colors and, around the age of 5, gives a simple definition of familiar things (mostly purpose, material and shape);
  • can recite (albeit sometimes skipping) a number line up to about ten and matches number names to counted objects; before the age of 5 understands what number means (ie knows that number is determined by the last number that occurred during counting); at the age of 6, he correctly determines the number of subjects (up to approx. 10), if he has illustrative material.[2]

Psychosocial development[edit | edit source]

  • around the age of 4, the development of intelligence shifts from pre-conceptual (symbolic) to conceptual (intuitive) thinking, he thinks in holistic terms;
  • they can already draw conclusions (e.g. assess what is less and what is more), but these judgments are completely dependent on opinion, usually on visual form; thinking does not yet proceed according to logical operations - it is pre-logical, pre-operational (e.g. there are the same number of beads in 2 identical glasses, after pouring all the beads from 1 glass into a glass of a different shape, the child shows that there are "more beads in the glass with a narrower bottom because it is the higher");
  • Jean Piaget calls the period between 2 and 6 years ' preoperational';
  • Sigmund Freud calls the period between the ages of 3 and 6 the Oedipal phase, because attachment to parents of the opposite sex dominates, then, on the contrary, attachment to parents of the same sex is strengthened;
  • thinking is still tied to the child's own activity - it is egocentric (e.g. the child covers his eyes so that others cannot see him), anthropomorphic (humanizes everything - "Cups are angry!", attributes human feelings to inanimate objects), magical (allows changing facts according to own wish) and artificialistic (everything is "done"); they think that humans control all natural events;
  • perceives the world egocentrically, does not understand the relationship between cause and effect and often interprets it wrongly egocentrically ("Daddy left us because I was naughty") - therefore everything needs to be thoroughly explained to the child so that he does not suffer from unjustified feelings of guilt;
  • the preschooler learns to manipulate the symbolic world - he cannot yet separate reality from fantasy very well; it is a period of night terrors and fear of ghosts;
  • unrealistic thinking peaks between 3-5 years;
  • already at the age of 4 he partially understands death (of people, animals and plants), around the age of 6 he fully understands death with its universality, irreversibility, finality and causality;
  • pre-school age is a period of play: at first common - associative play predominates , then comes cooperative play - organized in cooperation and with the division of roles; often based on fantasy;
  • around 3-4 years of age, the rivalry between children is clearly manifested.[2][3]

Child growth period[edit | edit source]

  • a period of stable growth between the dynamic periods of infantile and pubertal growth;
  • between 2 and 11 years of age, the growth curve is almost linear and does not differ significantly between boys and girls;
  • the action of growth hormone is applied;
  • the child grows along the percentile, which is determined by the growth potential of the parents, at least 5 cm per year;[3]
  • it gains 1.5 kg per year.[4]

Links[edit | edit source]

Related passwords[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. LEBL, Jan – PROVAZNÍK, Kamil – HEJCMANOVÁ, Ludmila. Preklinická pediatrie. 2. edition. Praha : Galén, 2007. pp. 3-5. ISBN 978-80-7262-438-6.
  2. a b c LANGMEIER, Josef – KREJČÍŘOVÁ, Dana. Vývojová psychologie. 2. edition. Praha : Grada Publishing, 2006. 368 pp. pp. 87-103. ISBN 978-80-247-1284-0.
  3. a b c LEBL, Jan – PROVAZNÍK, Kamil – HEJCMANOVÁ, Ludmila. Preklinická pediatrie. 2. edition. Praha : Galén, 2007. pp. 48-71. ISBN 978-80-7262-438-6.
  4. BENEŠ, Jiří. Studijní materiály [online]. ©2007. [cit. 2009]. <http://www.jirben.wz.cz/>.