Benefits of Early Childhood Brain Stimulation and why it should be Implemented in every African American Community.
- By Malik Green
- Published 10/28/2009
- Education
- Unrated
Malik Green
I am a 52 year old African American male, born in Harlem; raised on the Lower East Side of New York City. As a child I loved to read. I was particularly interested in politics, my ethnicity and God. My inherent passion for my African ancestry was evident at a very young age. Actually, at the age of 5; which was the year 1962, I distinctly remember African Americans not wanting or liking to be “Black” or “African”. That was very confusing to me at the time. I; however, for no specific reason, was pleased with being “Black” or “African” even at the early age of 5. My inability to make sense of why my race had been treated the way they were treated led me to search for the answers as to: Why my people, African Americans, didn’t seem to appreciate their own heritage and ethnicity? This desire to know was the beginning of my quest to find the answers to these most profound questions. My biological father left before my first birthday. My first African American role models were Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X. These men epitomized what I always thought African American men can be; independent, strong, intelligent and fearless. Being African American, especially an African American male, growing up without a father, a real man makes life in America very difficult. I; unfortunately, had to learn many things the “hard way”. I dropped out of high school at age 17; and with no where to go, I joined the U.S. Army. After spending 5 years in the military I came back to New York in 1984 and was introduced to “crack cocaine”. After two hellish years of crack addiction I, by the grace of some force greater than myself, I was able to free soul from this menacing demon. I have been clean now for over 20 years. Over the last twenty plus years I have been on a personal mission to make sense of why African Americans are in the predicament we are in today. I extensively studied the political, economical and social aspects of America. I have discovered truths that bear light and understanding that is lacking today in the African American community. I have also spent a great deal of time on a spiritual quest as well. This is where I have achieved the greatest benefit reward. I have researched the history and concepts of all the major religions; Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism and well the occult sciences of spirituality. Through this research I have discovered some astonishing and verifiable truths; truths that are not widely disseminated to the masses. I do believe that as you read my book, this knowledge will manifest itself. We all have gifts that we come into the world with. My inherent gift is the gift of insight. As you read this book you will quickly see that it does have a lot to offer the African American people and America as a whole.
View all articles by Malik GreenBenefits of Early Childhood
Brain Stimulation and why it should be Implemented in every African American
Community.
Over the last four decades, there has
been a myriad of studies on early childhood brain development. All of these studies have produced astonishing
results in regards to how children learn, how their brains develop from infancy. These studies also revealed the negative
impact on children not receiving adequate childhood brain stimulation.
One of the studies that had really
caught my attention is the Carolina Abecedarian Project. The Carolina Abecedarian Project is an
intensive early childhood intervention program.
The Abecedarian Project focuses on low-income, at-risk children between
the ages of six weeks and five years.
The Abecedarian Project came
about as a result of a small group of scientist in 1966, at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who were committed to improving the lives of
children and their families through research, teaching and other social services. The Abecedarian Project initially started
with a group of preschoolers. The program enrolled 111 infants between 1972 and
1977. Fifty-Seven of these infants were
randomly assigned to receive center-based early educational intervention. The remaining Fifty-Four infants were placed in
a control group.
The curriculum entailed educational “games” that emphasized
development skills in cognition and language. For example, infant games were
age appropriate adult-child interactions that included talking to the child,
showing pictures or toys, and offering infants a chance to react to their
environment. Activities were individualized for each child. As children aged,
the “games” became more conceptual and skill-based, but the program always
emphasized individual development. Children also received their healthcare on
site from a staff pediatrician.
The Astonishing Results of the Abecedarian Project:
The infants that participated in the program
received treatment until the age of 8 years old. In order to properly assess the program’s
benefits the children were monitored and received follow-up assessments at age
12, 15. At all three ages (8, 12, 15)
the children who received the treatment from birth to age five had higher I.Q.
scores. These children also scored
higher on achievement test in math and reading during elementary and middle
school years. They also had lower levels
of grade retention and placements in special education classes.
Additionally, the children who received the intervention scored
1.8 grades years higher in reading and math as young adults.
Thirty -six percent of these children were more likely to attend a
four-year college, compared to only 14 percent of the children who did not
receive intervention.
Twenty-six
percent of the children who received intervention were less likely to have had
their first child at age 18 or younger, compared to forty-five percent of the
children who didn’t received intervention.
Forty-seven
percent of the intervention children were more likely to have a skilled job
versus only twenty-seven of the children who did not receive intervention.
Other
notable benefits of early intervention are that these children were less likely
to smoke cigarettes and less likely to smoke marijuana than those children who
did not receive treatment through the intervention program.
The Cost of the program
versus the Benefits of the Program:
The project cost approximately $10,000 per child,
per year. The project was financed using
federal, state, and local public education dollars. The children that
participated were evaluated periodically through age 21 for cognitive,
academic, and social effects of early childhood education. These children received early childhood
education for five days a week, year round.
The following is the surprising results of this
comprehensive study:
- A
conservative estimate of $100,000 in savings to society can be produced
per child by an investment of $10,000 per year per child. Savings accrue
through reduced spending on special education, welfare, and juvenile
crime.
- Special
education services for those in the program were half as much as those in
a comparison group at age fifteen (24 percent versus 48 percent).
- Children
who participated earned significantly higher scores in both reading and
math.
The
age-21 follow-up found that young adults who received the early educational
child care consistently scored higher on tests of cognitive development, fared
better on reading and mathematics achievement tests, and were more likely to
attend college.
- Forty
percent were still in school, compared with 20 percent of the control
group, and 65 percent were employed, compared with 50 percent of the
control group.
- Thirty-five
percent had graduated from college or were enrolled in college, compared
with 14 percent of the others.
- Members
of the study group were an average of 19 years old when their first child
was born, compared with 17 for the control group.
The projected cost-benefit ratio was 2.5:1. This ratio states that this project doesn’t
cost the taxpayers anything. In fact, it
actually saves taxpayers money. The
projected ratio means that for every dollar spent on the program, taxpayers
save approximately $2.50. This is
savings is realized through fact that there would be less of a need for
educational and government services, and reduced health care costs.
If these results are as promising as they seem, then the African
American community must make a serious effort to have early childhood
development programs implemented in their respective communities; not only for
a few children, but for all children.
In
summary the
findings of the project clearly prove that intensive early childhood
educational intervention makes a tremendous difference in the lives of
children; especially children raised in poverty or low income environments.
The following websites are great resources to learn more about the
amazing benefits of early childhood brain development:
The Frank Parker Graham Childhood
Development Institute http://www.fpg.unc.edu/
National Governors
Association, 444 N. Capitol St., Suite 267, Washington, D.C. 20001-1512
www.nga.org
The Black-Print – Black America’s Blueprint for
Achieving Wealth, Prosperity and Respect. By Malik Green
To contact Malik Green:
www.outskirtspress.com/theblack-print
malik@going-beyond-the-dream.org
www.going-beyond-the-dream.org

