‘Repeat after me’: The best way to boost your child’s brain is simple repetition, expert claims

Parents who bombard their babies with colourful toys, books and activities in the hope of boosting brainpower are getting it wrong, a child development expert claims.
Young children’s brains are not equipped to cope with too much stimulation and instead thrive on ‘simplicity and repetition’, according to Professor Sam Wass, director of the Institute for the Science of Early Years at the University of East London.
‘A few years ago, there was this idea that young children need a lot of stimulation,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. ‘You know this idea of Baby Einstein: the more you throw at them, the more that they learn.
‘I hate to disappoint but the science is really clear that when they’re young, their brains are a big, jumbled mess, and what they need is exactly the opposite of that.
‘They need simplicity, clarity and repetition, just doing the same thing again and again helps them to extract meaning from things.’
Prof Wass’s comments challenge the once-popular belief behind tools such as Baby Einstein videos, which promised to boost intelligence by exposing infants to classical music, foreign languages, colours and shapes from an early age.
The Baby Einstein brand was founded in 1996 by Julie Aigner-Clark, an American former teacher, and produced videos introducing infants to the music of Mozart, Beethoven, Vivaldi and Handel, alongside simple words spoken in different languages.
However, research has cast doubt on the usefulness of such material. A major study in 2007 found babies who watched such videos understood fewer words than those who did not.
Three toddlers sitting on a kitchen bench playing with kitchen utensils (stockphoto)
Although later analysis suggested the videos were unlikely to be harmful, experts concluded they offered little real benefit to language development.
Prof Wass added: ‘What works best is definitely to read the same book over and over, to press just one button on one toy to make it pop up over and over again. We have this idea that the more we throw at them, the more they learn.
‘In fact, it’s exactly the opposite of that.
‘Babies’ brains are far slower than adults in processing information so they can often miss details if things are not slowed down or repeated.’



