Book Review: Washington Post on "Growing an In-Sync Child" by Carol Kranowitz and Joye Newman
[Source:  The Washington Post]
In a hurry-up world in which doing more and doing it faster is often the  goal for children no matter how old they are, authors Carol Kranowitz  and Joye Newman are spreading a different message: Slow down.
Give children time to explore, play, engage in lots of physical activity  and do things for themselves and they will get the basic skills they  will need for reading and writing, the Bethesda authors say in their  recently published book, “Growing an In-Sync Child” (Perigree, $15.95).
By “in sync,” Newman and Kranowitz mean a child who is comfortable in  his body, able to move efficiently and fluidly and can focus on a task  without becoming excessively distracted. Sounds pretty basic, but as  children spend more time at a desk or in front of a computer or  television screen, and less time playing, kids are increasingly  out-of-sync, the authors say.
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