Labelling Body and Facial Expressions

Labelling Emotions

Children use body and facial expressions to reflect their emotions. By the same token, children need to interpret body and facial expressions as part of their emotional development.

Children who cannot express their needs could get frustrated or miss out on engaging in activities with other children. One example is a child who is too shy to ask peers to play with them. Another example is a child who is trying to get a toy or a game from someone else. In both examples, children need to be able to express what they want and understand the feedback of other children whether verbal or non-verbal.

Role of educators:

How can educators help children enrich their emotional vocabulary and enhance their communication skills in order to successfully negotiate what they want?

Educators need to provide activities that help children recognise emotions such as anger, sadness, surprise, happiness, and frustration in themselves and other children. A child who can recognise the intentions of other children by correctly reading their emotional expressions will have a better chance of being included in any setting.

Expressing and interpreting emotions are pathways to emotional regulation and successful socialisation.

Building a vocabulary of emotions from simple to complex ones is part of children’s socio-emotional development. According to Plutchik’s wheel of emotions (Six Seconds, n.d.), the basic emotions are joy, disgust, anger, and anticipation, and their opposites are sadness, trust, fear, and surprise respectively. The combination of two basic emotions brings up a new emotion.

Children need concrete activities to interpret and label emotions. Educators could teach children how to recognise the affective states of other children by looking for their body language, facial expressions, and tone of voice.

A simple activity of having a face with a printed emotional label could be a starting point.

Reading children’s books to children can contribute to their understanding of affective states. Often, in children’s books, the plot revolves around an issue that triggers an affective state and how to resolve the issue.

Games could be used as well. One example is asking children to play musical chairs. On each chair, there is a card of a facial expression flipped face down. When the music stops and the children sit down, they are asked to turn the card over and explain what emotion the face is expressing. They are also asked to make the same face. The children are then asked to go for a second round and repeat the process and so on. This allows the children to experiment with facial expressions in a non-threatening environment. More complex emotions could be introduced as children learn the basic ones.

The Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development (n.d.) proposed other ideas. The educator could:

  • Provide activities that help children label their emotions. For example, they could look at the mirror and make faces and then try to label the emotion.
  • Read a book to the children and ask them to guess how the child is feeling based on the text or based on the illustrations.
  • Ask children during “show and tell” to make a facial or a body expression about how the activity they are sharing made them feel.
  • Assist children in making up a song about activities or actions that make them feel happy, sad, angry, surprised, and so on. The words of a familiar song could be adapted.
  • Provide props for children to role-play different experiences in the dramatic area. An example is going to see the doctor and trying to act the experience out.
  • Prepare cards of activities and facial expressions and ask children to pair the activity with the facial emotion it brings in them.
  • Play a game with children where one child chooses a card that has an expressed facial emotion and imitates that emotion. The other children must guess the emotion.
  • Prompt children to come up with a solution for a child who is sad, angry, or unhappy about an event through problem-solving.

Why are interpreting and labelling emotions useful?

Joseph and Strain (2003) elaborated on the process. When children recognise and label their feelings, they develop emotional regulation and when they recognise and label other people’s emotions, they strengthen their problem-solving skills. The process then assists the children to come up with solutions acceptable to themselves and other parties thus generating a win-win outcome.

The educators could easily share the information with parents. Both parents and educators could scaffold children as they navigate the emotional realm around them. A synchronized process would support children as they grow up in a global world.

References:

Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development. (n.d.). Ideas for teaching about emotions. https://www.ecmhc.org/ideas/emotions.html  

Six Seconds. (n.d.). Plutchik’s wheel of emotions: Exploring the emotion wheel. https://www.6seconds.org/2022/03/13/plutchik-wheel-emotions/

Joseph, G. E., & Strain, P. S. (2003). Enhancing emotional vocabulary in young children. Young Exceptional Children, 6(4), 18-26.  https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/109625060300600403

How to build success?

When children are learning to walk, they fall and get up time after time until they learn. They don’t make a decision to stop trying and to crawl for the rest of their lives.

They are not concerned about how much time it is going to take to get what they want. They don’t know much about time or the future. That seems to work for them. They are willing to give tasks the required time to achieve them. They live in the moment.

They might not be happy repeating all over but that does not stop them. They are not forcing happiness or positive thinking upon themselves.

Do children’s responses differ? Yes, they do. They might accept difficulties with ease but also may not. Babies process their feelings by crying. It is their way to express themselves and to sort things out. Crying does not stop them. It might even encourage to persist.

Children are patient most of the times. Sometimes they get frustrated. Does either of those two feelings stop them from trying again? The answer is “No”.

Yes, they would like approval from people around them but not at the expense of doing what that they really want to do.

How to build success? Adults need to allow children to solve their problems on their own. Children are natural explorers. They experiment and accept that things might not work out right away.

Can we as adults solve our problems as children do, please?

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What do infants listen to?

It is important to realize that newborns are alert and can discriminate sounds.

By one month, infants differentiate speech sounds (phonemes) such as /p/ and /b/ (Trehub & Rabinovitch, 1972). By 6 months of age, infants discriminate two syllable words such as /bada/ and /baga/ and recognize a familiar syllable inside a string of syllables (MacWhinney, 2011).

Infants also discriminate speech sounds of familiar and unfamiliar languages. However, this ability diminishes considerably for unfamiliar consonant contrasts by one year of age (Dietrich, Swingley, & Werker, 2007). Examples of contrasting consonants are pack-back; pie-buy; and rope-robe.

In one experiment, Werker, Maurer, and Yoshida (2010) showed that by 6 to 8 months, infants discriminated most foreign consonant pairs and some foreign vowel pairs. However, by 10 to 12 months, infants barely heard any of the foreign pairs. Examples of vowel pairs are boat and fruit where usually the second vowel is silent. Examples of consonant pairs are /p-b/ and /t-d/ where one letter is voiced using the vibrations of the vocal cords and the other letter isn’t.

The tone in which the language is conveyed also makes a difference. Fernald (1993) found that 5-month-old infants will respond with a smile to a positive tone and not to a negative tone even when the language was unfamiliar.

Last but not least, infants can respond to their own names by 5 months old (Newman 2005).

The above findings highlight the importance of speech interactions with the child and the role of both the environment and experience on speech perception. Widening children’s listening experiences is a window for them to learn many languages and to engage in successful communication styles. Ultimately, high quality listening experiences ensure success in a global world.

Reference:

Boyd, D., & Bee, H. (2012). The developing child (13th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.

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How do newborns see and hear the world?

Boyd and Bee (2012) discuss how children interact with the world around them. How do newborns use their senses and how could caregivers help them in their life journey?

Newborns can see a person located around 8 to 10 inches (20 to 25 centimeters). They can also see the colors red, green, orange, and yellow in a week’s time but need a bit longer to see blue and violet (allaboutvision.com).

Babies can also track a moving object in the first few weeks. At about 6 weeks, the tracking becomes more defined with the accuracy improving dramatically by 10 weeks.

Babies’ visual acuity reaches 20/20 by 6 months of age; that is, babies can see at 20 feet – 6 meters- what other people with normal vision can see at that same distance.

With regards to their other senses, newborns hear in the general human hearing range and turn their head in the direction of the sound; they differentiate sweet, sour, bitter, and salty tastes; and they discriminate the smell of their mother.

To help children use their senses efficiently, it is important that the caregiver holds the newborn closely, looks in their eyes and converses with them. Caregivers should not assume that newborns don’t see them. In effect, newborns focus on and respond to the caregivers’ signs, sounds, and touch.

Caregivers need to welcome the child into this world. Positive people and nurturing environments give children the confidence and the ability to succeed in a global world.

Reference:
Boyd, D., & Bee, H. (2012). The developing child (13th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.

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Is it too early to talk “success” with children?

Every time,
We listen to a child,
We encourage a child to carry out an activity,
We comfort a crying child,
We let a child make a choice and carry out that responsibility,
We watch a child experiment with materials,
We respect a child’s failure,
We help a child apologise for mistakes,
We discuss different points of view with a child,
We set agreed upon rules,
We accept a child’s fears and need for time to calm down,
We show pride in what a child offers to self and others,
We share fun as well as sad stories,
We show our love,

Guess what, every time,
We are talking “success” with the child.

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