Connected Lefty Jamael Lundy, Married to Council Member and Running for Office, Busted...
Dan Goldman Is BIG MAD That Kash Patel DARES Investigate the 2020 Election
Deport Every Single Illegal Alien Possible
BOMBSHELL --> Jonathan Turley Explains WHY FBI Seizing Fulton County Votes Is a...
WATCH: Stephen Colbert Claims That the Nazis Were Better Than ICE
Don Lemon Arrest Causes Hysteria on CNN, MSNow
DOJ Drops DOOZY of an Epstein Email About Bill Gates, an STD, and...
'This Is REAL': DHS Employee and Life-Long Democrat Breaks Her Silence About Minnesota...
And Now for the BEST FAFO Yet! Largest License Plate Tracker, StopICE, Has...
Jemele Hill Rage-Tweets: Don Lemon's Church Storm Arrest is 'Horrifying' – Selective Outra...
'Warmth of Collectivism' Fails: 10 Dead After Mamdani Orders End to Homeless Encampment...
SHAMEFUL? Amanda Carpenter Laments Don Lemon Arrest—Ignores the Trespassing and Disrupting...
This Is HUGE If What We're Hearing About Amy Klobuchar and Tim Walz's...
How DARE They? One of Their Own Held Accountable—Jon Favreau Already Plotting Retaliation...
*GASP* the HORROR! Brian Stelter's DRAMATIC Thread About Don Lemon's Arrest (Night in...

New York Times piece argues that wearing masks can actually help your children learn

Recently, the American Academy of Pediatrics earned itself a massive ratio when it tweeted that there are no studies to prove that teachers and caregivers wearing masks around babies and toddlers impede children’s language development. “There are no studies to support this concern. Young children will use other clues like gestures and tone of voice,” the AAP said. The question is, are there any studies to allay this concern?

Advertisement

Now an opinion piece in the New York Times is going even further, suggesting several ways in which children wearing masks actually presents opportunities for children to learn.

That’s quite a claim:

Wearing a mask can also help teach children to pay more attention to their own bodies and physical behaviors. Keeping a mask on over the course of a school day involves the kind of self-control and self-regulation that many children find challenging. Younger children must inhibit the urge to pull off their mask, and older children must be mindful of when their mask is slipping down or when it’s OK to take it off.

Needless to say, children will not always be perfect at keeping their masks on. But the research on self-control and self-regulation suggests that children who master the skills needed to keep their masks on will grow up to be better at achieving their long-term goals, solving problems and handling stressful situations. (For children who habitually bite their nails or pick their nose, a mask could also be precisely what they need to kick the habit.)

When was the study done connecting mask-wearing to better achievement of long-term goals?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Preferably children wouldn’t need masks, but since they do, let’s try to find out ways they present opportunities to learn.

Advertisement

“For older children, mask wearing is a way to teach more sophisticated ethical concepts like duty and sacrifice,” the piece argues.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos