Early Learning Experiences
Documented efforts to enhance the development of children, especially to remediate the consequences of deprivation, have taken place since the early nineteenth century, when researchers learned that certain types of early experience were essential for the emergence of high intellectual functioning. More recently, studies of children in orphanages in the 1950s and 1960s initiated the investigation of what young children need to ensure healthy growth and development. This paper traces subsequent attempts to identify factors contributing to impaired development and measures to ameliorate them in several early intervention programs. The analysis of data gained from these programs indicate that the rates of mild mental retardation associated with extreme poverty can be substantially reduced by intensive programs of significant duration and that additional social benefits will accrue as a result. Research following the orphanage studies took three tracks. One track conducted behavioral experiments on animals and demonstrated that deprivation can produce mental retardation and aberrant social and emotional behavior in animals. A second line of research sought to understand variation in young children’s responses to non-optimal settings and the extent to which improvements in the environment could reverse or minimize negative