(Newser) Raisins: They're not just for making inferior cookies anymore.
Researchers claim they can predict how well an 8-year-old will do in
school using nothing but a raisin and cup when the child is a toddler,
according to a press release from the University of Warwick. The Telegraph
says the method "could be the simplest test of childhood aptitude ever
invented." Researchers tested hundreds of 20-month-old children by
placing a raisin under a cup and telling them to wait until they were
told to eat the raisin, according to the press release. The Telegraph
reports the test seems simple enough but can be "excruciating" for a
young child and many will fail. In the end, researchers found toddlers
who successfully waited to eat the raisin had an IQ seven points higher
when they were 8.
“The
raisin game is an easy and effective tool that is good at assessing
inhibitory control in young children ... and can be used in clinical
practice to identify children at risk of attention and learning
problems," researcher Dieter Wolke tells the Telegraph. Researchers published their findings Thursday in the Journal of Pediatrics.
They were especially interested in looking at how toddlers who were
premature babies did on the test. Not well, it turns out. "The lower a
child's gestational age, the lower the inhibitory control and the more
likely that the child had poor attention regulation and low academic
achievement," the study
states. Researchers hope to use their findings to get children likely
to underperform academically help earlier in life, according to the
press release. (A 66-year-old raisin program was declared unconstitutional.)
Source : Newser
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