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Encouraging a Curiousity for World Cultures (page 2)

By World Notes, LLC
Parents' Choice Foundation

These are just some ways an interest in international cultures can begin. Be creative -- inspiration can come from seemingly unlikely places, such as these examples below:

  • One individual we spoke with became fascinated at the age of four with the Dr. Seuss classic Hop on Pop. He was intrigued with names like Constantinople and Timbuktu he begged his parents to tell him more about those places. He now works in the Middle East.
  • Another was given a UN cookbook when she was seven years old. She and her mother made many of the simple recipes from all around the world and the experience stuck with her. Years later, she headed a multi-national corporation spanning Europe and the former Soviet Union.
  • A third was passing by a foreign embassy late at night with her parents and asked why the lights were still on. When her parents explained that the embassy's home country was in a different time zone, and that people were probably at the office, it occurred to the young girl that people in the building were actually getting paid to travel to and work in another country. That experience started her interest and career in international diplomacy.

Some of these ideas may help foster a your child's curiosity for world cultures - you never know where inspiration may begin. With a little commitment and enthusiasm, you can open up the world to your children and give them the ability to go places about which you've only dreamed. Children prepared with the tools of world literacy under their belts are better equipped to become informed citizens of the world.

Bon Voyage.

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