Without providing the service of safeguarding for children and young people who are not developed enough to do it for themselves, their future could be negatively affected. If they were to be affected by an event such as abuse, and there is no safeguarding in place, this could carry on and seriously affect their physical and emotional development. This could mean they fall behind with developmental milestones. Children need to be provided with a safe and happy environment to grow up in so they are happy to develop at a normal rate and sequence. This will help them achieve their full potential, through into adulthood.…
The topic of this editorial is the protection of children and how there is more that can be done to ensure their safety.…
Total for this Section: 60 marks Ideas about the nature of children have changed over time. The modern view is that children are fundamentally different from adults – innocent, inexperienced and vulnerable. Thus modern childhood involves segregation: children’s vulnerability means they need to be shielded from the dangers and responsibilities of the adult world. Childhood has become a specially protected and privileged time of life. Yet children were not always viewed in this way. Until the 17th century, childhood was regarded as a brief period (up to the age of about 7), after which the individual was ready to enter the wider world. Some sociologists argue that we are now witnessing a further change in the nature of childhood, and that the differences between childhood and adulthood are once…
Through the years, countless parents have become more cautious about their children’s security to prevent harms. Yet this has had negative implications of preventing exploration of society by the child. In “The Short Leash” Grose and Rosin demonstrate this identical concept that through the generations child independence has degenerated because of the restraints placed by their parents. Even though some might have opinionated that with the current innovations children are able to explore the world more, this is not the case. A lot of the activities that were standard in 1970 such as “sneaking out, petty theft, amateur arson, drugs, and sexual experimentation” and many other “wild and reckless” activities or even walking 5 miles from home are unacceptable today.…
Children must learn to take care of themselves but at the same time be allowed to take risks and…
Analysis Article The writer of the article “Overprotective parents stifle growth”, Jane Brown a retired school principal, claims that parents are too protective of their children whilst the writer of “Reality Check”, Jack Lee, indicates that parents aren’t taking enough precaution with their children. The writers use different persuasive techniques to persuade their readers such as emotive writing. The tone that the writers use is pleading and the style of both pieces are simple. There is a picture placed between both articles and is used to show a similarity between the two articles. A technique used by Jane Brown is sarcasm throughout the article. She talks about how parents are trying to create “perfect” children and “protecting” them and “incidents” occurring at school, by specifically using these words the reader thinks that there really is no such thing as…
Males then brings up the fact, children “Mimic,” their parents and other adults in their household. In the article the text reads, “Seventy-Five percent of all teenage smokers come from homes where parents smoke.” Mr. Males also mentioned, “Abuse to a child can cause them to turn out violent as an adult.” A child’s parents or parent most likely will over look the possibility of imposing a corrupt lifestyle on their own child. He also comments, “The biggest predictor of whether a teen will become a smoker, a drunk, or a druggie is whether or not the child grows up amid adults addicts.” Children are even vulnerable to other older young adults committing crimes, drugs, and alcohol abuse. Now days, all children are victims to peer pressure just to be seen for a few meaning less moments in the limelight of popularity. Kids sometimes aren’t taught the honorable values because either the parents of the children are over looking the concept of the preparation and the importance of making the correct choices in life or the parents weren’t trained themselves.…
The essay written by Jerri Cook titled Confessions of the World’s Worst Parent, is based on the book Free Range Kids: Giving Our Children the Freedom We Had Without Going Nuts with Worry written by author Lenore Skenazy (Cook). Cook provides similarities about raising her son and uses Skenazy’s experiences as they both point out the feeling of being judged by “good” parents because they gave their children the freedom to explore life without constant supervision. Cook shows the struggles between raising children the way she was raised and the way society wants them to be raised today. Cook explains to the audience in a humorous fashion the questions that all parents deal with, children and their freedom to explore and the paranoia that they will be hurt or taken. Presently the planet is dealing with the age of too much information, along with this comes misinformation and overinflated imaginations. Cook mentions that life for children was different when she was a child; children were left to their own devices and the parents trusted them to do the right thing and it did not do any harm (Cook). Cook explains throughout her that society may be producing a planet filled with paranoid parents and children…
In “Letting go”, Sam Schulman states that parents use too much control over their children by not letting them grow as the responsible adults they crave to be, by monitoring their every move. I do agree with the author that we overprotect our children more than ever before, certainly because we cannot look at our new generations and compare them to the care-free children in a care-free world, as it was after the World War II. Unconditional love is what makes parents worry so much. By accepting to be understanding friends instead of parents, and by using candor over rigidity, we are failing our children. Also, we all promised not to be as our parents, the guidance for our children should be stricter. Discipline in the USA is a constant fear. Child protective services are called if a child complains of his parents. Early in school, children are taught to dial 9-1-1 if parents to discipline them. Of course, I do not mean to correct with abuse but to do so to teach them right from wrong. Furthermore, we need to look at…
Cited: Shultz, J. (April 4, 2001). Parental Involvement may keep children out of danger. The…
The increasing safety regulations for children are limiting children’s opportunities to interact with the world around them, because we’re moving away the child from real world. Anyway, the children are always going to figure out how to do the most dangerous thing they can. Moreover, we prevent our kids relate to reality and interact with the outside world.…
Children should be encouraged to think about risks and given more independence, so they are more likely to grow in confidence. If a child’s experiences is limited its likely that the child may find it difficult to assess and manage risks on their own .If we become to obsess about their health an safety, we may affect their learning development and abilities. Sometimes it’s good to offer them challenging environment for them to deal with risks under our observation also when a child sustain or witness injuries they gain direct experience of their action and choices.…
All children have clear rights to learn and develop into adults, and be protected from harm. Through exploring new experiences and making choices, children learn and develop the skills necessary to support them into their adult life’s, however children do not always have the skills and judgements that allows them to make safe choices and decisions.…
It is important to safeguard children and young people as without this protection their future could be negatively affected. Their health and development could be impaired as its possible they could withdraw from family and peers which would affect them emotionally and also developmentally fall behind with educational milestones (if school is missed). Children and young people need to be protected from neglect and abuse and have a safe environment in which to grown up in with parents, teachers and any other close adult being approachable and accessible if needed, when/if any problem or concerns were to arise. This is all crucial in a child’s upbringing as the care they receive through their childhood will contribute to the success of the child’s ability to reach their full potential into adulthood.…
A GUIDE TO LEAN SHIPBUILDING 1) Introduction 2) What is Lean Manufacturing a) The goal: Highest quality, lowest cost, shortest lead time b) The Toyota Production System c) Japanese Shipbuilding as lean manufacturing d) Why change to lean shipbuilding? e) The Lean Shipbuilding Model 3) Just In Time “The right part, right time, in right amount” a) Takt time—the pacemaker of the process (balanced cycle times, time windows) b) Continuous Flow (e.g., panel lines, cells in shops, process lanes, stages of construction), e.g., design blocks to come off line at common intervals so balanced on assembly line. c) Pull Systems (e.g., 40’ cassettes for webs, paletizing and kitting, ) i) Supermarket pull system ii) Sequenced Pull (longitudinal stiffners to a panel line using cassetts, level iii) Balanced Schedules (build to order vs replenish buffers vs schedule)—Big spikes in demand upstream based on build schedule for final construction. US yards build from ground up and big spikes, e.g., T-Beams. Japanese build in rings from front on back and more uniform demand, but requires accuracy control. Cross-trained team moving around the yard another solution. 4) Built In Quality a) Accuracy Control b) Labor-Machine Balancing c) In-Control Processes d) Visual Control e) Quality Control f) Worker Self-Quality Control g) Error…