Child Observation Study CD1 Elia Janet Garcia LATTC 5/4/2010 Name: Delyla Age: 2 years old Physical Development 1.) Describe the child’s physical appearance. Short and chunky‚ about 2 feet tall‚ around 25 pounds‚ stubby arms and legs‚ and soft‚ short curly hair and a small beautiful smile 2.) Give examples of gross motor skills that you observe. Are they age-typical? She walks‚ runs‚ and crawls fine. She doesn’t grasp objects very well and she likes shaking them. She needs
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An observation of parent-child interaction at the park In the first five years of a child life is when the most complex development occurs. Children develop cognitively as their brain captivates information and they learn to process the information. Children also develop socially and emotionally as they interact‚ play‚ and live with others (i.e. friends‚ family or teachers). Cognitive‚ social and emotional development through play is essential for a child’s growth as well. The development of
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During my eighth observation at the Child Study Center (CSC)‚ I walked in and went straight to the four year old room. Once I got in the room I notice that all the students were on the carpet listening to a College student reading them a story. I sat back and watched and listen to the students and how they were interacting with someone different reading to them at whole group. After the story the college student had an activity for the students to do that went with the story that she had read. The
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fast. The other boys did not wait‚ they rushed down all fast with wooden toys spread across the front. Nick ran from the slide to a car where another child was playing with it but he took it over. He did not talk to the child just burst in and started placing his cars on the rack to slide. Nick was doing parallel play with the children in his
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communicating with families‚ and tracking children’s development. Adapt these observation strategies to fit any group of young children. Anecdotal Records: Valuable Tools for Assessing Young Children’s Development Laura McFarland tifying possible developmental delays (Bredekamp & Rosegrant‚ Gather meaningful 1992; Cicchetti & Wagner‚ 1990; information about children. Dodge‚ Heroman‚ Charles‚ & Maiorca‚ 2004). An anecdotal record is a detailed descriptive narrative recorded after a specific behavior
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CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHART: MIDDLE CHILDHOOD (7-11 years) Early Childhood Development YOUR CHILD DEVELOPMENT CHART: MIDDLE CHILDHOOD (7–11 YEARS) SECTION 1: MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS | |[pic] [pic] | |BIOSOCIAL |Brief Description of Example
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Preschool Observation Child Development 103 Instructor: S. Gethers Name: Don Carrington Child Center Address: 4339 W. 129th Hawthorne‚ CA 90250 Date of Visit: 13 June‚ 2014 Time: 9:15 A.M -12:30 P.M Director’s Name: Cheraki Davis Teacher: Cristian Teacher Assistants: Veronica and Chazmine Number of Children: 21 Ages: 3 - 5 years old Language Skills: Language skills refer to the child’s ability to speak and to communicate so that he/she can understand and be understood by others. It
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claims that the oedipal guilt and oedipal conflicts present within the story of “Cinderella” are critical to a child’s unsatisfied thoughts and feelings; this is why children identify strongly with this fairy tale. In his argument‚ Bettelheim uses anecdotal evidence to prove his statement. For example‚ a mother tells her five-year-old daughter to grab some salt‚ and the daughter acts out because she feels that she is given all the hard work. The daughter then proposes the idea of her sibling(s) and
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distance between two objects We will ask the child to tell us how far an object is from another object‚ using wooden blocks. 2. Compare distance We will ask the child to measure the distance between a third object and the first one. Then‚ we will ask which one was closer to the first object‚ the second or the third. 3. Submit results of a vote in a graph We will show the child a bar chart showing the group class voting of their favorite animal. We will ask the child to tell us which animal has won the vote
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met and befriended many students and teachers that have ties to the Military. The majority of children has excellent manners‚ and is very smart; others were not quite there. There could be a number of factors why a child is acting out or behind in school‚ especially for a military child. Having a parent in the military is challenging. Having gone through it myself‚ I sympathize with them‚ but it wasn’t until meeting these kids and realizing how much support they needed‚ that I decided to seriously
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