Unit 201- Child and young person development 3.1 Identify the transitions experienced by most children and young people 3.2 Identify transitions that only some children and young people may experience e.g. bereavement 3.3 Describe with examples how transitions may affect children and young people’s behaviour and development Most children and young people will experience the following transitions: * Starting Nursery or reception * Going from part time to full time education
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Support children’s speech‚ language and communication Speech is the communication or expression of thoughts in spoken words. The exchange of spoken words is a conversation and there are 8 different parts of speech. Noun- names a person‚ place‚ or thing Pronoun- takes the place of a noun Verb- identifies action or state of being Adjective- modifies a noun Adverb- modifies a verb‚ adjective‚ or other adverb Preposition- shows a relationship between a noun (or pronoun) and other words in a sentence
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Abstract Being well-educated is a product of both the school and the individual. Simply going to a quality institution and obtaining an education does not translate into being well-educated. On the other hand‚ being able to perform a specific task very well but lacking in some very basic academic fundamentals does not mean a person is well-educated either. Alfie Kohn examines what it means to be well-educated and I will respond to some of his thoughts on the topic.
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Ida B. Wells: Courageous Success Introduction The Harlem Renaissance was a time period that began after World War I and lasted until the middle of the 1930’s depression‚ this era refers to a time of written and artistic creativity among African Americans. During this movement creativity was brought‚ but unfortunately so was discrimination and crimes that often occurred. A woman named Ida B. Wells was commonly referred to as the fearless crusader‚ suffragist‚ women’s right advocate‚ journalist
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the 24th Annual BU Conference on Language Development. Cascadilla Press‚ Somerville‚ MA‚ 2000. Early Communication: Beyond Speech-Act Theory Anna Papafragou University of Pennsylvania 1. Introduction For the past two decades‚ speech-act theory has been one of the basic tools for studying pragmatics from both a theoretical and an experimental perspective. In this paper‚ I want to discuss certain aspects of the theory with respect to data from early communication in children. My aim will be to show
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children’s speech‚ language and communication. Understand the importance of speech‚ language and communication for children’s overall development. 1.1 Explain each of the terms. Language is structured communication with rules and a set of symbols that are spoken‚ signed or written. Speech is the vocalisation of language. Communication is a way of sending signals to other people‚ this includes body language‚ facial expressions‚ gestures & language. Speech‚ language and communication needs
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E1. Communication and Language development The development in children of a young ages increases in the first few years of their life. A child aged between 0-3 their language and communication development they begin at the pre-linguistic stages starting with cooing which usually comes at around 6 weeks; this is where a baby makes cooing noises to show pleasure. These early sounds are different from the sounds they make later on which is mainly because the mouth is still developing. At 6-9 months
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environment. It is vital that all children – especially those with speech‚ language and communication needs – feel Review evidence about in your key factors that provide a comfortable‚ confident‚ secure and welcome the setting and that they have a sense of belonging and well-being. They need the support of adults who are sensitive to their needs and understand how supportive speech‚ language and communication important children’s well-being is to their learning. environment It is important to provide an
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CU 1530 PROMOTE COMMUNICATION IN CHILDREN’S AND YOUNG PEOPLE’S SETTINGS SHC 32 1.1 Identify the different reasons people communicate Examples of why people communicate To gain reassurance and acknowledgement – Giving a child reassurance will help them to develop. To build relationships - People communicate to make new relationships the way we speak to them at first may make them feel welcome or overlooked. To maintain relationships – Each time we talk to a child we are maintaining
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Person Centred Risk Every opportunity contains risks – a life without risk is a life without opportunities‚ often without quality and without change. Traditional methods of risk assessment are full of charts and scoring systems‚ but the person‚ their objectives‚ dreams and life seem to get lost somewhere in the pages of tick boxes and statistics. A person centred approach seeks to focus on people ’s rights to have the lifestyle that they chose‚ including the right to make ’bad ’ decisions
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