________________________ is the development or unfolding of traits present in the individual from his hereditary endowment. 3. ________________________is the result of the activities of the child himself 4. ________________________ method uses two or more groups with identical characteristics; one group is given training while the other group is not. 5.________________________is the rate of development that occurs during the pre-natal period and continues throughout babyhood up to the first 6 years 6.________________________means
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TDA 2.1: Child and young person development. 1.1- Ages | Physical development | Communication and intellectual development. | Social‚ emotional and behavioural development. | New born | Babies are born with reflexes which are actions they do without thinking. There reflexes are linked to survival | Babies will cry in order to communicate their needs. They will also look around and react to sounds. | Babies and their primary carers usually mothers. Which they will be to develop a strong relationship
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Unit 022 Understand Child and Young Person Development. Outcome 1 Understand the expected pattern of development for children and young people from birth-19 years. AC1 The aspects of development are Physical‚ Cognitive‚ Communication‚ Social (including Emotional & Behavioural) and Moral. In explaining the sequence of development I have used guideline ages for when it is most common to see the development. Physical Development Birth – reflex actions performed without thinking – startle‚ grasp
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CHILD AND YOUNG PERSON DEVELOPMENT UNIT 1 CHILD AND YOUNG PERSON DEVELOPMENT 1. KNOW THE MAIN STAGES OF CHILD AND YOUNG PERSON DEVELOPMENT 1.1 DESCRIBE THE EXPECTED PATTERN OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE’S DEVELOPMENT FROM BIRTH TO 19 YEARS‚ TO INCLUDE: PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT‚
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Child and young person’s development. 1.1 Describe the expected pattern of children and young people’s development from birth to 19 years to include a. Physical development. b. Communication and intellectual development. c. Social‚ emotional and behavioural. There are five main principles of development‚ * Neonate this is birth to one month * Infancy this is one month to one year * Early years this is one year to five years * Middle childhood this is five years
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main development of a child from the age range; 0-2yrs‚ 3-5yrs & 5-8yrs. From birth to adulthood children are continuously growing‚ developing‚ and learning. A child’s development can be measured through physical‚ intellectual‚ language‚ emotional and social developmental milestones. All children follow a similar pattern of development therefore the order in which each child progresses will roughly be the same. However‚ each child will develop at a different rate and their development may not
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language skills that help them develop into an adult. At the age of 8 children love to play games with words and know how to spell many words. Even though they can spell many words‚ they don’t necessarily know what they mean. Children in there school age years enjoy having fun and showing others what they can do. In the 3rd grade‚ boys and girls are able to classify items that can be put in distinct categories. They can number‚ relate and can explain in words what they are doing and why. Children learn new
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Atypical Child and Adolescent Development Fall 2011 - Study Guide for Midterm Chapters 6‚ 7‚ 8‚ 9 Chapter 6 - Conduct Disorder – Be familiar with the following concepts and disorders: • Differentiate conduct disorder from oppositional defiant disorder in terms of age‚ symptoms‚ severity of symptoms‚ age of onset‚ and prognosis.- conduct disorder (childhood) will display one symptom before the age of 10‚ symptoms- repetitive‚ persistent pattern of severe aggressive and antisocial acts: inflicting
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Name: Shem Blake Course: Child-Adolescent Development Lecturer: Mrs. Kennedy Date: February 19‚ 2013 Discuss how poverty affects the psychosocial‚ cognitive‚ moral and physical development of the adolescent The term poverty is usually used to simply refer to a lack of money‚ but living in a state of financial instability is both physically and emotionally damaging. While an adolescent who grows up in a middle class suburb is taught that he or she can go to college‚ marry‚ have a rewarding
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A basic introduction to child development theories Developmental perspectives The NSW Office of Child Care (Department of Community Services‚ DoCS) published a document in 2002 called the NSW Curriculum Framework for Children ’s Services: A practice of relationships (.pdf 1.4 MB). This document has some interesting perspectives of the role of child development and developmental norms. It is important to consider multiple 1/16 Contents Child development theorists ....................
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