I observed a child just over 1 year old. I’ll call her‚ Rae. Rae has an older sister‚ we’ll call her Jo. When I first began observing her‚ she was playing with her sister and was smiling. I assume she was having fun. She seemed fine until her mom popped out and went to the restroom. She also had trouble sharing with her older sister. I noticed that Rae was always trying to stand and walk‚ she’s wobbly. The first major thing I observed was that Rae seemed to have a problem departing from her mom
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when a child is placed in a crib he may start crying‚ because being in the crib would be mean that he couldn’t be with his mother. The second one is repetition. These are habitual practices that we do over and over to the point where‚ if we don’t do it‚ things will seem out of place. The third is imitation. Children often like to imitate others‚ like repeating the same utterance their caregiver may have recently said. Or‚ for example‚ if child A starts playing with an aggressive child B‚ child
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produce a child development assignment Sequence = is the order that development happens in. a baby ’s physical development may begin with rolling over then sit up‚crawl‚walk‚run another may sit up‚walk‚run missing out rolling over and crawling even though elements are missed the development skill proceeds in what is viewed as an expected patten. Rate = is the speed that it happens. There for a baby may achieve walking unaided at 10 months another may accomplish it at 12 months and at 16 months
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Theories of Child Development 1. Three Major Stages in Freud’s Psychosexual Theory a. Oral Stage b. Phallic c. Genital Stage 2. Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory in association with child development a. Stages 1 and 2 b. Stages 3 and 4 3. Piaget’s Cognitive –Stage Theory a. Sensorimotor Stage b. Preoperational Stage c. Concrete Operations Stage 4. Points of Similarity a. Similarities b. Differences 5. Why is understanding child development important
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EFFECTS OF ATTACHMENT ON EARLY AND LATER DEVELOPMENT There is no doubt that early experience influences later development. This influence could account for individual differences in many aspects such as cognition‚ behaviour‚ social skills‚ emotional responses and personality. Some developmentalists assert that early experience guarantees long-term developmental outcomes or protects against subsequent trauma (Sroufe and Jacobvitz‚ 1989). Early experiences‚ especially emotionally or affectively charged
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OBSERVATION NO. 5 SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT Aim: To observe a child‚ who is 4 years 3 months old‚ in a construction area during a free-play in order to identify her social skills. Objectives: To observe and record Rebecca’s ability to share toys with other children. Record of observation Three children are sitting at a big round table and playing with different constructional toys. Rebecca is playing with big plastic letters. The teacher approaches the children. Rebecca (to the teacher) I
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Observation is very important in young children because that is how you get to know a child better. While observing how a child interacts with their peers‚ adults‚ and how they behave in different settings‚ you are getting to know the child without speaking to them. It may be important to observe a child but at the same time it may mislead you into being judgmental‚ to soon. For instance‚ if you observe a child misbehaving‚ not getting along with the other children or talking back to the teacher
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TMA 01 ED209 CHILD DEVELOPMENT Research of evidence‚ which describes the development of infants’ sensory abilities and how research has generated this knowledge. This assay will describe the development of infant’s senses of their 18 months of life and will define how this knowledge has generated. The development of the sensory and the nervous system is not whole at birth and will continue to mature until the adolescence. As babies cannot express themselves with words it has to
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Diet and Nutrition for Asthma in a Child (10 years old) Food allergy can cause both immediate and delayed patterns of asthma. Some common foods that might cause asthma are eggs‚ milk‚ cheese‚ peanuts‚ soy‚ yeast‚ wheat‚ preservatives and colourings. Egg: Egg is one of the most allergenic of all foods‚ and small amounts of egg could result in asthma symptoms within minutes‚ including anaphylaxis. According to Asthma Foundation‚ it is a myth that milk or other dairy products will increase the
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Child Observation Methods 1. Anecdotal Record Thursday‚ September 6th‚ a little girl ”M“ comes to daycare in the morning a little bit late‚ at 10:15am. When she arrived her classmates were about to have a snack and she was very excited to see everybody. “M” gave her teacher a hug with her two arms. Then she turns to her mom and says: “Bye‚ Mommy!” and ran to the classroom. “M” was trying to grab the chair with her left hand to sit down and have a snack with her friends. 3 boys and 2 girls
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