E1 1. Children act 1989 2. Disability discrimination act 1995 (DDA) 3. Children act 2004 4. Human rights act 1995 5. Equality act 2006 E2 The children act 1989 has influenced some settings by bringing together several sets of guidance and provided the foundation for many of the standards practitioners sustain and maintain when working with children. The act requires that settings work together in the best interests of the child and form partnerships with parents or carers. It requires settings
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‘’It is important to plan to meet the care and learning needs of all children.’’ External research CACHE LEVEL 3 DIPLOMA IN CHILDCARE AND EDUCATION Introduction Criteria 1 - Criteria 2 - The first stage of the learning cycle is planning and this is where you plan for the children activities that will be carried out throughout the time at placement and these activities need to be planned for the needs of all children. When practitioners are planning the activity they need
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2006 and Childcare Act 2006 and the EYFS reforms. According to Tassoni P et al 2007 page 161 “All employers have legal responsibilities under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974. This means that employers must meet certain rules to make sure people are safe in their place of work”. (D1) Explain how legislation can support strategies to establish and maintain healthy‚ safe and secure environments in early year’s settings According to www.northamptonshire.gov.uk “Childcare Act 2006
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ERR Questions Continued Task 4 Employee Number – Your employee number is a unique number that is individual to you. It allows your employer to have easy access to your online record. Employer Name – Your employer name is the person who employed you for the position you applied for‚ most likely your manager. Your employer is the one who gives you your shifts‚ you’re your wage and has the power to dismiss you. Tax Code – Everyone has different tax codes based on information such as your annual
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Te Whariki Te Whariki is the Ministry of Education’s early childhood curriculum policy statement. Te Whariki is a framework for providing children’s early learning and development within a social cultural context. It emphasises the learning partnership between teachers‚ parents‚ and families. Teachers weave a holistic curriculum in response to children’s learning and development in the early childhood setting and the wider context of the child’s world. This curriculum defines how to achieve
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your job contract list as its minimium standards for duties and responsibilities that you’re expected to work with‚ perform to & where wanted beyond in your daily work - link that to the national occupational standards. Legislation could be the childcare act 2006 that via an order & regulation of the act gives legal force/statutory strength to England’s eyfs framework - about on Plymouth.gov.uk and here‚ on education.gov.uk it put a requirement in place for settings to register and be subject to
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Unit 1. Understanding child and young person development. 1. Explain the sequence and rate of each aspect of development from birth – 19years. The word development refers not to the physical growth of children and young people‚ but to the skills and knowledge that they are developing. When looking at child development it is divided into the following areas – Physical Development Refers to learning how to master physical movement. Fine motor skills
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001‚ OUTCOME 1 1. Identify different reasons why people communicate To express needs To share ideas and information To reassure Express feelings To build relationships Socialise To ask questions To share opinions 2. Explain how effective communication affects all aspects of own work Through effective communication we can easily exchange every sort of information‚ our ideas with the people around and this can indirectly affect our work as the other people get to know
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CHILD DEVELOPMENT 5N1764 PLAY ACTIVITY / EXPERIENCE OBSERVATION TABLE OF CONTENTS Observation…………………………………………………3 Planning………………………………………………………7 Implementation………………………………………….11 Evaluation…………………………………………………..15 Explanation & Evaluation…………………………..19 OBSERVATION Date of Observation: 24th June 2014 Time of observation: 10:50am to 11:00am Number of
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053.1.2 Consequences of discrimination Scenario | Potential effect | | Family | Individual | Those who inflict | Paul is playing with the tea set in the role play area. Jasmine and Katy laugh at him and say he must be a girl because only girls play with the tea-set. | Not very happy that their child is being bullied and left out | Being left out of the play activitie.‚ feeling sad may feel bullied | Happy to tell him he cant play‚ may feel a sence of power | Heather uses a wheelchair
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