Sensitive Periods: The sensitive period for small objects In her work Dr. Montessori identified what she called Human Tendencies - lifelong tendencies that serve us in adaptation‚ etc. (Which I’ve written about previously) - and Sensitive Periods - short lived "windows of opportunity" for learning something specific with the greatest ease. The brain of the child from before birth to about age 6 has periods of ’sensitivity’ for certain things. From before birth‚ and lasting until 3‚ there is
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people’s development is influenced by a range of personal and external factors. 2.1 And 2.2 Personal Factors * During pregnancy-: If the mother smokes ‚takes drugs‚ becomes ill or suffers from stress or anxiety this can result in premature birth and health problems for the baby such as -: low birth weight‚ undeveloped organs‚ problems with sight and hearing. These are all problems that could delay their development. Some children are born with conditions that could affect their development such
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additional trauma exposure and other difficulties. These difficulties may extend from childhood through adolescence into adulthood. A better view of the impact of complex trauma can be understood by examining traumas impact on a child’s growth and development. There are seven primary domains of impairment observed in children exposed to complex trauma. The first is attachment‚ here the children have uncertainty about the reliability and predictability of the world. They also have problems with boundaries
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Stages of Cognitive Development In the infancy stage infants have little knowledge and awareness of thought processes. Children in this stage also have a general absence of learning strategies. Toddlers in this stage however‚ can point or look at a location to remember where their toy or object is hidden. Around age two children some children can use an object to get another object. Around one year some are able to plan actions to accomplish a goal. In early childhood some are able to show evidence
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The Montessori is another approach and is named after Dr Montessori who developed a method of teaching that could be used with each and every child. Her classroom practices and ideas have had a great impact on the education of young children. Montessori saw that children learn best by doing and that happy self-motivated learner form positive images of themselves as confident‚ successful people. [5] She realised that freedom was the most important factor in allowing children to develop. She also believed
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social worlds : Development in a social context. Cambridge‚ U.K.: Polity Press. Meadows S (1988) Piaget ’s contribution to understanding cognitive development. In K Richardson & S. Sheldon (Eds.) Cognitive Development to Adolescence. Hove: Lawrence Erlbaum. Siegel‚ L.‚ McCabe A.‚ Brand J‚ & Mathews J (1978) Evidence for understanding of class inclusion in preschool children: Linguistic factors and training effects. Child Development‚ 49‚ 688-693. Siegal‚ M. (2003). Cognitive development. In A. Slater
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Understand Child and Young Person Development 2. Understand the factors that influence children and young people’s development and how these affect practice. 2.1 Explain how children and young people’s development is influenced by a range of personal factors. Personal factors are those which are part of the genetic make-up of a child (nature‚ not nurture). As such‚ they cannot be changed‚ although their influence upon development can be addressed to give children the best possible chance to achieve
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The stages of Intellectual development on Helen Kellers and Malcolm X The stages of Intellectual development were invented by Jean Piaget after the development of children’s thinking for more than a fifty years. There are four stages: imitation‚ separation‚ classify and metaphors. Stages intellectual development is aplicated to every learning process such as Malcolm X a man that learned through a dictionary. Also Helen Keller‚ a woman who was blind and deaf. However‚ learned by touching objects while
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Sensorial education helps develop a child’s intellect. Whether you believe intelligence is genetic or produced by environment‚ you can further it by education. Intelligence is built upon by experiences and thought processes. The Montessori materials for ages 2 1/2 to 6 are designed to help the child’s mind develop the necessary skills for later intellectual learning. Sensorial impressions of child’s environment are not the same as sensorial education. Impressions are feelings and not an intellectual
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DEVELOPMENT STAGES ACCORDING TO PIAGET KHADIJA TIJANI GROUP B IDENTIFY THE FOUR STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT ACCORDING TO PIAGET THE FOUR STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT ACCORDING TO PIAGET ARE ‚ •SENSORY MOTOR STAGE •PREOPERATIONAL STAGE •CONCRETE OPERATION STAGE •FORMAL OPERATION STAGE CLEARLY IDENTIFY THE AGE RANGE FOR EACH STAGE THE AGE RANGE FOR EACH STAGES ARE: STAGES AGE RANGE SENSORYMOTOR 1 ½ or 2 years 2 to 7 years 7 to 11 years 11+ years PREOPERATIONAL CONCRETE OPERATION FORMAL OPERATION DESCRIBE
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