Paxina Bwalya Kimbinyi TDA 2.1: 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 * Communication and intellectual development * Social‚ emotional and behavioural development Children and young people development follows a pattern from simple to complex. For example‚ children learn to stand before they can walk‚ skip or hop. Communication also progresses
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the children to the mothers who were out working in the factories of offices etc. However when the men came home because the war had ended and they wanted their jobs back‚ the nurseries where then closed. Then in the second half of the twentieth century‚ public expenditure on early year’s provision focused on families who presented social needs and difficulties. The local authority day nurseries which were called later called family centres and nursery schools mainly catered for children at risk
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Promoting development and learning in early childhood is extremely important. “Learning starts in infancy‚ long before formal education‚ and continues throughout life.” All parts of the environment and everything or everyone a child comes in contact with will have an impact on their cognitive‚ emotional‚ and social development. In our early childhood programs‚ they use Developmentally Appropriate Practice to determine how and what to teach each individual child. This is a framework of principles
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with children‚ young people and adults 1.1 Describe how to establish respectful‚ professional relationships with children and young people. To enable you to establish a respectful relationship with children and young people you need to maintain your professional distance at all times and remember you’re there to educate them not to be their friends. You must let the child know you’re interested in them and make time for them‚ each and every one of them. It’s important that children don’t
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Ways to promote childrenâ€TMs social development Setting limits to encourage the required behaviour can be carried out by using appropriate sanctions and rewards. This could be in the schoolâ€TMs behaviour policy‚ go and look. Build independence through encouraging children through their self-help skills dressing/undressing for P.E.. Be patient and give support when a child is carrying out a task that will develop their self- help skills. Opportunities should be made available for children and young
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in depth look at what defines a child as gifted‚ how the life course of the gifted can be described‚ and some options for educating students who are gifted. I began by taking a look at what defines a child as "gifted". Our book describes gifted children as those that have a combination of an extreme talent in subjects such as music‚ mathematics‚ and art‚ and an above average intelligence‚ which is usually defined as an IQ of 130 or higher (Santrock 217). Academic‚ intellectual‚ visual and performing
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Adolescence 11 – 18 years 4. Adulthood 19 – 65 years 5. Later adulthood 65+ Task 1.2. Physical development Gross motor skills – large muscles Fine motor skills – using small muscles Baby – babies are born with several actions or reflexes that they use to survive. For example‚ crying or grasping objects. Child – the child starts to go to school and go to activities with other children. They have exercises at school‚ they develop their moves. Teenager – during this time a teenager experiences
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Task 3 - links to learning outcome 3‚ assessment criteria 3.1‚ 3.2‚ 3.3 and 3.4. * an explanation of how to monitor children and young people’s development using different methods.‚ * Assessment frameworks ( eg EYFS profile assessment‚ P Scales (Performance Indicators Value Added Target Setting) CAF (Common Assessment Framework)) describe those frameworks that would apply to the type of setting you are in eg Early years setting‚ Children’s residential home‚ School. * * * CAF (Common
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Sabiha Zaman SHC 33: Promote equality and inclusion in health‚ social care or childrens and young peoples setting. 1.1) Diversity- Diversity mean difference‚ it recognises that even though people have things in common with each other they are also unique and different. Everyone is unique and different for example; skin colour‚ race‚ disability‚ gender and religion. Equality- Equality mean treating everyone equally in a way that is appropriate for their needs. Inclusion- Inclusion
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The motif of children and babies in Macbeth In William Shakespeare’s Macbeth‚ the recurring motif of babies and children was mentioned throughout the novel alongside the theme of death and innocence in order to depict the immorality of characters. Children were commonly associated with death and murder since that stark distinction aided in supporting the English stereotype that portrays Scots as violent and Barbaric people. In other instances‚ Shakespeare associated children with foolishness and
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