Montessori St. Nicholas Foundation Course (Birth – 6) Unit No. 13 Assignment 13a: What are the essential qualities of a good Montessori teacher‚ and why are these essential from the child ’s point of view? Assignment 13b: Describe in detail the changing demands made on the teacher and how she adjusts her role in the classroom accordingly? Name: | Lim C. Chong | MSN Student Reference: | 14789 | Address: | 43 Alexander StreetCockle BayHowickAUCKLANDNew Zealand
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respectful relationships? | 1. A child tells you all about their pets. | If a child wants to talk to me about their pets (or other things that affects them outside of school) I encourage them to do so whenever possible as I feel they are beginning to trust me and this might make it easier for them to come to me with more serious problems they might have. I show interest by asking them questions and listening carefully‚ I would also share my experience with pets. | 2. A child has tried really hard and
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Lindy Warwick Life Span Development June 23‚ 2013 Child Development Project Piaget and Vygotsky believed that play gives children good practice in adult-like behaviors. Vygotsky believes that various forms of play enables children to develop increasingly sophisticated ways of thinking about relationships between objects and what they mean. Piaget suggests that knowledge is the product of direct motor behavior. For my project I observed my children playing the Uno card game. The age limit
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Stages of Child Development and Related Developmental Theories Physical development Age | Gross Motor Skills | 2-3 years | Walks more rhythmically; hurried walk changes to run. Jumps‚ hops‚ throw‚ and catches with rigid upper body. Pushes riding toy with feet; little steering. | 3-4 years | Walks up stairs‚ alternating feet‚ and down stairs‚ leading with one foot. Jumps and hops‚ flexing upper body.Throws and catches with slight involvement of upper body; still catches by trapping ball
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Child Development Collection of work Aim The aim of this project is to observe a group of children from different ages for a specific period of time to see if their developments are meeting their requirements with a few months leeway as every child does not develop the same and at the required age. Objective My objective for this project is to discuss my project with my supervisor and the children’s parents that are going to be involved with my developmental observations. My list of development
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Factors That Affect Learning All children matter‚ regardless of their background. It is important that every child can fulfil its true potential‚ however there are factors that can affect a child’s learning to stop this. This essay will discuss the importance of emotional intelligence and how it positively affects a child’s learning and social class with its negative affect on education and solutions to combat it so deprived children have better opportunities in school. Social class has a major
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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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Child Development Chart |AGE |Physical Development |Communication and Intellectual Development |Social and Emotional Behavioural Development |Support children through transitions in their | | | | | |lives | |0-3 Years
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Child Development: 9- to 12-Year-Olds In late elementary and middle school your child experiences a period of tremendous intellectual‚ social-emotional‚ and physical change. School demands increase‚ friends become as important as family‚ and puberty begins to reshape her body. This is also a time when individual differences among children become more apparent. Here are the stages you can expect you child to pass through during early adolescence: 9-Year-Olds Physical Development uses tools‚
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able to understand speech (speech perception). The examination of the mental lexicon‚ (that is our ’mental dictionary’) also widens our knowledge in connection with speech production and speech perception. Psycholinguistics also covers the issues of child language‚ that is how babies acquire their mother tongue. A marginal area of study is bilingualism‚ which deals with those individuals and communities that speak two (or more) languages. Neurolinguistics focuses on cerebral processes during speech
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