grasping‚ and rooting * Touch‚ pull‚ and tug own hands | 3-6 months | Babies are quickly becoming stronger: * Roll over * Push body forward and pull body up by grabbing the edge of a crib * Reach for and touch objects * Reach‚ grasp‚ and put objects in mouth * Make discoveries with objects (for example‚ a rattle makes noise when it is moved) | 6-9 months |
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Developing one’s own practice in any career is essential for successfull professional development and job satisfaction. Every practitioner needs “ Self Evaluation” to help improve their own practice and develop their ability to reflect upon activities and modify plans to meet the individual needs of the children they work with (Teena Kamen) Teaching Assistant’s (TA’s) should set their own SMART targets(See B1) by developing their knowledge to update the existing skills and acquiring new skills
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A child’s development is influenced culturally by the social institutions‚ customs and laws that make up a society. Society is a group of people‚ large or small‚ living together by adopting customs and organization for mutual benefit and interactive coexistence (New Zealand Tertiary College [NZTC]‚ 2014). When we hear the term ‘social’‚ we immediately connect it to other people. M. Webber defined ‘social acting’ as the sense of the action is related to others’ behavior (Weber‚ 1922 cited in Aschenbrenner
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HOW MY OWN VALUES‚ BELIEFS AND PERSONAL EXPERIENCES MIGHT AFFECT MY WORK PRACTICE Everyone has different values‚ beliefs and preferences. What you believe in‚ what you see as important and what you see as acceptable or desirable is an essential part of who you are. [pic] The way in which you respond to people is linked to what you believe in‚ what you consider important and what interests you. You may find you react positively to people who share your values and less warmly to people
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strategies could be medical‚ nutritional‚ educational‚ social or emotional which are meant to meet the children’s additional needs. Down Syndrome Down Syndrome‚ also referred to as Trisomy 21‚ is a condition which causes delays in the development of children‚ both mentally and physically‚ due to extra genetic material. While normally when a baby is conceived it receives genetic information in the form of 46 chromosomes‚ 23 from the mother and 23 from the father‚ in a Down Syndrome the baby receives
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kirsty miles NVQ 3 Work Unit PWSC32 1.1 Explain what reflective practice is: reflective practice is a process by which you stop and think about your practice‚ consciously analyse your decision making and draw on theory and relate it to what you do in practice. 1.3 Explain how standards inform reflective practice in adult social care: codes of practice explain the way you should be working‚ you can use them to think about the way you work and compare them to your work and decide if you need
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Integrated working is when different services join together to offer more effective care for babies and young children‚ where multi-agency working is when different services work together to meet particular needs of babies and young children‚ along with their parents and/or carers. Multi-agency teams are made up of members of the children’s workforce drawn from a range of different disciplines who met for specific reasons on a regular basis; all the professionals will have joint aims and goals.
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Abstract Television violence affects children by encouraging immunity to the horror of violence‚ gradually accepting violence as a way to solve problems and imitate the violence they observe on television. Children can become immune to violence through extensive viewing that can cause aggressiveness. Those who watch violence on television and
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attainment Alison L. Booth & Hiau Joo Kee Received: 13 January 2006 / Accepted: 9 November 2007 / Published online: 11 April 2008 # Springer-Verlag 2007 Abstract Using the British Household Panel Survey‚ we investigate if family size and birth order affect children’s subsequent educational attainment. Theory suggests a tradeoff between child quantity and “quality” and that siblings are unlikely to receive equal shares of parental resources devoted to children’s education. We construct a new birth order
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of three parts: ID: This is the part of the personality that is instinctive and follows the needs of the body i.e a baby crying for feeding because they need to be fed‚ no matter how tiring or annoying the caregiver may be. Ego: This is the ‘planning’ part of a personality‚ the part that works out what is needed and how to get it. A child waiting to be given a biscuit rather than just taking one for example‚ has worked out that his needs are going to be met either way but if he waits‚ he will probably
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