Anecdotal Observations it’s all about seeing RRC ECE Workplace October 20‚ 2005 Workplace EC E Program Anecdotal Observation Resource 1 About Anecdotal Records 1. What are they? Anecdote: - a short story - a sketch - an illustration (J. I. Rodale‚ Th e Syno nym Finder (1978) Ro dale Press) Anecdote: - a brief account of an important developmental event (Billman‚ 1996‚ pg. 19). Anecdotal Record: - “The written account or word picture of one episode in the child’s life”
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What Is Observation? Clues to the development and personality of each child‚ for example‚ “read” the child and “see” a situation; distinguish between details and trivia. Seeing Children Through Observation -Children in action during play provides clues ;see children in relation to their peers‚ and Environmental factors that can influence behavior‚ such as Noise level‚ Congestion and Time of day. Observe Skill Development See a Child’s stage of development Meet children’s social‚ emotional‚
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The Effects of Alcohol on Behavior A Naturalistic Observation Study I conducted a Naturalistic Observation Study to examine some of the possible effects of alcohol consumption on the behavior of young adults. According to K. Cherry (2012) (What is Naturalistic Observation?‚ para. 1) A Naturalistic Observation is a method of research that is often used by psychologists and other social scientists in order to study and observe the behaviors as they would occur in their natural‚ un -disrupted
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running records can be transferred to checklists to make interpretation easier Advantages 1. They are easy and quick to use; 2. Little training required; 3. They can be used in the presence of the child or recorded later; 4. Helps to focus observations on many behaviors at once; 5. Can be used for curriculum planning; activities can be planned to encourage certain behaviors that have not yet been observed; 6. Can be used to condense information from running record or anecdotal records. Disadvantages
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alcohol during pregnancy‚ so does your baby because alcohol passes freely through the placenta to your baby. When you drink alcohol‚ so does your baby. Because babies are small compared to adults‚ alcohol breaks down much more slowly than in a grown person. This means that alcohol remains in a baby’s blood much longer than in the blood of its mother thus leading to possible irreversible harm to the baby’s development. All drinks that contain alcohol can harm your baby. There is no known safe amount of
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Methods/Procedures To test the original hypothesis‚ six observations were taken at many different times during the day. Observations were taken during the morning‚ mid-afternoon‚ and the evening. The data was collected on four different days. To make sure that the observations would be consistent and accurate‚ two sets of observations were taken around in the same time frame. The location and the weather were constant‚ while the time of day was altered since it was the variable that was being tested
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Context The purpose of this assignment is to compare and contrast two observations in different contexts. The children in both contexts where aged 4-5. I chose children of the same age so that age would not affect the results. According to Jean Piaget children of this age children are in the Preoperational Stage (RAD‚ 2012) I did not see any evidence to suggest that this was not the case. However I don’t think that all children reach the same stage of development at the same time‚ each case must
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Teacher Observation #1 Classroom Information: First Name of teacher: Grace Name of Center: St. Bernadine’s of Siena Pre-School Address: 24410 Calvert St. ‚ Woodland Hills‚ CA‚ 91367 Phone Number : (818)716-4730) Director: Charlene Barkes Ages of Children in classroom: 3 years old Number of Children in classroom: 8-16 children Physical Description of Teacher She is 5”7 about 125 pounds‚ about 25 years old and of Asian ethnicity with dark brown‚ straight hair pulled back into a low ponytail. She
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Objectives The purpose of this observation assignment was to investigate and interpret the different types of interactions between the individuals and groups present‚ as well as the environment in which these interactions take place. The various power relationships and sense of hierarchy in addition to the status and authority among the different individuals are also extremely pertinent to this assignment‚ as the dissection of such interactions and relationships may implicate certain socially
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Each observation location varied depending on which group of athletes was being focused on. The two groups of athletes that I have observed and worked with consisted of athletes from both UNI cheerleading as well as TNT cheerleading. UNI cheerleading is comprised of college age athletes both male and female that are a part of either the co-ed or all-girl squad. The location that my observations and research for UNI cheerleading took place in the UNI-dome‚ the Mcleod Center‚ and the West Gym on UNI’s
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