Republic of the Philippines DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Region I DIVISION I OF PANGASINAN MAPANDAN NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL Mapandan‚ Pangasinan Instructional Supervision Form 1 PRE-OBSERVATION INFORMATION Teacher:_Velasquez‚ Almira O.___School:Mapandan National High School__ District:_III_________________________Division:Pangasinan I____________________ Year Level: Fourth____________________Subject: English IV_______________________ School Year: 2011-2012________________Semester:________________________________
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one child’s development based on a series of observations you have made. In addition to informing your own understanding of development and learning‚ you can also consider how your findings can help you to identify ways of supporting the child’s development. Abstract This report will look at Observations within a Haringey Early Years setting and on one Child. I will make five various observations over a period of time. I will examine the observations through elements of her development and learning’s
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Portfolio of Child Observations | 1 The Brief: Observation report instructions: carry out three observations of the same child‚ one must be timed‚ one written and the other your own choice. In all the observations you must look at the child ’s physical‚ language‚ and social skills and ultimately their overall cognitive development. The report must be written up in the format: abstract‚ introduction‚ method‚ results‚ discussion and analysis. In the discussion and analysis you must tie together
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| | | |Adolescent Observation in Natural Setting | |
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I began my Sociological Observation Paper at the town’s local baseball field. It was about 8:30 p.m. when the game began‚ and it was about this time when I noticed the connections between the baseball players and the weary watchers. The event can be called a sort of an aggregate‚ a term used to describe a group of people found at a certain place at a certain time which I became acquainted with on the 25th of June towards the end of the class lecture. While there‚ I was a bit absent-minded‚ seeing
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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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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 1. Not very detailed; 2. Little information about the context or sequence of events; 3. May miss important information not included on the checklist. 4. Notes if a behavior occurred but not how
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Psychology Project I Systematic Observation Systematic observation is an assessment strategy used to document behavior‚ activities‚ knowledge or skills of a sample space (here‚ a group of people) over a period of time‚ rather than assessing the sample space at the same time. The rationale for our observations is to interpret the reading interests of males and females by the magazines they choose to buy. From the observations it can be hypothesized that what the sample space prefers to
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there at all. He looked like he would rather be somewhere else. This observation is posing a bigger concern for society‚ especially‚ if there are a lot more fathers not getting involved with their children; this may create a disconnecting with their father. Children need both parents to feel loved and cared for and not just the attention of their mothers. Limitation I observed this family in one setting alone. Observations need to be completed on different fathers’ interactions with their children
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Many may think we are born to be sociable or how to understand our emotions. But to be honest we are not. As early as infancy in it vital for child care teachers to groomed infants to socialize with others. Lack of social skills infants can grow up to live a lonely life in adulthood. This is the same for emotions if infants are not taught to deal with their emotions at an early age they can live a life of confusion. Infants need opportunities to develop a sense of self‚ a sense of self‚ with others
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