Education and Support for Multilingual Children “Practitioners need the empathy‚ understanding and skills to help children achieve a positive sense of themselves and of others. Our role: to protect and value all children in the setting‚ foster empathy and provide accurate information about difference to enable children to think critically about and challenge bias.” Migration in the world means that children grow up in multilingual communities and families. Bilingualism is common for a
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When it come to children with special needs there are different categories that the children can fall in. With in each of these categories there are different teaching methods that have to be use and different types of training that the teacher will need. Children with special needs are tested and then put into the appropriate group as to the disability that they have. There are several different types of special needs such as autism‚ behavior disorders‚ Cerebral Palsy‚ Down Syndrome‚ Alcohol
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“Children Need to Play‚ Not compete” Taylor Worrell English 101 Mon/Wed 1:30 3/2/2011 Everyone wants to win. But should that be a child’s top priority? Children’s sports should be more focused on cooperation and pure fun. The physical and psychological negatives are not worth the feeling of winning a game or making a team. Competitive sports have too many negatives that outweigh the positives and should be either removed or restructured. After children are fully prepared and mentally and
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Pass Three (P3): Explain barriers which may be experienced by individuals Merit One (M1): Assess barriers which may be experienced by individuals with additional needs‚ with reference to models of disability In Nazir’s case study by the looks of it he is facing a lot of barriers‚ one of which I think is communication. All of his family has limited information on Dementia‚ this makes it hard for them to put his Alzheimer’s into perspective. They will not know how he’s feeling or ways to potentially
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Introduction to working with children E1 – Describe three different types of settings which provide care and education for children in your area. There are three types of settings that provide education and also care for children these are called the Statutory Sector‚ Voluntary Sector and the Private Sector. They all have specific jobs/roles‚ each providing services aimed at different people. A Statutory setting is provided by the government and has to be available for children to attend by law
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Support Individuals With Specific Communication Need 1.1 Explain the importance of meeting an individual’s meeting needs. Every individual has the right to communication as the Human Rights Act (1998) lists the freedom of expression as well as other rights relating to communication. As a support worker I have a moral obligation as well as adhering to the standards‚ codes of practice‚ guidelines‚ morals and law that govern my practice to ensure that communication needs are met. If an individual’s
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MU2.8 Understand how to support the nutritional and dietary needs of children 4.1 Define the basic nutritional requirements of children to ensure a balanced diet and meet government guidance. Children and young people need to have and maintain a good and healthy diet‚ therefore it is important for staff to promote healthy eating to both children and parents. Having and maintaining a healthy diet during childhood can improve the child’s concentration and behaviour‚ it makes it a lot easier to
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Rachel Pass Support children and young people’s positive behaviour. Know the policies and procedures of the setting for promoting children and young people’s positive behaviour. Outcome one. 1:1; Describe the policies and procedures of the setting relevant to promoting children and young people’s positive behaviour. All schools have discipline and behaviour management policies. These are to promote a positive ethos and encourage good behaviour. This is so each child can achieve their own potential
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Children Need to Play Tracy R. Collins Early Childhood Education Capstone ECE 430 Instructor Kathryn Shuler November 8‚ 2010 All children need to play it is an integral part of learning and coping with the realities of everyday life. While children need physical activity to stay healthy and fit they also need unstructured‚ child centered‚ imaginative play that they control. Many parents today enroll their children in as many structured activities as possible everything from art classes
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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 to make any adjustments they enable
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