& Young Persons Development 1.1 Describe the expected pattern of children and young peoples development from birth to 19 years to include:- * Physical Development * Communication and Intellectual development * Social ‚ emotional and behavioural development A child’s development can be measured through physical and language milestones‚ intellectual‚ emotional and social development. Each child follows a similar pattern‚ but each child can vary in their development and reach milestones
Premium Jean Piaget
observing the 6th grade students applying Piaget theory of development I would say that most were at the Concrete operational stage of cognitive development. In this stage of development intelligence is demonstrated through logical and systematic manipulation of symbols related to concrete objects. (Huitt‚ W.‚ & Hummel‚ J. 2003) The teacher asked more questions and let the student be more independent as at this stage of cognitive development they should be able to use logic and intelligence to answer
Premium Education Teacher Learning
which can affect their cognitive development due to the lack of a sense. When children develop their cognition‚ an important part of this development is communication and listening to the family to eventually understand all of the names given to objects and people. Blindness can affect a child’s cognitive development as well‚ due to the child not being able to they see the objects and people they learn to speak about. However‚ even though the child’s cognitive development could be delayed or impaired
Premium Hearing impairment Audiogram Hearing
For this assignment I will be discussing the key issues that affect a child’s physical development‚ there are many key issues relating to this‚ however I will only be focusing on two key issues which are how poor nutrition affects a child’s physical development and how the environment affects a child’s physical development. I will be focusing on a child under the age of 5 years. Physical development is a process that begins as a baby and continues into late adolescence‚ this includes how the body
Premium Malnutrition Nutrition Obesity
Karri Tidel ECED 111 Observation #2 October 22‚ 2010 Social Emotional Room 11; 1 year olds: Three children are eating breakfast at a table and feeding themselves. All of them turn and look at us as we walk in. They watch for a few seconds then eat again. Boy in red- he eats rice krispies with his hands. Looks at us but continues to eat. Girl in pink and black stand when sees the teacher give child more oranges. Grunts “Uh‚ uh” Teacher says “you have oranges” Looks at plate and eats. Takes
Free Girl Boy American films
psychologist in the field because of his contribute to developmental psychology and cognitive psychology. He studied his children and created a system on how kids learn and how they think. He created a theory describing how children understood the world in four stages. The four stages are Sensorimotor‚ Preoperational‚ Concrete Operational‚ and Formal Operations. Sensorimotor is the first step in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development the ages range from 0-2 years old. At this stage the infant’s knowledge
Premium Jean Piaget Theory of cognitive development Developmental psychology
Emotional Intelligence American Intercontinental University Trvillian Dill Abstract As you read this document‚ you will get an understanding of what Emotional Intelligence is. Explanations and examples will be given to help you understand the concept of Emotional Intelligence. You will learn ways that you might develop an enhanced emotional IQ as well. Emotional Intelligence (EI) After taking the EI test‚ the Overall results were: IQ score = 116 Percentile score = 86 By the overall results
Premium Psychology Learning Emotional intelligence
Emotional Status and Development in Children Who Are Visually Impaired There are mutual effects of emotional problems on the development of visually impaired children. The methodologies used may correspond to developments at different ages. The study identifies a group of visual impaired children with emotional or behavioral deficits that is compared to their development with visually impaired children with no emotional or behavioral detect as related to age. The author hypothesizes there will be
Premium Disability Blindness Vision loss
Impacts on Cognitive development Despite all the positive impacts of screen technology‚ it lowers the cognitive development by causing loss of concentration‚ decrease in attentions spans‚ poor personal communication skills‚ and inability to think abstractly (Greenfield 2013). Some kids are being overexposed to the screen technology; they don’t do anything else apart from playing computer games or watching TV. Eventually‚ these children develop attention problems. Being attentive is vital it helps
Premium Education Learning Teacher
transformations of their thinking and reasoning to obtain higher levels of intellectual (cognitive) development (Flavell‚ 2011; Piaget‚ 1952‚ 1960). According to Piaget (1952)‚ as children grow up‚ they progress through a series of qualitative changes of cognitive development that are characterized by differences in thought processing. Under his ob-servations of his three children‚ he proposes four key stages of cognitive development which corre-spond with children’s ages‚ particularly the sensorimotor stage
Premium Developmental psychology Psychology Jean Piaget