essortment.com/family/childsafetytip_sbmt.htm . Playgrounds and outdoor play equipment provide fun‚ fresh air‚ and exercise. But they also can pose some safety hazards. . Before you visit a playground‚ check to make sure that play areas are designed to allow an adult to clearly see kids while they’re playing on all the equipment. . Adult supervision‚ Parents can help prevent playground accidents by taking some precautions Surfaces ‚ A proper playground surface is one of the most important factors
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1. What are some of the benefits of using outdoor space in early childhood? Using outdoor space in early childhood provide children with health‚ cognitive‚ and social benefits. Health benefits: It gives children the opportunity to exercise their large muscles group much more than when they are indoors‚ because they have more space to run‚ skip‚ climb‚ swing‚ and jump. Playing outside also allow children to burn more calories than when they are inside. Cognitive benefits: When children play outside
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The Importance of Nature in a Child’s Life Nature is made by nature‚ not by man. Nature can be used for many different things. It can be used for a natural playground‚ a learning experience‚ a science experience‚ a meditation place. The list is endless on what nature can be used for. The best part about it is that there is no list that states what it can and can’t be. It is all in your imagination. This is important for children to learn and grow with. Without nature‚ there would be no land to live
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The topic of my observation was children ages 2-5 and how they play. I’ve found through research and observation that play is affected by each child’s individual development. Play has norms and structures that most children follow‚ but these guidelines are moldable based on the circumstances encompassing each child’s development. In the PowerPoint slides from class‚ Berger (2014) states that development is multi-cultural‚ multi-directional‚ multi-contextual‚ and plastic. Style of attachment‚ ethnic
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the morning and left the park at ten thirty. The park is about five acres and located in a quiet neighborhood of Pasadena‚ CA. It has a playground‚ basketball courts‚ handball courts‚ and plenty of open grass and trees which make for a calm and peaceful setting. The park was fairly empty with a few adults engaging in morning fitness activities‚ and the playground was empty. The temperature outside was about ninety
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Ask Not What Your Playground Can Do For You Timmy‚ Jimmy‚ Tom‚ Andy‚ weird kid picking his nose on the teeter-totter: Today we didn’t see my birthday party‚ but me being a little kid and turning into a big kid-- I was like you guys‚ and now I’m not. I can tell you the same thing that our mommys and daddys told us almost a bajillion years ago. The playground is not the same anymore. The big kids can share their toys‚ or push us off the swing set. But the same problem our mommys and daddys had
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The Dragon’s Playground Poem Example We will practice how to answer an unfamiliar text question: building our vocab in the process. 15MINS Per Unfamiliar text Q1. Identify ONE verbal language feature used to describe the children in lines 12-16. “With teeth so white… fresh and ripe.” Give an example of this feature‚ Verbal feature: Consonance (Repetition of consonant sounds) Example: “Perhaps it is the taste? It seems a monstrous waste.” Explain how the poet uses this language feature
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families feeding the ducks and geese‚ retired men relaxing in the shade with their fishing rods‚ and a unique and dangerous attribute only found here. 3. What are the three topic sentences? My favorite parking lot is the one directly adjacent to the playground. As Leland and I huff our way up the hill‚ we are able to overlook over the rest of the park. This bridge leads to what the locals call “Geese Island”‚ someone even managed to carve the name into the last plank. 4. In what order is this essay developed
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The Devil’s Playground We as human beings naturally strive to participate and be active members of a “society” or a culture in order to feel incorporated into some kind of structure. Within a structured “society” there must be an in-between or “threshold people” (1 pg. 95)‚ which is depicted by Victor W. Turner as liminality. Liminality is a state of being in-between a structured society or “limbo of statuslessness” in which the individual or group becomes homogenized (1 pg. 97). An
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References: Ackerley‚ J. 2002. Playground rhymes keep up with the times. Play and Folklore 42‚ 4-8. Ackerley‚ J. 2003. Gender differences in the folklore play of children in primary school playgrounds. Play and Folklore 44‚ 2-15. Armitage‚ M. 2004. Hide and seek – where do children spend their time after school? Paper presented at The Second European Conference Child
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