Describe the key features of effective communication with children and young people and adults. Provide examples of how you might engage in appropriate and professional relationships with both adults and children and young people across the 0 to 19 range. Describe the differences in communication with adults and children and young people of different ages and stages of development. It is important to be able to communicate on a one to one basis and in a group setting. Communication is a two way
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language and communication OCR Unit No: 19 Sector Unit No: HSC 2015 Level: 3 Credit value: 4 Guided learning hours: 30 Unit expiry date: 31 January 2015 Unit accreditation number: T/600/9789 Unit purpose and aim The unit aims to provide a basis for understanding the importance of speech‚ language and communication for a child’s overall development and explores the ways in which those working with children can support the development of speech‚ language
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The use of different means of communication to meet different needs. In my role will use verbal and non-verbal communication. Non-verbal means including the use of sign and pictorial methods as well as written forms of communication. Some do’s and don’ts when communicating verbally:- DON’T Cover your mouth when speaking as some people may be lip reading to support their understanding. Use inappropriate language. Use offensive language Use overly complex language Use jargon and slang DO Speak
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Down Range is a book by Dick Couch‚ a former Navy Seal. He tells about how he became a navy seal and his experiences. He also writes about other missions that he was not even in‚ including missions by the famous American sniper‚ Chris Kyle‚ who is the world’s most deadly sniper. The motive of a Navy Seal is to be the best gunman in the world‚ plus being stealthy‚ effective‚ professional‚ and lethal. Dick Couch did this and he was on the battlefield. Couch was in the Navy seals in the 1980’s
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4.2. Describe the importance of reassuring children‚ young people and adults of the confidentiality of shared information and the limits of this. Confidentiality is the preservation of privileged information‚ concerning children and their families‚ which is disclosed in the professional relationship. It is a complicated issue which is based upon the principle of trust. Confidentiality is very important when working in a closely with parents. Some information needs to be shared but only with your
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Describe how to deal with disagreements between the practitioner and children and young people If it is TA versus a child‚ then the chances are that the child is being confrontational and disobedient. You would have to point out the boundaries and explain that it would not be wise to cross these boundaries if the child did not want to make the situation worse for their self. With an adult‚ they have their own perspective on what has caused the disagreement and this should be listened to and then
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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 (from
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Polymers have different structures. They also have different functions. Describe how the structures of different polymers relate to their function? Polymers a large molecules made up of a chain of smaller molecules‚ known as monomers. The monomers that a polymer is made up of decide its structure and therefore it’s function. These monomers are linked and coiled in a very specific manor giving the polymer a specific tertiary structure (an extensively coiled and linked polymer chain caused as a
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psychosexual development with Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development an overview of each will first be discussed‚ followed by a comparison of similarities and differences. Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Development Freud believed personality was crystallised in childhood thus proposing a series of developmental stages progressing from birth to puberty. As with other stage theories Freud’s psychosexual stages of development occur in a predetermined sequence which may overlap with each stage identifying
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The expected pattern of children and young people’s physical development from birth to 19 years of age is as follows: By the age of 4-12 weeks‚ a baby will be able to: Roll from their side on to their back. Lift head and chest off the floor supported by their forearms Hold on to a toy for a brief period of time. By the age of 4-6 months‚ a baby will be able to: Have good head control. Sit with support. Roll from their back to their side. By the age of 6-12 months‚ a baby will be able
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