1. Look around in your workplace setting or your classroom setting for eight more potential hazards. List these in the spaces in the left-hand column below. |Hazard |How the hazard can be dealt with | |Stairs |Involving children in risk assessment ‚ and senssibilize them about the | | |risk of raining
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Unit 54.. Duty Of Care 1.1 Within my work role I have a duty of care to ensure that‚ myself and the students are taking reasonable care in and around the setting to enable them to avoid injury to one another and / or making any damage to the work setting which could conclude in an injury. As well as this I have a duty of care to watch over the students for example during individual work‚ and making sure they are all treating each other as equals‚ that they are listening to each other and are all
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you. Therefore if you have good commutation skills and good body language when working with parents they are more likely to trust you when looking after their children. Children who can sense that their main carer has a good relationship with the childcare setting are more likely to be happy being left in the setting. According to Maskell (2010) “This links into the theorist bowlby (1950) who believed in his findings about secure and attachment”. Other way’s that you can build relationships with
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Unit 2- Development from conception to age 16 years. E1- Social and Emotional development often underpins children’s and young people’s happiness‚ security and success. A starting point for this development begins in early years when the child starts to pick up their first strong relationship with their parents. These relationships are usually life-long. -This is the development stages from the ages of 0-3 years. Age Stage of Development. 1 months Watches primary carers face 5 months
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E1‚ E2‚ E3 E4 Children Act 1989 The Children Act focuses on the welfare of the child and stated that “the welfare of the child is the paramount consideration.” (Children Act 1989 www.devon.co.uk) In my setting the child is at the heart of everything to do with him/her. For example the setting plans outdoor activities in which they may play or do classroom related activities. The setting has to take in consideration the child’s safety through the environment‚ the activity planned‚ how the children
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053.1.2 Consequences of discrimination Scenario | Potential effect | | Family | Individual | Those who inflict | Paul is playing with the tea set in the role play area. Jasmine and Katy laugh at him and say he must be a girl because only girls play with the tea-set. | Not very happy that their child is being bullied and left out | Being left out of the play activitie.‚ feeling sad may feel bullied | Happy to tell him he cant play‚ may feel a sence of power | Heather uses a wheelchair
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D1: Explain the relevance of the title to children’s care or education. In an early years setting‚ it is essential that a practitioner supports the children’s play‚ learning and development because this will then enable certain learning goals to be achieved in relation to the early year’s foundation stage framework for development. These learning goals that the practitioner will help to support the children develop will have an overall effect on how they are able to learn and behave later in life
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E1 – See Attached E2 It is important to take into consideration the physical environment when planning for children’s learning and to create an enabling environment‚ this is because Health and Safety and Risk Assessments will need to be carried out‚ in order to ensure it’s safe for the children. For example an outdoor environment‚ will need to be Risk Assessed to make sure there are enough staff to Children for the ratio and whether the outdoor equipment is suitable for the age range. Having
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Unit 1 – An Introduction To Working With Children: Assignment D1: Statutory provisions are services that have to be available by law through legislation. (Tassoni‚ 2007‚ p. 25) A primary school is an example of a statutory provision service. If you do not send your child to primary school‚ you could get sent to jail or finned by the government. Primary school children are usually aged from 5-11 years. They usually start Primary school aged 4 and continue this education until they’re aged 11
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Unit 2 Assignment A child develops through its whole life. They can develop; physically‚ linguistically‚ intellectually‚ socially and behaviourally. “Physical development is the way in which the body increases in skill and becomes more complex in its performance” [Meggitt‚ 2000‚ Page 2]. Twenty five days after conception; the body of the chid has developed immensely from the small fertilised egg. Up to birth the foetus mainly develops physically however once the child is born the child then begins
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