eventually fills up with learning and experience. According to Locke‚ there are four things of environment that mold a child’s mind. The first is associations. This is where one thought is usually associated with another for example‚ when a child is placed in a crib he may start crying‚ because being in the crib would be mean that he couldn’t be with his mother. The second one is repetition. These are habitual practices that we do over and over to the point where‚ if we don’t do it‚ things will
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due to children progressing at different rates. |Physical Development | |Age range |Explain the sequence and rate of development | |0-3 months |From birth‚ your baby’s reflexes will allow her to turn her head to suckle when you touch her cheek. | |
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approach to person centred practice is treating everyone as an individual. Laws such as the Human Rights Act 1998‚ Health and Social Care act 2012‚ state that each and every person should be treated as an individual and the care that they receive should be specifically tailored to them as every persons support needs are specific and individual to them. If as a professional‚ you were to have the same approach with each and every service user‚ set the same or very similar goals for them and based your
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Section 1: - The pattern of development from birth to nineteen 1.1 Explain the sequence and rate of each aspect of development from birth to 19yrs 1.2 Explain the difference between sequence of development and rate of development and why the difference is important Section 2 – The factors that influence development 2.1 Explain how children and young people’s development is influenced by a range of personal factors 2.2 Explain how children and young people’s development is influenced by a range
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Erikson and Freud were psychologist that had theories about the developments of a child’s life. Skinner believed that behavior was learned and reinforced through environment(Boree‚2009). He centered his theory around operant conditioning. An example of operant conditioning is going to school and working hard to receive a good grade. This is a positive outcome of Skinner’s theory. Operant conditioning is a learning process in which a person does good and receives a good outcome‚ does bad and receives
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TDA 2.3 Communication and professional relationships with children‚ young people and adults 1.1 Describe how to establish respectful‚ professional relationships with children and young people. To enable you to establish a respectful relationship with children and young people you need to maintain your professional distance at all times and remember you’re there to educate them not to be their friends. You must let the child know you’re interested in them and make time for them‚ each and
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skills from what they experience at home. This experience should be caring‚ loving and supportive‚ it should provide children with the opportunity to develop and interact as much as possible. Children need to be exposed to as many experiences as feasible‚ so that not only can they learn and develop‚ but they can have their main carers/parents support. This will allow a child to learn to deal with different situations. Sadly‚ for some children their home circumstances or the way in which they are brought
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Child Development Chapter 1 1. | An example of a dependent variable in an experiment might be: | | | | eye color. | | | gender. | | | blood type. | | | level of depression. | | | | | Score: 1 of 1 | | 2. | Watching and recording others’ behaviors in a systematic and objective manner is referred to as: | | | | | scientific observation. | | | a laboratory experiment. | | | cross-sectional research. | | | a correlational design. | | |
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Effects of poverty on the physical development of a Jamaican child Physical development is defined by Tina Bruce and Carolyn Meggitt in the text Child Care and Education as “the way in which the body gains skills and become more complex in its performance.” Arnold Gesell a psychologist and pediatrician put forth normative development guidelines for a child (physical development milestones). The normative development guidelines are categorized into gross motor skills‚ fine -motor skills and balance/coordination
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It may be necessary to adapt the way you communicate when the person you are communicating with use’s English as a second language‚ has a Hearing impairment/deaf‚ Medical problem‚ disability‚ Special educational needs‚ Poor vision or blind. When we are communicating with children and young people with [SEN] it is important to use the following • Speak clearly and appropriately when communicating. • Slow your speech if necessary. • Use visual aids such as pictures‚ photograph or flashcards. •
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