"A Person's A Person, No Matter How Small"~ from Dr. Suess' 'Horton Hears A Who'
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
End of course Effective Programs and Practices
I am coming to the end of my third course. I have learned a lot and hope that my next course, Issues and Trends in the Early Childhood Field, continues to impart me with knowledge. Thanks to all my classmates for their support and collaboration. Stay Tuned!
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
My Supports
This week we are focusing on the importance of inclusion for every child in early childhood programs. Inclusion could mean children creating environments for children that are not only "ability diverse" but also those that have different cultural or linguistic backgrounds. Part of this assignment is for me to think about how factors in my daily life support me and what it would be like for me if those supports were gone.
The first factor I thought of was a practical/physical one: stools. I am not very tall, barely 5 feet, so I need help reaching the tall cupboards and shelfs in my home. If I didn't have my stools, I would have a really hard time getting things up or down! Stools are very helpful to me. I am also grateful I can pull my seat up in my minivan so I can drive. If I could not drive, I would go crazy! What does drive me crazy are the things in the store or supermarket on the very top shelves that I cannot reach without assistance.
Emotionally, I have great supports. My husband is a good provider and very supportive of me working on my master's degree and helps with the kids so I can get work done. My children, though they don't know it, are my motivation and support me with their unconditional love. I know also that the rest of my family is behind me and I can go them whenever I need something. If my emotional support was gone, it would be a lot harder for me to get motivated. Not that I couldn't, because I am not co-dependent and I do not rely on others in that way, but when one is alone and has no one to encourage or love them, it may be hard to see the reasons to keep pursuing your goals and ambitions.
The other part of this assignment is to imagine myself with a specific disability and the supports I would need. I am going to try to imagine what I would do if I was blind. The most important of our senses is our vision. We are visual creatures and we live in a world that is meant to be seen. If I could not see I would need to rely on someone or something almost all the time. Other than my family support system, I would need a dog, a cane and a really good sense of hearing, touch, smell and orientation. I would also need a good sense of humor and a positive outlook on life. Having such a disability could be very depressing and I would not be able to meet that challenge if I had a negative attitude.
Children with disabilities are unique, because they grow up with them. They do not know life any differently. I think that is a blessing. To go from having something such as the ability to walk, talk or see and then not be able to would be a much different challenge than having that be the way life has always been. As educators, we need to able to view children as the people they are, not the challenges they have in life. We will need to educate ourselves in the special accommodations and supports they may need to succeed in our programs, but have to remember after that they are much the same as every other child.
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
My Connections To Play
When children pretend, they’re using their imaginations to move beyond the bounds of reality. A stick can be a magic wand. A sock can be a puppet. A small child can be a superhero.
~Fred Rogers
American Children's Television Host
Pausing to listen to an airplane in the sky, stooping to watch a ladybug on a plant, sitting on a rock to watch the waves crash over the quayside—children have their own agendas and timescales. As they find out more about their world and their place in it; they work hard not to let adults hurry them. We need to hear their voices.
~Cathy Nutbrown
Contemporary British educational theorist
The quotes above represent play in my childhood. Playtime was a time for me to do what I wanted to do, how I wanted to do it. I was left relatively unsupervised and to my own devices, which suited me just fine. I learned a lot about society and my role in it through my play, and built my understanding of the world as well.
Growing up, my toy of choice was my baby dolls and my barbie dolls. I spent hours playing mommy and dressing and undressing my barbie dolls. I LOVED to play house. I read and colored all the time. When I wasn't confined indoors, I was outside, running around, playing with my sisters and neighborhood kids exploring or playing at whatever we could conjure up. Even though it was 30+ years ago, I remember my childhood playtime fondly.
Growing up, my siblings and I weren't allowed to be in the house when it was nice outside. My play in childhood was supported by parents and grandparents who understood the value of just being outside and exploring, but also that toys lent something to play as well. I had toys, but I seem to remember not having the ones I really wanted (or maybe I just wanted what my friends had). Even so, I still had lots of Barbies and baby dolls and whatever else my mother could offer me that nobly served their purpose in my play activities.
MY 3 ESSENTIAL PLAY ITEMS:
"GET OUTSIDE!" Playing outside was a big part of my youth.
Dream Date Barbie-I loved this outfit. Of all the Barbies, this is the one I remember the most.
My first Cabbage Patch (not my actual doll). She looked just liked this, her name was Trudy, and she was my cherished friend.
I am always amazed at the way play has changed in the last 15-20 years. Sometimes I wonder at the fact that up until recently childhood was not relegated to learning toys, electronics and ready made activities. We didn't have all that, and neither did the generations before us, and we all seemed to have done alright. My goal for my children is the love of the basics of play, toys that they have to figure out how to work and how to be outside and run around, something they are actually good at. They are learning that the best things in life don't have to be expensive toys or electronics.
As adults, we do not often get the opportunity to play like we did as children, but we can still do it. Playing WITH children can be very enjoyable. Building Lego cities or playing soccer with them are great ways to teach children the value of play and that grownups like it too. Fun and relaxation are very important to adults for decompressing and building relationships with others. We should always remember to keep play in our lives. After all "All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy".
Monday, November 4, 2013
Relationship Reflection
"No man is an island entire of itself, each man is a part of the continent, a part of the main".
~ John Donne, 1624.
This week we are discussing the importance of family relationships and partnerships. Relationships and partnerships are important because, as John Donne said so eloquently, we are all part of a larger system. There are many instances in life where we cannot function as just the individual, we need others. Human nature compels us to form relationships, which help society function. The partnerships and relationships I have in my life are few in number, but that is okay. Each has a give and take that provides me with something I need and something the other person needs.
The first, and most important, relationship in my life is with my husband. We have not just a relationship, but a partnership. We work together to raise our children and support our family, financially and emotionally. My husband is my friend and partner and an essential part of my support system. What makes our relationship a partnership is that we are working together toward a common goal as parents and spouses, which makes it different from most of my other relationships.
Another relationship that is important to me is the one I have with my mother. She has always been there for me and did her best to raise me and my sisters to be competent, independent women. We now have a relationship that is mutual in that she can ask me for advice and I feel fine offering it to her.
The other significant relationship in my life is with my sisters. We have been able to form friendships over the years as we left childhood and school behind, got married and started raising families of our own. Though we all live in different states, modern day communication allows us to stay in touch and support each other. As the oldest, it has always been my job to take care of them, but it is nice to now be able to have mutual relationships where they can help me now, too.
Leaving home and forming adult relationships outside of my family was a difficult experience for me at times. It took time and maturity, but I have learned that the relationships we form in life, while some are temporary and others are long lasting, each have something to contribute to us as individuals. Just like a garden, relationships and partnerships require care, attention, and maintenance.
Professionally, the best experience I have had in learning about partnerships and family relationships has been in working with children and their families. I am constantly learning how to navigate the intricacies of each individual family's dynamic and how to adjust to their comfort level when it comes to building relationships with them.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
New Course-EDUC 6161 Effective Programs and Practices
I am now in my third course of my master's program, Effective Programs and Practices. Here I will be discussing issues which effect early childhood programs in policy and practice, and what they mean to me. Enjoy! :)
Sunday, October 20, 2013
When I think of child development...
I am now in the last week of my second MSED course, Early Childhood Development. I want to share a few quotes and ideas I think are important when thinking about child development.
"Free the child's potential and you will transform him into the world." ~Maria Montessori
Image courtesy of Salvatore Vuono/FreeDigitalPhotos.net
"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." ~Frederick Douglass
While Frederick Douglass was not a child development expert, he was a man who saw the best and worst in humanity. Douglass was born a slave in Maryland in 1818, but, with the help of friends, was able to escape to freedom in Pennsylvania around the age of 20. He knew something about good people and bad people. I believe this quote from him is very relevant to the importance of proper love, nurturing and education of children.
Finally, the video below talks about how the science of early childhood development is showing the importance of early intervention in early childhood.
Friday, October 11, 2013
The Whole Child
In today's academic environment, when it comes to evaluating children, the mostly widely used method is the standardized test. Standardized tests measure a child's knowledge in a certain subject. This is fine in theory, but in reality the methods for testing are unreasonable and the results are questionable. Standardized tests do not take into account students learning styles or test taking abilities. Instead all children are expected to perform at the same level regardless of aptitude. And are these tests measuring success of the child or the school? Generally, the school. How this is supposed to measure a child's true potential and success is a mystery to me. If we are to give standardized tests, then should they not be given at the beginning and end of the year to measure what is known against what they learn throughout the year? Teaching to the test has taken priority over teaching to standards.
One teaching method that has been recently developed is Whole Child Approach. Launched in 2007, the Whole Child Initiative is an effort to change the conversation about education from a focus on narrowly defined academic achievement to one that promotes the long term development and success of children (The Whole Child, 2013). The approach integrates the individual social, cognitive and emotional needs of learners into daily teaching. Seeing the child as a whole person with faceted needs and abilities, not just a student to be taught facts and figures to, is what is needed in our education system today.
In Taiwan, junior high school students prepare to take high school entrance exams in hopes of scoring high enough to be admitted to a prestigious high school, and then prepare for national university entrance exams so they can attend four year university. If they don't score high enough, they can't apply to these schools (Huang, n.d.). That is much different in the U.S. where entrance exams are not taken until applying for college and entrance exams are required, but students are not precluded from applying to most colleges by their scores.
References:
Huang, K. (n.d.). Taiwan and U.S. education comparisons. Retrieved from http://sitemaker.umich.edu/huangk.356/standardized_testing
The Whole Child. (2013). The whole child approach. Retrieved from http://www.wholechildeducation.org
One teaching method that has been recently developed is Whole Child Approach. Launched in 2007, the Whole Child Initiative is an effort to change the conversation about education from a focus on narrowly defined academic achievement to one that promotes the long term development and success of children (The Whole Child, 2013). The approach integrates the individual social, cognitive and emotional needs of learners into daily teaching. Seeing the child as a whole person with faceted needs and abilities, not just a student to be taught facts and figures to, is what is needed in our education system today.
In Taiwan, junior high school students prepare to take high school entrance exams in hopes of scoring high enough to be admitted to a prestigious high school, and then prepare for national university entrance exams so they can attend four year university. If they don't score high enough, they can't apply to these schools (Huang, n.d.). That is much different in the U.S. where entrance exams are not taken until applying for college and entrance exams are required, but students are not precluded from applying to most colleges by their scores.
References:
Huang, K. (n.d.). Taiwan and U.S. education comparisons. Retrieved from http://sitemaker.umich.edu/huangk.356/standardized_testing
The Whole Child. (2013). The whole child approach. Retrieved from http://www.wholechildeducation.org
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
The Consequences of Stress on Children's Development
This week my assignment is to write about how myself or someone I know was affected by any of the following: war, poverty, hunger, natural disasters, racism, isolation, noise, chaos, disease, environmental pollution, or violence. Fortunately, I have not had to deal with any of these horrible things in my life. My mother's brother died of leukemia when I was about 2 1/2 and while it did not affect me directly at the time, it had a profound effect on my mother and her family. It is something that is still very difficult for them to talk about and there remains an emotional grief that I do not believe has been adequately dealt to this day. While I have not experienced any of the things on above, my parents divorced when I was about 5 or 6 and it was very difficult on my sisters and I because of the things that the adults in our life were going through. I was sent to live with my grandmother for a time as I was in school, my sisters were not yet. Being away from my mother was difficult and it remains a time that is vivid in my memory. It took my mother a long time to recover from her divorce and to get back on her feet and of course this had a huge impact on my sisters and me. Without getting into specifics, times were very hard emotionally and it was very stressful on us me, as I was the oldest and responsible to help with my younger sisters.
The second part of this assignment was to pick a part of the world and the stressors children face there. I would have picked Taiwan, but it is an industrialized country and I did not think that their stressors are very much different than ours. So I thought about where children are facing the worst kinds of stressors. Somalia came to mind. Somalia is a worn torn country on the Horn of Africa, bordered on the east by the Indian Ocean and the countries of Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya to the west and south. Somalia has been in constant chaos and anarchy since the early 1990's. Warlords and Islamist militias have battled each other. Droughts have plagued the area for decades. According to UNICEF (2013), children in this country face the worst kind of deprivation and abuse in the world due to "restrictions on humanitarian access, reduced coping mechanisms, poor performance of crops, lack of access to markets, restriction of commercial and population movements, lack of income generating opportunities, and deep rooted poverty. High prices present the overriding barrier to food access." 1 in 10 Somali children die before their first birthday; Somalia has the largest population of unvaccinated children. As they grow up, they face poverty, war, drought, hunger, disease, chaos and violence. Boys are recruited as child soldiers, girls face early marriage and genital mutilation. Obviously, repeated exposure to all of these stressors is going to take a toll on these children's development. We know that stress affects the brain and traumatic or stressful events can cause major depression, PTSD, and ADD/Hyperactivity, and other physical, mental and emotional disorders and brain damage.
Considering that we live in relative safety and security in this country, it is extremely difficult to imagine that so many children face these horrible things on a daily basis. It really makes us put our own stressors in perspective.
References:
UNICEF. (2013). The situation of women and children in Somalia. Retrieved from http://www.unicef.org/somalia/children.html
The second part of this assignment was to pick a part of the world and the stressors children face there. I would have picked Taiwan, but it is an industrialized country and I did not think that their stressors are very much different than ours. So I thought about where children are facing the worst kinds of stressors. Somalia came to mind. Somalia is a worn torn country on the Horn of Africa, bordered on the east by the Indian Ocean and the countries of Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya to the west and south. Somalia has been in constant chaos and anarchy since the early 1990's. Warlords and Islamist militias have battled each other. Droughts have plagued the area for decades. According to UNICEF (2013), children in this country face the worst kind of deprivation and abuse in the world due to "restrictions on humanitarian access, reduced coping mechanisms, poor performance of crops, lack of access to markets, restriction of commercial and population movements, lack of income generating opportunities, and deep rooted poverty. High prices present the overriding barrier to food access." 1 in 10 Somali children die before their first birthday; Somalia has the largest population of unvaccinated children. As they grow up, they face poverty, war, drought, hunger, disease, chaos and violence. Boys are recruited as child soldiers, girls face early marriage and genital mutilation. Obviously, repeated exposure to all of these stressors is going to take a toll on these children's development. We know that stress affects the brain and traumatic or stressful events can cause major depression, PTSD, and ADD/Hyperactivity, and other physical, mental and emotional disorders and brain damage.
Considering that we live in relative safety and security in this country, it is extremely difficult to imagine that so many children face these horrible things on a daily basis. It really makes us put our own stressors in perspective.
References:
UNICEF. (2013). The situation of women and children in Somalia. Retrieved from http://www.unicef.org/somalia/children.html
Monday, September 9, 2013
Immunizations
This week I will be discussing a topic important to me and to child development: immunizations. In recent years, this topic has become a heated debate as opponents of immunizations have become concerned that some immunizations can lead to developmental disorders such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The scientific community has stated equivocally that there is no link between ASD and vaccines.
The reason I chose this topic is because I have two children of my own who were born internationally and I was drawn into this debate by all they hype in the media about vaccines around the times they came home. I did my research though and found that the U.S. has the safest and most effective vaccine supply in the world. Vaccines protect us and the community against truly terrible diseases. Vaccines have increased the average life span by 30 years and they save lives. To me the "research" of the link of ASD to vaccines is tenuous at best. I am not willing to risk my children's overall health on an assumption. It really angers me that others are willing to risk not only their child's health, but that of others by refusing to get their child immunized.
In my opinion, assuming the very small risk associated with any vaccine is better than the risk of not being immunized. Vaccines create "herd immunity" through immunization to disease. If a critical portion of a community is immunized it creates a level of protection for most of the community, as a chance of outbreak is greatly reduced. When less and less become immunized, then the risk of outbreak increases. This can be seen in the recent pertussis (whooping cough) outbreak in Texas. The rise in cases is attributed to a new vaccine and less children being immunized. Since infants cannot receive the vaccine until 4 months, pregnant mothers are encouraged to take the vaccine during pregnancy. The website www.vaccines.gov is a great source of information about vaccines. It is very easy to read and user friendly.
I will continue my comparison with Taiwan. According to the American Journal of Public Health (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1449171/), in Taiwan all children are required to receive 16 doses of vaccines by 18 months of age, including 1 dose of bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG/TB) vaccine, 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine, 4 doses of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis, 4 doses of oral poliomyelitis vaccine, 1 dose of measles vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine, and 2 doses of Japanese encephalitis vaccine. This is not as much as the U.S. requires, but the BCG is not administered or required here. When we brought our children home, they had to have several catchup vaccines that were not routinely give in Taiwan. Also, one of my children kept popping positive for TB, but since I knew that infants were give the TB vaccine in Taiwan I was able to get them a blood test and verify it was the vaccine that was causing the false positive.
Being informed and advocating for your children's health is one of the greatest things you can do for your children. It does make one feel a bit helpless when you see parents who don't do that. But we can be sources of information and encouragement to those parents who maybe just need a little help getting access to the facts.
The reason I chose this topic is because I have two children of my own who were born internationally and I was drawn into this debate by all they hype in the media about vaccines around the times they came home. I did my research though and found that the U.S. has the safest and most effective vaccine supply in the world. Vaccines protect us and the community against truly terrible diseases. Vaccines have increased the average life span by 30 years and they save lives. To me the "research" of the link of ASD to vaccines is tenuous at best. I am not willing to risk my children's overall health on an assumption. It really angers me that others are willing to risk not only their child's health, but that of others by refusing to get their child immunized.
In my opinion, assuming the very small risk associated with any vaccine is better than the risk of not being immunized. Vaccines create "herd immunity" through immunization to disease. If a critical portion of a community is immunized it creates a level of protection for most of the community, as a chance of outbreak is greatly reduced. When less and less become immunized, then the risk of outbreak increases. This can be seen in the recent pertussis (whooping cough) outbreak in Texas. The rise in cases is attributed to a new vaccine and less children being immunized. Since infants cannot receive the vaccine until 4 months, pregnant mothers are encouraged to take the vaccine during pregnancy. The website www.vaccines.gov is a great source of information about vaccines. It is very easy to read and user friendly.
I will continue my comparison with Taiwan. According to the American Journal of Public Health (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1449171/), in Taiwan all children are required to receive 16 doses of vaccines by 18 months of age, including 1 dose of bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG/TB) vaccine, 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine, 4 doses of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis, 4 doses of oral poliomyelitis vaccine, 1 dose of measles vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine, and 2 doses of Japanese encephalitis vaccine. This is not as much as the U.S. requires, but the BCG is not administered or required here. When we brought our children home, they had to have several catchup vaccines that were not routinely give in Taiwan. Also, one of my children kept popping positive for TB, but since I knew that infants were give the TB vaccine in Taiwan I was able to get them a blood test and verify it was the vaccine that was causing the false positive.
Being informed and advocating for your children's health is one of the greatest things you can do for your children. It does make one feel a bit helpless when you see parents who don't do that. But we can be sources of information and encouragement to those parents who maybe just need a little help getting access to the facts.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Birth (Beginning of EDUC 6160:Early Childhood Development)
I am now in the beginning of my second course, Early Childhood Development, in my Master's program. We will be learning about the stages of early childhood development. This week we were given the assignment to write about a personal birthing experience. I have none to share. My children were adopted and I have never given birth. I have never been in the room with any of my sisters when they gave birth, nor with a close friend or relative.
I wish that I had been the one to give birth to my children. They are such a blessing to me and I am grateful to the women who brought them to me.
My children were born in Taiwan so I chose to read about childbirth in that country. Taiwan is an industrialized nation that practices western medicine. 99% of women give birth in hospitals. Much of what I read states that many of the practices used on Taiwanese women in childbirth are decades old practices and are highly discouraged, or not at all recommended, by the World Health Organization. Women (almost 100%) are routinely administered I.V's, enemas and shaved and given episiotomies, and about half are given labor inducing drugs. Also, they are constantly strapped to fetal monitoring machines (recommended monitoring every 30-45 mins if higher risk), so they cannot get up and walk around. Cesarean sections account for almost 35% of births (a good level would be 12-15%). Women are made to give birth laying flat on their back. Medical intervention is seen by Taiwan doctors as a safety precaution, but health officials have been warning that such procedures are contributing to higher mortality rates in Taiwan, while many other countries' rates are falling. Tradition combined with a lack of understanding of how these practices are harmful rather than helpful continue to keep the practices ongoing in a large number of hospitals throughout the country. (http://taiwanonymous.blogspot.com).
I do believe these birthing practices are in many ways detrimental to not only the mothers, but the infants. High rates of cesarean sections, unnecessary use of drugs, fetal monitoring and less than desirable birthing positions do have ill effects on the infants, evident in the high infant mortality rates in Taiwan. To what degree they affect normal development, I do not know. I think the care a mother takes with her pregnancy prior to birth is more important to development than the birthing. My children have developed normally and are on track. Their birth mothers had access to prenatal care and gave birth in hospitals, but I don't know the circumstances. Like any mother, I am just glad they are healthy and thriving.
References:
Taiwanonymous.blogspot.com (2009, February 12). On childbirth in Taiwan: Taiwanese women, why aren't you angry? Retrieved from http://taiwanonymous.blogspot.com/2009/02/on-childbirth-in-taiwan-taiwanese-women.html
I wish that I had been the one to give birth to my children. They are such a blessing to me and I am grateful to the women who brought them to me.
My children were born in Taiwan so I chose to read about childbirth in that country. Taiwan is an industrialized nation that practices western medicine. 99% of women give birth in hospitals. Much of what I read states that many of the practices used on Taiwanese women in childbirth are decades old practices and are highly discouraged, or not at all recommended, by the World Health Organization. Women (almost 100%) are routinely administered I.V's, enemas and shaved and given episiotomies, and about half are given labor inducing drugs. Also, they are constantly strapped to fetal monitoring machines (recommended monitoring every 30-45 mins if higher risk), so they cannot get up and walk around. Cesarean sections account for almost 35% of births (a good level would be 12-15%). Women are made to give birth laying flat on their back. Medical intervention is seen by Taiwan doctors as a safety precaution, but health officials have been warning that such procedures are contributing to higher mortality rates in Taiwan, while many other countries' rates are falling. Tradition combined with a lack of understanding of how these practices are harmful rather than helpful continue to keep the practices ongoing in a large number of hospitals throughout the country. (http://taiwanonymous.blogspot.com).
I do believe these birthing practices are in many ways detrimental to not only the mothers, but the infants. High rates of cesarean sections, unnecessary use of drugs, fetal monitoring and less than desirable birthing positions do have ill effects on the infants, evident in the high infant mortality rates in Taiwan. To what degree they affect normal development, I do not know. I think the care a mother takes with her pregnancy prior to birth is more important to development than the birthing. My children have developed normally and are on track. Their birth mothers had access to prenatal care and gave birth in hospitals, but I don't know the circumstances. Like any mother, I am just glad they are healthy and thriving.
References:
Taiwanonymous.blogspot.com (2009, February 12). On childbirth in Taiwan: Taiwanese women, why aren't you angry? Retrieved from http://taiwanonymous.blogspot.com/2009/02/on-childbirth-in-taiwan-taiwanese-women.html
Monday, August 19, 2013
Reflections on Foundations: Early Childhood
I am now in week 8, the final week, of the first course in my Master's of Education in Early Childhood Studies program. It has been 8 weeks already?? The time has gone so fast. I really learned a lot from this course. Learning online was definitely a challenge at the beginning, but after the first week or two, I got into a pretty good routine that will carry me through the rest of the program. I think the things I learned from this course WILL be the foundations for my learnings in the rest of the program and will make a positive contribution to my career as a early childhood professional. I am so glad I made the decision to go with this program. I am looking forward to the next course, Early Childhood Development.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Code of Ethics and Ethical Conduct in Early Childhood Education
The NAEYC and the Division for Early Childhood (DEC) of the Council for Exceptional Children both have position statements which offer guidelines for responsible behavior and professional practice. Below I have listed three that are most meaningful to me.
1. We shall demonstrate in our behavior and language respect and appreciation for the unique value and human potential of each child. (DEC)
2. Above all, we shall not harm children. We shall not participate in practices that are emotionally damaging, physically harmful, disrespectful, degrading, dangerous, exploitative, or intimidating to children. (NAEYC)
3. In a caring, cooperative workplace, human dignity is respected, professional satisfaction is promoted and positive relationships are developed and sustained. (NAEYC)
I chose these because my personal code of conduct and professionalism includes respect for all children, families and staff; advocating for children and creating a safe and nurturing environment; and ensuring all staff are happy and productive.
Links:
NAEYC Code of Conduct and Committment to Ethical Conduct: http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/PSETH05.pdf
DEC Code of Ethics:
http://www.dec-sped.org/uploads/docs/about_dec/position_concept_papers/Code%20of%20Ethics_updated_Aug2009.pdf
1. We shall demonstrate in our behavior and language respect and appreciation for the unique value and human potential of each child. (DEC)
2. Above all, we shall not harm children. We shall not participate in practices that are emotionally damaging, physically harmful, disrespectful, degrading, dangerous, exploitative, or intimidating to children. (NAEYC)
3. In a caring, cooperative workplace, human dignity is respected, professional satisfaction is promoted and positive relationships are developed and sustained. (NAEYC)
I chose these because my personal code of conduct and professionalism includes respect for all children, families and staff; advocating for children and creating a safe and nurturing environment; and ensuring all staff are happy and productive.
Links:
NAEYC Code of Conduct and Committment to Ethical Conduct: http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/PSETH05.pdf
DEC Code of Ethics:
http://www.dec-sped.org/uploads/docs/about_dec/position_concept_papers/Code%20of%20Ethics_updated_Aug2009.pdf
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Course Resources
Below are course resources for Walden University EDUC 6005:
Position Statements and Influential Practices
- NAEYC. (2009). Developmentally appropriate practice in early childhood programs serving children from birth through age 8. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/dap
- NAEYC. (2009). Where we stand on child abuse prevention. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/ChildAbuseStand.pdf
- NAEYC. (2009). Where we stand on school readiness. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/Readiness.pdf
- NAEYC. (2009). Where we stand on responding to linguistic and cultural diversity. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/diversity.pdf
- NAEYC. (2003). Early childhood curriculum, assessment, and program evaluation: Building an effective, accountable system in programs for children birth through age 8. Retrieved May 26, 2010, fromhttp://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/pscape.pdf
- NAEYC. (2009, April). Early childhood inclusion: A summary. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.naeyc.org/files/naeyc/file/positions/DEC_NAEYC_ECSummary_A.pdf
- Zero to Three: National Center for Infants, Toddlers, and Families. (2010). Infant-toddler policy agenda. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://main.zerotothree.org/site/PageServer?pagename=ter_pub_infanttodller
- FPG Child Development Institute. (2006, September). Evidence-based practice empowers early childhood professionals and families. (FPG Snapshot, No. 33). Retrieved May 26, 2010, fromhttp://community.fpg.unc.edu/sites/community.fpg.unc.edu/files/imce/documents/FPG_Snapshot_N33_EvidenceBasedPractice_09-2006.pdf
Note: The following article can be found in the Walden University Library databases. - Turnbull, A., Zuna, N., Hong, J. Y., Hu, X., Kyzar, K., Obremski, S., et al. (2010). Knowledge-to-action guides. Teaching Exceptional Children, 42(3), 42-53.
Use the Academic Search Complete database, and search using the article's title.
Global Support for Children's Rights and Well-Being
- Article: UNICEF (n.d.). Fact sheet: A summary of the rights under the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Retrieved May 26, 2010, from http://www.unicef.org/crc/files/Rights_overview.pdf
- Websites:
- World Forum Foundation
http://worldforumfoundation.org/wf/wp/about-us
This link connects you to the mission statement of this organization. Make sure to watch the media segment on this webpage - World Organization for Early Childhood Education
http://www.omep-usnc.org/
Read about OMEP's mission. - Association for Childhood Education International
http://acei.org/
Click on "Mission/Vision" and "Guiding Principles and Beliefs" and read these statements. - Selected Early Childhood Organizations
- National Association for the Education of Young Children
http://www.naeyc.org/ - The Division for Early Childhood
http://www.dec-sped.org/ - Zero to Three: National Center for Infants, Toddlers, and Families
http://www.zerotothree.org/ - WESTED
http://www.wested.org/cs/we/print/docs/we/home.htm - Harvard Education Letter
http://www.hepg.org/hel/topic/85 - FPG Child Development Institute
http://www.fpg.unc.edu/ - Administration for Children and Families Headstart's National Research Conference
http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/hsrc/ - HighScope
http://www.highscope.org/ - Children's Defense Fund
http://www.childrensdefense.org/ - Center for Child Care Workforce
http://www.ccw.org/ - Council for Exceptional Children
http://www.cec.sped.org/ - Institute for Women's Policy Research
http://www.iwpr.org/ - National Center for Research on Early Childhood Education
http://www.ncrece.org/wordpress/ - National Child Care Association
http://www.nccanet.org/ - National Institute for Early Education Research
http://nieer.org/ - Pre[K]Now
http://www.pewstates.org/projects/pre-k-now-328067 - Voices for America's Children
http://www.voices.org/ - The Erikson Institute
http://www.erikson.edu/
Selected Professional Journals Available in the Walden LibraryTip: Use the A-to-Z e-journal list to search for specific journal titles. (Go to "How Do I...?", select "Tips for Specific Formats and Resources," and then "e-journals" to find this search interface.)- YC Young Children
- Childhood
- Journal of Child & Family Studies
- Child Study Journal
- Multicultural Education
- Early Childhood Education Journal
- Journal of Early Childhood Research
- International Journal of Early Childhood
- Early Childhood Research Quarterly
- Developmental Psychology
- Social Studies
- Maternal & Child Health Journal
- International Journal of Early Years Education
Resources I am contributing to this list:
http://edweek.org Online journal focused on current issues in education, including ECE.
www.childdevelopmentinfo.com Information child development stages.
http://www.brazelton-institute.com and http://www.brazeltontouchpoints.org For anyone interested in infant development and methods.
- National Association for the Education of Young Children
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Quotes
The following are quotes from leaders and major contributors in the child development field.
"When we strengthen families, we ultimately strengthen the community. Our goal is that parents "When we strengthen families, we ultimately strengthen the community. Our goal is that parents everywhere work with supportive providers, feel confident in their parenting role, and form strong, resilient attachments with their children. To help achieve this, providers must be responsive to parents, knowledgeable about child development, and eager to see every parent succeed."
"The message I most often emphasize to parents and caregivers is this: listen to the baby. Babies have so much they can tell us if we just know how to listen."
-T. Berry Brazelton, M.D., noted pediatrician
"This brain research tells us that adults---not just parents, but teachers and providers too, function as either protective or risk factors in children’s development. And that means we must, as a society, do whatever we can to ensure that the teachers and providers who spend their days with children have the preparation, support and reward that allow them to play that protective role in children’s lives."
-Marcy Whitebook, Ph.D., Director of the Center for the Study of Early Childcare Employment, UC Berkeley
"When I think of the word passion and the meaning of the word, what comes to mind are what are my values, what are my beliefs? What are the ideas that lead me to action? What do I do so naturally that perhaps seems natural to me but may be challenging to others?"
-Letitia Lara, LCSW, Regional Manager, Outreach and Professional Development, Zero to Three
Monday, July 15, 2013
My Personal Childhood Web
A childhood web is meant to show the relationships that surround a child and how they contribute to that child's overall development. Below is a representation of the people in my early childhood who cared and nurtured for me or showed me they cared for me. My immediate family were the central figures in my life and I cannot recall anyone else that really affected my life substantially in a positive way other than them. We moved constantly growing up and I did not have the fortune of having close relationships with my extended family, teachers or other adults. I often wonder what it would have been like to have those relationships growing up. My web was very small, but positive and nurturing.
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Art
This photo is of an art project my daughter did a couple of weeks ago. We were painting and she has this habit of doing a great picture and then smearing over it with her hand and covering up her artwork. Like this:
In order to refocus her creativity, I painted a picture of a house with rainbows, clouds, trees and birds to show her that you can paint an actual picture of something. It was very rudimentary but she was impressed, nonetheless! So she then sat down and did this painting:
In order to refocus her creativity, I painted a picture of a house with rainbows, clouds, trees and birds to show her that you can paint an actual picture of something. It was very rudimentary but she was impressed, nonetheless! So she then sat down and did this painting:
I was very proud of her creation and vision.
Wherever You Are...
As part of our assignment this week, we were to share a children's book that we especially like. There are so many beautiful books for children that it is hard to choose, but one that is especially meaningful to me is the book Wherever You Are, My Love Will Find You by Nancy Tillman. This book tells a child that he was wanted more than he will ever know and that his mother's (or father's) love will always be with him. I think it is so important for all children to really know that they are loved, treasured and wanted, no matter what their situation in life. It is meaningful to me because my children are adopted and I hope they can take the message in this book to heart and know that it is how I feel for them. They should always remember that their dad and I love them no matter where they are or what they are doing, even when they are all grown up.
Links
In the right column I have added links to the blogs of my classmates at Walden who are also working on blogs about Early Childhood Education/Development. In the left column I will add links to websites I think are useful and informative for Early Childhood Development. Please feel free to message me with suggestions to websites.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
The Journey Begins
Welcome to my blog. My name is BethAnn Keough. As I start my journey through the Early Childhood Development master's program at Walden University, I will be posting information about early childhood development, what I am learning and resources from which to learn and explore in the field of early childhood education and development. I am excited to start on this process and hope you will join me and learn along with me. (Week 1)
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