Naturalistic Curriculum Model Goal: to increase the infant/young child’s control, participation, and interaction in natural social and physical environments.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Recipe for Developing and Implementing an Effective IEP
Advertisements

Creating Supportive, Inclusive Placements for Deaf Preschoolers The River School Model Sarah Wainscott.
Integrating CSEFEL into the Work with the Framework and Foundations
SCHOOL LEADERS: THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL INDUCTION
Developmentally Appropriate Practice
Collaborating with Families: Partnering for Success
Purpose of Instruction
PORTFOLIO.
LearningGames and Early Childhood Curriculum Connecting Center-Based and Home Learning Using a Comprehensive Curriculum Hilary Parrish Product Development.
1 Nebraska’s Pathway to Early Learning Guidelines.
Language and Literacy Domain California Preschool Learning Foundations Volume 1 Published by the California Department of Education (2008) LanguageandLiteracy.
Standards, Assessment, and Curriculum
Unit 5 – Planning and Integrating: Key Topic 1 1.
Developmentally Appropriate Practices (DAP)
Ch. 1: A Functional Language Approach Owens, Robert J. (2010). Language disorders. A functional approach to assessment and intervention, 5 th Edition.
DED 101 Educational Psychology, Guidance And Counseling
Observing Children: A Tool for Assessment
High Quality Kindergarten Programs 8/6/2015 Division of Early Childhood Education.
What should be the basis of
NAEYC Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs Serving Children from Birth through Age 8.
EC Special Educators conceptualizer synthesizer instructor evaluator listener.
An Introduction to The SCERTS ® Model Collaborators- Barry Prizant, Ph.D. Amy Wetherby, Ph.D. Emily Rubin, MS Amy Laurent, Ed.M, OTR/L Copyright 2010-
Introducing the SCERTS framework Information for family/whānau and educators Adapted from: Hawke’s Bay Early Intervention Team presentation 2010 Handout.
Research to Practice: Implementing the Teaching Pyramid Mary Louise Hemmeter Vanderbilt University
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT 1 PSYCHOLOGY 3050: Social Construction of Mind
Coaching for School Readiness
Home, school & community partnerships Leadership & co-ordination Strategies & targets Monitoring & assessment Classroom teaching strategies Professional.
Resources to Support the Use of DEC’s Recommended Practices This presentation and handout were developed by Camille Catlett.
Language and Literacy Unit 4 - Getting Ready for the Unit
ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with.
Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (INTASC)
Building Blocks for Including and Teaching Preschoolers with Special Needs Susan Sandall, Ph.D. University of Washington
1 Enhancing Services in Natural Environments Presenter: Mary Beth Bruder March 3, :00- 2:30 EST Part of a Web-based Conference Call Series Sponsored.
Helping Families, Schools and Communities Understand Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder Teresa Boggs, M. S. CCC-SLP Director of Clinical Services.
Autism Marked by severe impairment of communication, social, and emotional functioning Characteristics Apparent sensory deficit Severe affect isolation.
Curriculum and Learning Omaha Public Schools
9/11/2014ECSE 602 Dr. Y. Xu1 ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities This session will address: Preschool Blocks.
Assessing Learners with Special Needs: An Applied Approach, 6e © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Special Considerations of.
Early Intervention Support for Children and Families.
Intervention: First Words “Parents are their children’s first and most enduring teachers” (Kaiser & Hancock, 2003, p. 9)
CHAPTER 3: Language Development Among Children of Linguistic Diversity Modified by Dr. Laura Taddei Language Development in Early Childhood Education Fourth.
13-1 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Nutrition, Health, and Safety for Young Children: Promoting Wellness, 1e Sorte, Daeschel, Amador.
Planning and Integrating Curriculum: Unit 4, Key Topic 1http://facultyinitiative.wested.org/1.
The Creative Curriculum for Infants, Toddlers, & Twos
Introduction to the Framework Unit 1 - Getting Ready for the Unit
Goals of Transition Plans  To ensure continuity of services  To minimize disruptions to the family system by facilitating adaptation to change  To ensure.
Ilene Schwartz, Ph.D., BCBA-D
Planning and Integrating Curriculum: Unit 4, Key Topic 3http://facultyinitiative.wested.org/1.
WestEd.org Infant/Toddler Reflective Curriculum Planning Process Getting to Know Infants Through Observation.
©2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Using Program Assessments to Look at Children in Groups “Pointing the finger of blame at others.
Developmentally Appropriate Practices Cynthia Daniel
Vermont Early Childhood MTSS
Clinton County RESA Early On ® Training & Technical Assistance Higher Education Introduction to: Developing Functional IFSP Outcomes to Meet the Unique.
Introduction to the Framework: Unit 1, Getting Readyhttp://facultyinitiative.wested.org/1.
Introduction to the Framework: Unit 1, Getting Readyhttp://
COACHING. Coaching focuses on partnering with families. This is a shift from the expert telling parents what to do in a top down fashion to a coach who.
Social-Emotional Development Domain California Preschool Learning Foundations Volume 1 Published by the California Department of Education (2008) Social-
AUTISM: Methodologies and Recent research Ilene S. Schwartz University of Washington
Rationale for Inclusion Legal Mandates Head Start Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Americans with Disabilities Act Benefits for children with.
Developmentally Appropriate Practices. Five Guidelines For Developmentally Appropriate Practices.
Classroom management for learners with disabilities.
Developmentally Appropriate Practices. Five Guidelines For Developmentally Appropriate Practices.
Creative Curriculum and GOLD Assessment: Early Childhood Competency Based Evaluation System By Carol Bottom.
Supporting Effective Inclusion through the Use of Evidence-based Practices for Preschoolers with ASD ANN SAM, PH.D. ANN COX, PH.D.
Using the CLASS tool to Improve Instructional Practices in Early Childhood Tracie Dow and Felicia Owo.
A Project LIFT Training Module
2015 Leadership Conference “All In: Achieving Results Together”
Early Childhood Inclusion at the Frank Porter Graham Child Care Program: A Collaborative and Routines-Based Approach.
Developmentally appropriate practices and specialized instruction are fundamentally dependent upon each other in early childhood special education. Record.
Chapter 11 Reflections on Intentional Teaching
Presentation transcript:

Naturalistic Curriculum Model Goal: to increase the infant/young child’s control, participation, and interaction in natural social and physical environments. This is a process model with content and instructional techniques derived through environmental analysis. Content of instruction: goals are developed on an individual basis, reflecting the sill demands of natural, age-appropriate environments. The content is responsive to the requirements of the increasing number of environments that children will participate in. - Noonan & McCormick p. 134

Naturalistic Curriculum Models Reference curriculum to the unique needs and lifestyles of the child, family, peers, and community. Plan instruction that can be implemented naturally in daily family routines. Emphasize skills that are functional now and in the future. - McDonnel & Hardman (1988)

Content of Instruction Age-appropriate skills Skills for participating in present and future environments: Ecological inventory Survival skills

Instructional Focus Newborns: parent-child interaction Procedures: observation and specific descriptive feedback Infants: parent-child and broader social experiences (including objects) Procedures (Dunst, et al. 1987), : Sensitivity to child behavior Interpretation of “intent” Responsiveness Encouraging initiations Supporting and encouraging competence

Instructional Focus Focus: appropriate social-communication interactions in natural environments, self- help skills, cognitive development Procedures: Promoting socialization within and outside of family context Responsiveness to child’s interests and communicative attempts Developing routines around everyday tasks Promoting problem solving abilities

Instructional Methods Environmental arrangement Guided learning Violating expectations Responsiveness to child initiations Encouraging ongoing activities Supporting and encouraging competence

Approaches to Naturalistic Teaching Milieu : focuses on bridging the gap between the training environment and the natural environment Nurturant-naturalistic: moves from direct instruction to education in which the child takes the interactive lead and to naturalistic contexts. Joint-action: establishes structured interaction routines through which to teach skills Transactional intervention program: focuses on the quality of the interactive behavioral match between children and their primary caregivers Natural language teaching: developed for children with autism

Environmental Adaptations Design: amount and arrangement of space Materials: smaller manipulative items Equipment: furniture and large items Grouping Scheduling

1. Physical setting 2. Temporal characteristics 3. Social context 4. Activity system 5. Relationships 6. Child 7. Adult/teacher Environmental Systems

Time of Day Preceding Activities/ Scheduled Activity/ Subsequent Activities Individual Child’s Schedule Group’s Schedule Adults’ Schedules Perspectives of Time

Map the Child’s Day Describe the flow of activities in which the child participates across the day. Identify the times when he/she is available for teaching in conversation alone or in small groups. Identify group times when language goal might be embedded in a larger group activity. Identify key conversation partners and assess their availability as language teachers or conversational partners.

Analyze the Child’s Day Identify highly preferred activities and partners. Analyze identified teaching times in terms of the child’s communication goals. Examine the child’s day in terms of the child’s communication goals. Examine the child’s day in terms of supports for communication (models of language, access to listeners, support for total communication and emergent literacy).

Map the Adults’ Days Begin with your daily schedule. Note who you talked to, what you do, what your teaching and classroom management agenda looks like. Note group sizes, goals of activities, support provided by others in the classroom, transitions, etc. Think about goals and priorities for each activity. Use your intentions as well as what you accomplished in mapping the day.

Analyze the Adults’ Days  Identify the times in which skills are currently being taught formally or informally.  Identify additional times for teaching that emerge as you analyze the day from the teacher and child perspective.  Note the strategies the teacher currently uses to teach language skills including specific target language, concepts, social interaction skills, emergent literacy skills, direction following, etc. Note the types of talk the teacher generally uses in the classroom.

Activities & Skills Children:Setting:Date:

Steps in Naturalistic Curriculum Ecological assessment Set priorities Determine present levels of performance Establish instructional objectives Develop instructional plans Establish an instructional schedule Instruct Evaluate

References Brown, J., Collins, A., & Duguid, P. (1989). Situate cognition and culture of learning. Educational Researcher, 17, Duchan, J., & Weitzner-Lin, B. (1987). Nurturan-naturalistic intervention for language-impaired children. ASHA, 29, Hart, B., & Risley, T. (1975). Incidental teachingof language in the preschool. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 8, Kaier, A. P., Hendrickson, J., & Alpert, C. (1991). Milieu language teaching: Asecond look. In R. Gable (Ed.), Advances in mental retardation and developmental disabilities, (Volume IV, pp ). London, Jessica Kingsley Publisher. Koegel, R. & Johnson, J., (1989). Motivating language use in autistic children. In G. Dawson (Ed.) Autism (pp ). New York: Guilford Press. Mahoney, G. & Powell, A. (1984). The transactional intervention program. Woodhaven, MI: Woodhaven School District. Mcdonald, J. (1989). Becoming partners with children. San Antonio, TX: Special Press, Inc. McDonnell & Hardman (1988). A synthesis of best practice guidelines for early childhood services. Journal of the Division for Early Childhood, 12, Noonan, M. J., & McCormick, L. (1993). Early intervention in natural environments: Methods and procedures. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole Publishing Co. Odom, S. L. & McLean, M. E. (1996). Early Intervention/Early Childhood Special Education:Recommended Practices. Austin, TX: Pro-ed. Warren. S., & Kaiser, A. (1986). Incidental language teaching: A critical review. Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 51,