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The Life of a Child Education of Young Children: Infants, Toddlers, and Pre-Schoolers Susan Snyder
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Numbers, numbers … There are 13,000,000 children 0-5 years old. Of these, there are 6,000,000 infants and toddlers. Of all mothers in the labor force, 65 % have children under age six 59 % of mothers with infants (children under age one) are in the labor force. Every day, 13 million preschoolers are in child care. This is three out of five young children. http://www.childrensdefense.org/earlychildhood/childcare/basics.asp
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In the past hour... 467 children were born. 47 were born to 15-19 year old children. 162 were born to unmarried moms. 37 have low birthweight. 7 are under 31/2 pounds. 74 have had no first-trimester prenatal care. 51 moms smoked during pregnancy. 3 will die before their 1st birthdays. 280 will be in daycare in six weeks. 18 babies will be born to10-14 year old children today. In America. Based on National Vital Statistics Reports: Volume 54, Number 9: Births: Preliminary Data for 2003; US Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, published November 23, 2004.
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Teachers are telling us... Millions of children are not prepared to start school. What does that mean? –Social readiness –Motor readiness –Cognitive readiness –Emotional readiness
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Every child born is... A culture of one Unique Complex Many have stable, nourishing, safe environments; Varied and rich experiences, Opportunities to develop relationships with adults and peers, And enter school ready to learn. Many do not.
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Who is responsible for children? Parents or home-caretakers in a parental role Early care providers –Head Start, –Early Start, –Private providers, –In-home providers http://www.childrensdefense.org/earlychildhood/childcare/basics.asp april 01
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The Young Child’s brain... A newborn's brain is only about 1/4 the size of an adult's. It grows to about 80% of an adult’s size by 3 years of age And 90% by age five. (Zero to Three) –Infants –Toddlers –Pre-Schoolers Is “plastic.” We are “neuron farmers.” Experience is the key to growth.
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What will we do to this child’s brain? Adults do or don’t make decisions about: –The environment – physical and emotional –The content of the curriculum Goals, Objectives, Delivery Systems –The allocation of time –Physical care – pre-natal, nutrition, safety –Trauma, Depression, Fear –Poverty –Different learners –Expectations, Developmental Compression –Use of media
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How will parents and caretakers make decisions? Will they know... –About visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learning? –The importance of play? –About the need to move? –How to model arts skills? –How to address individual needs? –How to develop self-reliance, independence, and problem solving skills? –How to build literacy skills? –Meaningful assessment? Professional development is critical.
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How do we make the process as important as the product?
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What is this?
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Is this the same? If I change it, what is different and what stays the same? compare and contrast
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What does it sound like? Auditory learners accent Crescendo? Upward? Decrescendo? Downward? triangle
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What does it look like? Is it part of something larger? Is it part of any letters? A B C D E F G H I J K Visual learners
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Where can I find it around me? Transfer and application of knowledge
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Can words have this shape? How can you make this word sound like a triangle? How can you make this shape by yourself, or with someone else? Kinesthetic learners
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Can a poem have this shape? I Am Happy Sometimes.
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How Will children learn to ask questions? Or: How can we keep them asking questions? Will they learn to value many answers rather than one right answer? Will parents and teachers learn what choices they have, and what will be “best” for each child? Will parents and teachers learn to nurture imagination?
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For young children, For the rest of their lives, The process is more important than the product.
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