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Creating Developmenta lly Appropriate Classrooms The Importance of Age and Developmental Status Chapter Ten

Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

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Chapter Ten. Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms. The Importance of Age and Developmental Status. Rationale for Developmentally Appropriate Practice. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Creating Developmentally

AppropriateClassrooms

The Importance of Age and Developmental

Status

Chapter Ten

Page 2: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Rationale for Developmentally Appropriate Practice

Developmentally appropriate practice (DAP): involves providing learning environments, instructional content, and pedagogical practices that are responsive to the major attributes and salient needs and interests of a given life period in order to facilitate continuing developmental progress

Continued…

Page 3: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Developmentally appropriate practices result from decisions about the education and well-being of children based on three important kinds of knowledge:

What is known about child development and learning

What is known about the strengths, interests, and needs of each individual child

What is known about the social and cultural contexts in which children live

Page 4: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Barriers to Developmentally Appropriate Practice

According to the NAEYC, the goal of early childhood education, helping each child be “ready to learn” when he or she enters school, has not been fully realized.

Economic goals for schooling place pressures on schools to teach more and more cognitive material to younger and younger children.

Page 5: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Developmentally Appropriate Practice and Early Childhood

Education

Early childhood education seeks to advocate for the nurturing of young children as a necessary means to achieve the democratic goals of a just society.

In some ways it acts in opposition to strictly economic goals for education.

Page 6: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Theoretical Basis for Developmentally Appropriate

Practice Universal theories

Cognitive developmental theory (Jean Piaget)

Psychosocial development (Erik Erikson)

Particularist theories

Constructivist theory (Lev Vygotsky)

Cognitive development (Jerome Bruner)

Page 7: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Constructivist Thought in Developmentally Appropriate

PracticeChildren of all ages are understood to be

active constructors of their own knowledge.

Concepts and perceptual development are enhanced through wide experiences with people, materials, and events.

Curriculum is expected to provide multiple opportunities for direct and concrete engagement.

Page 8: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

The Idea of Cognitive Structures

The term structure refers to the concepts, ideas, and understandings that children construct through transactions with their social and physical environment.

Knowledge is “made” by the knower, who assimilates new experiences within knowledge structures already present, and accommodates to experiences that do not fit neatly into those structures.

Continued…

Page 9: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Motivation to learn comes from the fact that children’s cognitive structures are constantly challenged.

The need to understand provides the impetus for acquiring new knowledge.

This need to understand is internal.

The teacher’s task is to provide a match between what the child is ready to learn and what is available to the child to learn.

Continued…

Page 10: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

The constructivist view differs from the traditional view of readiness by emphasizing that cognitive readiness is not determined simply by biological maturation.

Rather, readiness also depends on the transactional nature of the child’s environment.

At any point in time, a child is ready to learn if learning experiences are at an optimal level of novelty or incongruity.

Page 11: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Characteristics of a Developmentally Appropriate

ClassroomConstructivist ideas gained scientific

support and integrity in the 20th century through the work of Piaget, Vygotsky, and Bruner.

The work of both Vygotsky and Bruner placed greater emphasis on the social-cultural context of children than did the work of Piaget.

Page 12: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Pedagogies: Old and New

Historical antecedents:Comenius in the 17th century

Rousseau in the 18th century

Pestalozzi and Parker in the 19th century

Dewey in the 20th century

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Child-Centered Instruction

Use of small group organization

Use of activity centers

Project-based learning

Provision for student choice

Joint teacher-student planning of learning activities

Integration of content

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Roles: Old and New

Teachers work in collaboration with students, other teachers, and other adults.

The goal is to support the learning and development of all children.

Teachers need to know as much as possible about each child—learning styles, interests, preferences, personality, temperament, skills and talents, challenges and difficulties.

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Place of Content Knowledge: Old and New

Early childhood education is concerned with the process of learning and its effect on child development.

Knowledge acquisition is seen as necessary for the child to reconcile incongruities and solve problems; thus students may learn different things from the same lesson.

Early literacy learning involves “playing” with language.

Deductive reasoning, basic to mathematical understanding, is an inherent capability of young children.

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Assessment: Old and NewScreening and assessment should never

be used to close educational doors to children, but to open them.

Observation of children in natural activity contexts is an important factor in assessment.

Also important is looking at collections of children’s work and maintaining ongoing communication with parents.

Page 17: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Perspectives on Age and Development

School experiences profoundly influence and are influenced by people’s development as human beings.

“Development” refers to systematic changes in the individual that occur from birth to death.

What implications does this have for schooling?

Page 18: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Sensitive Periods and Developmental Crises

Sensitive periods are points in development when children learn readily.

Childhood: sensitive periods depend, in part, on the life history of the child and on the child’s experiences in school

Adolescence: a period of physiological, emotional, and cognitive change

Ego identity, or the development of one’s sense of self, is a lifetime enterprise.

Page 19: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Individual Differences and Developmental Domains

Individual differences may be related to biological, psychological, social, and cultural factors.

The “nature vs. nurture” debate is ongoing and refers to the question of whether differences are innate or learned; they are probably both.

Continued…

Page 20: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Developmental domains refers to aspects of development that progress more-or-less at the same time, if not at the same rate:

Motor development

Cognitive development

Language/communication development

Social/emotional development

Continued…

Page 21: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Milestones (e.g., first words, independent walking) and transitions from one stage to another can be influenced by many factors:

Gender

Geography (e.g., climate)

Genetics

Specific environment

Differential cultural values and expectations

Disabilities

Page 22: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

The Importance of Developmental Knowledge

Necessary for effective use of developmentally appropriate practice

Necessary in order to take individual variations into account

Especially important in inclusion classrooms

Page 23: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Examples of Cultural Variations

Values, such as the notion of independence

Ideas of what constitutes “childhood”

Expectations for the “proper” time to acquire specific knowledge (e.g., knowledge of sexuality)

Page 24: Creating Developmentally Appropriate Classrooms

Something to Think About

Much of the story of human development must be written in light of cultural influences in general and of the particular persons, practices, and paraphernalia of one’s culture. And chief among these, of course, in any complex culture, will be such educational institutions as apprenticeships or formal schools.