1 / 22

Social and Emotional Development

Social and Emotional Development. Agenda . Responsive Caregiving Attachment Self-Awareness Emotional Development and Self Regulation Relationships with Others Promoting Positive Interactions Inclusion . Objectives. Describe secure attachment and explain the caregiver’s role

finna
Télécharger la présentation

Social and Emotional Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social and Emotional Development

  2. Agenda Responsive Caregiving Attachment Self-Awareness Emotional Development and Self Regulation Relationships with Others Promoting Positive Interactions Inclusion

  3. Objectives Describe secure attachment and explain the caregiver’s role Create a strategy for responsive caregiving in a stressful situation List 4-5 classroom materials that can promote self-awareness Compile best practices for peaceful and appropriate transitions Develop an inclusion strategy for a child with special needs

  4. Responsive Caregiving

  5. Attachment

  6. Trust and Emotional Security Indicators: • Establishes secure relationships with primary caregiver • Differentiates between familiar and unfamiliar adults • Shows emotional connections and attachment to others while beginning to show independence

  7. Responsive Caregiving 0-8 Months • Hold, cuddle, and laugh with infants • Hold infants during bottle feeding time; talk to them in a calm and soothing tone • Notice, understand, and follow the signals of infants, such as cries of hunger or pain, turning away when full, or when ready to stop interacting • Display courteousness, warmth, and sensitivity when interacting with adults and children

  8. Responsive Caregiving 8-18 Months • Notice and be responsive to words, gestures, laughs, and cries • Stay close and visible while infants explore • Reassure them that you will return, explaining where you are going and when you will be back • Introduce them to new people and allow them time to become comfortable. 18-36 Months • Provide encouragement for trying activities and playing with new people • Accept that toddlers will need comfort items

  9. Responsive Caregiving 36-48 Months • Connect with three-year-olds on a daily basis, such as naptime or arrival • Respond with affection and care when approached by an upset or hurt three-year olds • Encourage independence and participation in new situations (“Go ahead, you can do it!”)

  10. Self-Awareness Erik Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development A stage theory of development based on the mastery of one stage in order to successfully progress to the next.

  11. Self-Awareness • A clear and positive Sense of Self and identity • Self-Recognition of the baby in the mirror • Identifying the Categorical Self in social contexts • The Looking-Glass Self is understanding self based on the responses of others

  12. Self-Awareness Indicators: • Expresses needs and wants through facial expressions, sounds, or gestures • Develops awareness of self as separate from others • Shows confidence in increasing abilities • Shows awareness of relationship to family/ community/ cultural group

  13. Early Emotional Development At birth, infants can express contentment, distress, and interest. Within 6 months emotions begin to evolve from those.

  14. Self -Regulation Indicators • Begins to manage own behavior and demonstrates increasing control of emotion • Shows ability to cope with stress • Develops understanding of simple routines, rules or limitations

  15. Self-Regulation Caregivers can support self-regulation by: • Having realistic expectations of behavior • Not identifying a child by a negative behavior • Point out strengths and positive qualities • Balance the routine and the room arrangement with high-energy and peaceful activities and spaces • Use emotion words to help describe feelings • Be respectful of physical needs

  16. Relationships with Others Indicators of relationship development: • Shows interest in and awareness of others • Responds to and interacts with others • Begins to recognize and respond to the feelings and emotions of others and begins to show concern

  17. Caregiver Responses Learning Environment • Create an atmosphere of trust and cooperation • Room arrangement provides clues for behavior • Engaging and interesting materials keep children busy with play and learning • Organization promotes self-help skills and cooperation

  18. Caregiver Responses Routines • Consistent from day to day • Provide a logical and predictable order of events • Appropriately flexible for the needs of the children Transitions • Use consistent signals for transition • Create logical transitions during natural breaks in activity • Eliminate all waiting time

  19. Caregiver Responses Interactions • Build a relationship with the child • Provide valid choices • Redirect to a specific activity • Avoid power struggles

  20. Inclusion Social-communication deficits

  21. Inclusion Strategies • Modify environment • Adjust expectations • Provide visual supports • Project cards • Picture schedules • Communication • Provide appropriate choices • Create a reward system Read Home Snack

  22. Conclusion • Action Plan • Q&A

More Related