Growth and development from birth to eight years is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and occurs across physical, intellectual/cognitive, language/communication, emotional, and social domains. Key developmental milestones include crawling between 6-10 months, walking between 12-18 months, and speaking first words around 1 year of age. Physical development focuses on gross and fine motor skill development. Intellectual development includes problem-solving, memory formation, and understanding abstract concepts. Emotional development encompasses self-identity, attachment to caregivers, independence, and understanding right from wrong. Social development allows children to form relationships and friendships with others.
Growth and development from birth to eight years is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and occurs across physical, intellectual/cognitive, language/communication, emotional, and social domains. Key developmental milestones include crawling between 6-10 months, walking between 12-18 months, and speaking first words around 1 year of age. Physical development focuses on gross and fine motor skill development. Intellectual development includes problem-solving, memory formation, and understanding abstract concepts. Emotional development encompasses self-identity, attachment to caregivers, independence, and understanding right from wrong. Social development allows children to form relationships and friendships with others.
Growth and development from birth to eight years is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and occurs across physical, intellectual/cognitive, language/communication, emotional, and social domains. Key developmental milestones include crawling between 6-10 months, walking between 12-18 months, and speaking first words around 1 year of age. Physical development focuses on gross and fine motor skill development. Intellectual development includes problem-solving, memory formation, and understanding abstract concepts. Emotional development encompasses self-identity, attachment to caregivers, independence, and understanding right from wrong. Social development allows children to form relationships and friendships with others.
Growth and development from birth to eight years is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and occurs across physical, intellectual/cognitive, language/communication, emotional, and social domains. Key developmental milestones include crawling between 6-10 months, walking between 12-18 months, and speaking first words around 1 year of age. Physical development focuses on gross and fine motor skill development. Intellectual development includes problem-solving, memory formation, and understanding abstract concepts. Emotional development encompasses self-identity, attachment to caregivers, independence, and understanding right from wrong. Social development allows children to form relationships and friendships with others.
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Unit 18: Assessing children’s development support needs .
P1: Explain patterns, principles and theories that contribute to an understanding of
growth and development from birth to eight years. M1: Analyse stages of growth and development across different areas for selected children of different ages. Growth is the increase in size, weight and height. An example of this is when a baby is born one of the first things that is checked is the weight, length, and the circumference of the baby’s head. Development is the possession of skills and abilities over time. An example of development is when a baby can be able to grip a person’s hand. There are different factors on how growth and development is determined e.g. through genetic inheritance environmental issues and such. Some children can take longer than others to grow and develop because of these factors. Developmental milestones are an important stage in development, an example of this is between birth to eight years old children would be able to develop the main types of milestones e.g. crawling, walking, sitting upright without support and such. When a baby is between 6 and 10 months they begin to crawl. It was also said that between 12- and 18- months babies would normally start to walk. Knowing these types of information would allow people to assume on how the baby is developing. Physical development is a process that starts in infancy and continues into late adolescence. Physical development focuses on gross and fine motor skills as well as puberty. Fine motor skill development is the ability to use small muscles by moving your hands and fingers. Gross motor skill development is the ability to use your larger muscles which requires whole body movement such as running, jumping, walking and such. Locomotion is when a child can move from one place to another. This could be by crawling or rolling within the first couple of months. The child is usually using their large muscles to do this. Balance is important when you are still and when you are on the move it is linked to your larger muscles an example of this is standing on one leg. Hand-eye coordination helps in developing balance because the eye receives information for the brain so that it would guide and direct your hands to accomplish tasks. Hand-eye coordination is important as it helps with life skills such as reading, writing, drawing, and such. To have good coordination you must have a good balance, a sense of rhythm, spatial awareness, auditory awareness and visual awareness. Coordination helps with tasks such as walking up and down stairs and such. Intellectual/cognitive development is the process in which a child can use their thinking skills to complete tasks and solve problems. An example of this is completing a jigsaw puzzle or knowing their colours. As a child grows and develops new experiences, their brain cells would also grow and mature. When the brain matures it goes through two different types of processes such as the development of new connections this depends on the child’s development process. This and example of neurological and brain development. At the earlier stages of a child’s life there is a significant growth and development which includes many factors that influence the connections that are being made. The brain of a 3-year-old is much more active than the brain of an adult. If a child is extremely stressed it could affect their cognitive and emotional development. All children develop at different rates and their abstract though develops over time. One way in which the ability to think about abstract concepts is that is depends on the child’s previous knowledge e.g. if the child has never seen snow before when the teacher explains how it looks and how it feels the child would understand but imagining something else that is similar to it. For the process to fully develop the child needs to have a balance of knowledge and practice. This is an example of the development of abstract concepts. When trying to solve problems and make decisions you must use thinking skills which are the mental processes to make sense of experience and such. There are 3 main processes that are involved e.g. gathering information. This is by using your senses such as hearing, smelling, touching and seeing. It is also said that you are also allowed to retrieve information from passed experiences that is stored in your memory. Another example of a process is understanding which is when you can organise information and create clear concepts that helps to link relatable experiences together. The last example is productive thinking which is the ability to use information and understanding to create, analyse, evaluate and make decisions. Memory is an important intellectual/ cognitive development as it is a prime aspect of emotional and social development examples of this is self-image and self-esteem. There are 3 main stages of memory e.g. encoding this is when you organise information to be stored. Another example is storage which is when you are keeping the importation. Lastly is retrieval this is being able to remember the information. Speech language and communication is vital in a child’s development. Children learn language and conversations from a young age due to seeing and hearing adults’ interactions. A child can start to speak and use words at roughly the one-year stage of life due to them developing sounds and gaining control of their tongue and mouth. There are three main categories of language such as phonology. This is connected to the sounds of language e.g. a, b, m. it is essential to have the ability to identify the different sounds as some words such as cat and bat had distinct and different meanings. Phonics is having the ability to use the sounds that you make to build up words. Another example is semantics which connects to the words or units of language and how meaning can be changed by adding another unit e.g. adding dis to appear. Lastly syntax is how the structure of a sentence is changed due to the placement of a word. An example of this is “the boy chased the dog” and “the dog chased the boy”. In these phrases the same words have been used but the order in the sentence has changed. Communication is the ability to receive and transmit information to other people in different ways e.g. though symbols, pictures, touch, musically and verbally. Emotional development refers to your feelings and how you express them. Emotional development begins to develop at a very young age and progresses positively if strong attachments have been made. There are different types of emotional development such as the development of self-identity. Self-identity is important as it is how a person views themselves through what they look like, who they are and their gender. This is a gradual process as a child starts to recognise themselves between the ages of 18-24 months and realises that they are human beings. Another type of emotional development is self-esteem which is also linked in with self-confidence. Having a high of low self-esteem can come from friendships, relationships, care givers, school and your own character. Having a high self- esteem means that the child would feel worthy and have the upmost respect for themselves. If a child is then always being put down by friends, family, school and such they would have low self-worth, no respect for themselves, low-confidence and low self-esteem. This is why children need to be given activities that they are able to succeed in so that they don’t feel like they are failures which would make them have a low self-esteem and self- worth. A type of emotional development is attachment. Attachment is the ability of the infant to form a bond with their care givers due to having powerful positive feelings towards them. Infants usually start to build an attachment towards their mothers and there are different ways to build attachment and example is eye-to eye contact. This is when the infant is staring at the parent’s face. Another example is skin-to-skin contact this is when the mother lays the new-born baby on her skin for about an hour maternity hospitals would usually encourage this. Familiar voices are also a way to help with attachment because the infant is used to hearing the care givers voice making them feel secured when hearing them. Lastly familiar smells help with attachment because the child would be able to get used to the parent’s smell and would understand that they are their care givers. This shows that attachment is important because it allows children to build bonds with other people and show affection to other. Independence is also another form of emotional development. For a child to learn and develop independence they need to be given love, support and positivity which would help to encourage them. Children will learn and develop new skills and feel emotionally stable if they have good parenting. This is because they would have parents that would support them and allow them to make informed choices such as what outfit they want to wear or what they want to have for breakfast. This would allow the child to have a sense of responsibility which links in with independence. Moral development is also an example of emotional development because it teaches a child to learn the difference between whats right and whats wrong. The child will learn this through their experiences and the environment that they live in. Infants between 18-24 months might not understand right and wrong but are aware of certain types of dissatisfactions for some types of behaviours. An example of this is hitting another child is wrong. Children learn to avoid disapprovals but may not understand why it is wrong. Between early childhood children start to understand and think about other people’s response to what is happening and start to empathise with others. Social development is the ability to make friendships and relationships which others. Social development links in with emotional development because from a young age children start to learn about relationship with the people that they are close to such as their care givers. An example of social development is friendships. This is essential because it allows children to interact and communicate with others which is a part of social development. Children are also able to observe facial expressions and understand body language which allows them to believe that what is happening is positive, enjoyable of even upsetting. Building friendships allows them to interact, play and imitate others. The interactions being made allows the children to form deeper relationships with others. Another example of social development is cooperation. This is when children have the ability to work together and pass through different stages of play. An example of this is that children would start to observe interactions and develop relationships as they move from playing next to children instead of playing with them which is called parallel play to associative and cooperative play which means that they would explore and communicate more actively. Children start to work together by solving problems and play intensely. The children would also learn and develop when they feel like they are in a safe place and start to cooperate by sharing and helping each other. As an eight month old infant Shajah is physically developing at a normal rate. This is because at around eight months the infant starts to lift their head, can be able to roll over and wave their arms which is an example of gross motor skills. They are also able to hold toys which is a sign of fine motor skills. Shajah has shown that she is developing at a normal rate as she is able to sit on her own, hold her head upright and started to try turn herself over. Shajah is also able to pick up an object, shake and bang them then drops the object. This shows that Shajah is able to use her fine and gross motor skills which means that she is physically developing. At eight months intellectually the infant should develop the ability to vocalise some words, and be able to find their care givers by hearing their voice. This shows that the infant would be using their knowledge on how their care givers sound to know who it is and were the voice is coming from. Vocalising some words is an example of intellectual development because the child first learns to imitate their parents then start to vocalise the words that they have imitated. Shajah has started to instinctually develop by constantly babbling which shows that she is trying to vocalise some words. This suggests that she is intellectually developing as she is trying to communicate by babbling. At eight months old the infant starts to develop an anxiety of being separated from their care givers. This means that the infant starts to be upset around strangers and does not want to leave their care givers side. Shajah has shown emotional development as she screams and is upset when she is approached by strangers. This is because she is at a stage when she is developing separation anxiety and does not trust anyone but her care givers. Shajah attends a nursery which means that she is able to play and socialise with other people such as the staff members and other children. This means that Shajah would be able to develop the ability to interact with someone else other than their care givers. It is also said that playing peek-a- boo at eight months old would help the infant to develop social skills. This is because if a stranger plays peek-a-boo with and infant they will start to laugh and play with the stranger. This links in with Shajah because she enjoys playing peek-a-boo as she giggles when playing the game which means that it would help her to develop social skills. As a four-year-old Ben is developing at a slow rate. This is because physically Ben should be more active and should be able to throw a ball and catch it. However, Ben is unable to kick and catch a ball which means that he is developing at a slower rate that others his age. Not everyone would be able to physically develop at the same rate but it is important to help Ben to learn how to catch and throw a ball so that he can develop physically. For Ben to develop his intellectual skills he must be able to learn how to problem solve and know his colours. To be able to learn how to problem solve and know his colours Ben must be taught by his teachers. However, Ben does not like to mix with others and does not communicate with teaching assistance or teachers and only communicates at home. This means that if Ben does not like communicating with staff he will find it hard to learn and understand how to problem solve. This would slow his rate of intellectual development. When Ben does communicate at home he will say short sentences of two or three words. This means that Ben might have low-confidence or have a low self-esteem which is part of emotional development as he finds it hard to communicate and mix with others. Having low self- esteem and self-confidence would impact Ben because he would always feel afraid to meet others and interact with them. This links in with social development because if Ben has a low self-esteem and self-confidence he would find it hard to makes friends and communicate with others. An example of this is that Ben does not speak with his teaching assistant or his teacher and does not like to mix in with other children. Another thing is that Ben like to play solitarily this would impact him as he gets older because he would find it hard to make friends and build relationships. This shows that Ben is developing at a slower rate than others his age.