Neuro-Nurturing - Brain Development in Children - Deborah McNelis M. Ed.
Friday, 13 November 2020
Brain Development in Children - Deborah McNelis M. Ed.
Sunday, 20 September 2020
The Great Kererū Count - Citizen Science
This year for the first time I'm taking part in a citizen science project The Great Kererū Count 2020. After attending the Blake Inspire Course for teachers I became more aware of the variety of citizen science projects that schools can be involved with. Though there are not any sightings of Kererū at my learning centre in future I if circumstances alow I could get them involved. Or we could take part in other bird surveys.
Māra Kai
Māra Kai
Link Tuia Matauranga
To make this more relevant and rewarding, we suggest using plants that will grow relatively quickly – and ones that are most likely to be considered delicious!
Suggested activity
Discuss why and how people grow food for themselves, and what the impact of this is on the local environment – from growing, to eating, to composting. You could also discuss the transportation and storage of food, versus eating locally grown and seasonal produce, and whether big or small gardens are more productive.
Investigate what types of fruit and vegetables would be suitable to grow in your local area, and what time of year to plant each of them. The Maramataka (Māori lunar calendar) is a useful tool, as well as information about weather patterns.
Create your own garden, in your backyard or in pots, or look for a community garden in your local area that you can contribute to. If there isn’t an existing community garden in your area, you could talk to people in your community about whether you could help to set one up.
Record the planting, growth, and harvesting of your fruit and vegetables. You could do this by taking a series of photos, drawing pictures, or writing a story. You could also make a poster about the benefits of māra kai, or create a menu based on the fruit and vegetables you have planted.
Share your māra kai with others – you could invite your friends and whānau to eat a meal based on “in season” food you have grown.
Growing Kūmara
Maramataka
Maramataka Article Spinoff
Learning to live by the Maramataka: Mahuru
Tīkanga - karakia mo mātau mahi māra
Wednesday, 26 August 2020
Strategies to help avoid show downs
Avoid tug-of-war "Link to blog post
This is called ‘dropping the rope.’ Our relationship with the child is the most important thing in this situation.
Imagine that conversation again: you ask your child to put their shoes away. You’re picking up one end of a thick tug-of-war rope. Your child says ‘no.’ They’re picking up the other end of the rope. It might seem as though there is now no way out of this situation except to see who can pull hardest.
But what do we do instead to prevent our child from walking all over us and never helping out around the house and having our in-laws think we are terrible parents?
Model Graciousness - What would you do if your friend spilt their drink at your house?
I got down on her level and said, gently and kindly: “Do you remember a few minutes ago I asked for your help putting shoes away? You didn’t want to help me, and now you’re asking me for my help. When you help me it makes me WANT to help you. When you don’t help me, it makes me feel like I don’t want to help you. I’m going to help you now, and tomorrow I’d really appreciate your help with the shoes.”
Model Graciousness Link to Article
“What do I do when they simply refuse to do what I am asking them to do?”
The question looks a lot more like:“What do I do when I’m not in control?”
Children do not learn from what we say. They don’t even learn from what we do. They learn from who we are. And they’re always watching.
That’s why I choose to model graciousness.
You Lost Your Patience with a Student and Feel Terrible... Now What? Link to blog post
Teaching Social Skills - Conflict Resolution
Two Arm Technique for Hitting, Biting, Pushing and Toy Snatching - Alyson Schafer
Dialogue supports children to discuss their feelings/solve problems independently the teacher remains neutral and speaks on behalf of a child if they are unable to. He is saying, "I don't like that."
Monday, 24 August 2020
Conservation Week
Article: E-Tangata
Link to full article: https://e-tangata.co.nz/comment-and-analysis/moving-from-tokenism-to-respect/?fbclid=IwAR1UZpQjxJ2WZpqmVZ61F07o7m8eoEkTa-h31rhU7ubfCPuTovO0TrECLmU
Tuesday, 21 April 2020
Understanding Behaviour - Biting
Early Childhood Therapist Advice on Biting Video Link
- Developmentally normal - if occurring occasionally.
- 3 main causes: developmental issues, inability to express emotions, environment
- Above 3 years biting should decrease - children begin to develop impulse control, self-regulation skills
- Although it's a developmental behaviour adults react very emotionally to biting, we may need to change our expectations
- Teething
- Oral motor skills
- Sensory exploration
- Cause and effect
- Need or want for more attention
- Desire to be autonomous
- Anger
- Excitement
- Fear
- Self-protection - someone is in their space
- Relieving tension/stress orally - like us adults eating, drinking to relieve stress
- Over or under stimulated
- Sensory overload
- Routines that aren't flexible
- Look at the environment: duplicate popular toys, toy options but not overwhelming,
- Avoid over crowding
- Oral motor-skills - different texture foods, crunchy, hard, cold etc
- Oral motor-skills blowing bubbles, windmill, wind instruments
- Wear a chew necklace
- Gross - motor skills exercises, brain break
- Transitions - have calming activities - sensory helps self-regulation, and exercise before transitions too
- Cause and effect toys activities
- Teach children to recognise when it might happen and how to respond. "Stop" Body language etc.
- Intervening - name the emotions, all the bodily responses to frustration, red face etc
- Attention seeking - lot's of positive attention when not biting, always attend the child who got bit first. Develop empathy by letting child help tend to child who got bit, ice, hug etc.
- Be brief, serious, when correcting biting behaviour, eye level, name behaviour.
- Lots of repetition, modeling, co-regulating
- "Sorry" doesn't teach empathy, making amends, helping child who got bit does. 'Sorry' may teach them to just say sorry after their action to fix problem.
- Resources - Teeth Are Not For Biting - Best behaviour series
- Repetition, read same book a lot!
- It's Never Right To Bite - Social Story - Teachers Pay Teachers
- Teachable Transitions Rae Pica
By Beatrice Motamedi Healthy Day
It turns out that 25%-40% of boys and 10%-28% of girls aged 2-5 years are rated by their preschool teachers as having moderate to high levels of aggression. (You may be shocked to learn that 40% of adult violent behavior started before the individual was 8 years old.) For a child older than 3 years to be aggressive enough for parents or care providers to call for help is a significant problem which, if left unaddressed, can evolve into a lifetime of dysfunction.
Age 3 is a pivotal age, as aggression is normal and even expected before then. All infants bite once they cut teeth. Kids also experiment with their mouths: You may have had the surprise of cuddling a smiling 9- to 12-month-old just to have him sink his teeth into your shoulder. And both male and female 15- to 18-month-olds will knock over a peer to get a desired toy (instrumental aggression) without a thought.
But aggression that is intended to hurt others (hostile aggression) – not just to get something – should have peaked by age 2½ years and be on the decline by age 3. That means that 3-year-olds who are regarded as aggressive have not progressed as they should have. And before trying to send these young children off to a (difficult-to-access) mental health evaluation, you are in a key position to try to figure out why this is so
It is useful to think about the ways in which the following needs are not being met, rendering these kids so unable to cope.
- Sleep
- Noisy chaotic environment
- Nutrition
- Frustration, need for mastery
Thursday, 16 April 2020
First 1000 days
- Can a strong start help us build a more equal society?
- Science of brain development is telling us
- Born with all our 100billion brain cells but connections between brain cells established in first years of life - synapsis.
- Newborn brain uses 97% energy that child takes, in 4 year old brain - 44%.
- Poor nutrition, lack of stimulation, violence = poorer health, lower success in school & life.
- Interventions work - above intervention closed the gap within 24months
- Home visits, nutrition packages, (home visits had most beneficial effect - parental interaction brain stimulation)
- Flexibility, plasticity and potential for growth at it's highest first 1000 days of life.
- Young infants respond the most to stong geometric shapes in black and white.
- We are biologically programmed to respond to our babies in positive way.
- Kanohi ki te kanohi - baby talk universal. Ahuru mōwai - little paradise.
- Children need human face vs technology.
- Early investments/interventions most successful.
- Nutrition programmes, home visits with at-risk families, mothers' groups, preschools subsidised.
Childhood Anxiety NZ - Nathan Wallis Child Psychologist
- Case study of child diagnosed with selective mutism and social anxiety
- Calm quiet baby
- OK until school-age then expected to 'perform'
- School system too focused on cognitive/academic outcomes
- But we only attain these when we meet the needs of the 'lower brain' met
- Power of the 1st 1000s day interaction with environment grows brains 1,2,3 lower brain
- Frontal cortex top brain 4
- Strategy -ask children with anxiety "What's your worry rating?"
- Nature / Nurture - siblings within families will have inherited different predispositions towards anxiety from parents, life events can then be triggers to these children.
- Case study 2 - perfectionist but also gives up early
- Pulls hair out
- Traumatic start to life - earthquake
- Strategy "What's a great thing you did today?"
Monday, 13 April 2020
Learning Stories in Practice - Powerful Frameworks
NOTES:
Recognizing Powerful Frameworks - Learning Stories in Practice with Wendy Lee
- Framework - big picture vision learners/teachers/whānau understand.
- Essential to formative assessment.
- What does self-directed learning mean to me?
- Framework shapes assessment.
- Environment & emotional climate affects learners' ability to take next steps / risks.
- Formative assess = Learning stories assess across levels - zoom in on parts of the big picture.
- Example: Pattern making conversations/maths knowledge- knocking on window, music,
- Revisiting learning stories by learner and family is important, adds emotion.
- I need to make connections to whānau when writing; below what great models Ashlyn has had to develop her love of stories/books.
Te Whāriki Curriculum - 4 Principals
- Teacher takes a wide lens making connections to art, dance, music, drama, ICT, literacy.
- Courageous Attitude & Resilience are life skills. You are showing it now while in hospital and this disposition will help you in your life-long learning journey.
Pakiako - Learning Story
- References kupu from last year
- Acknowledges learning from home - you added kupu to your kete over summer
- Recognising whanau commitment to reo Māori.
- Portfolios are literacy artifacts.
- Introduces to concepts of print in a deeply personal emotive way.
- Research shows if children practise telling/retelling stories from a young age they are more likely to become competent readers.
- Assessment Shapes Who and What We Are - Identities are shaped by what we value in our assessments
- Identifies evolving dispositions using different examples - caring for and frog by making an enclosure and feeding tiger worms, though he ran away from the worms.
- Next step supporting learner to be brave on next occasion when feeding tiger worms this frames learner as, "about to become brave". Very specific personal next step.
Next Step Options:
- Gives child options
- Inquiry learning process
- Children have the right to be active participants in decisions in his/her learning
- Outlines what next-step choice the child made.
Sunday, 12 April 2020
Learning Stories in Practise - Wendy Lee
A colleague suggested looking at Educa Webinars. So I signed up for a series on Learning Stories which is a current focus of my professional learning - as I have recently started working as an ECE teacher and am wanting to get started writing meaningful learning stories.
Notes:
Webinar Series by Wendy Lee based on book Learning Stories in Practise1990s Margarete Carr - came up with new form of assessment 'Learning Stories' as world first socio-cultural curriculum was developed here in Aotearoa NZ.
- Learning Stories - personalized learning, progress over time, formative assessment.
NOTICE - RECOGNISE - RESPOND
- Notice - the story, the photos
- Recognise - teacher analysis what learning is happening
- Respond - future learning, next steps
- The story should make sense to teacher/whānau/learner
- Capturing the brilliance of a child
- Write with heart and wonder
- These stories last a lifetime
- What learning is happening? Connections to wider world, Maths, empathy, social/emotional development, creative expression.
What Makes A Powerful Story:
- Context, set the scene
- Focus on what is significant
- Audience in mind - directly to child or both family and child
- Variety - differing views of the world
- Over time - one day or several occasions observed
- Essential for life-long learner outcome of our ed system
- Attitudes
- Ways we respond
- acquired early
- motivation to explore world
- nurturing critical
- can be fostered, learned, taught
- Can be positive of negative
- Recognised in OECD countries
- Turns skills into action!
NOTICE - RECOGNISE - RESPOND - RECORD - REVISIT - REVIEW
- You should be able to respond instantly vs long term planning
- Teachers more intuitive/responsive/spontaneous 'in the moment'
- Close the gap between notice - respond
- Portfolios help children recognise the learning journey they are on - Learning to learn!
- Write to the children and write from the heart!
- Use Educa forms to record, revisit, review etc
Additional Reading: