My Artifact Demonstrating My Learning Experience.
The important to promote family involvement in educational settings for children with disabilities. That was the topic of class CE 220 unit 6 project 9 that I had to focus on. I choose this artifact because it demonstrates the disorders that a family with a disabled child has to face every day. In my assignment I was instructed to list three pacific disorders that cause physical and mental development delays. My artifacts shows delays in their cognitive skills and their effects on a child’s developmental growth, and the disorder of muscle movement, muscle tone, and posture due to abnormal brain development. Being aware of the different obstacles a child and the parent deal with make it essential that I promote family involvement. I recall studying the different disabilities that children had, and the many obstacles they faced daily, I could relate to their situation because I have a close family member struggling to do simply things we take for granted. What a tremendous challenge for them and their family members. As an educator, I now promote family involvement in
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I recalled throughout my own learning experiences that my parents were the backbone of my development. They made me feel safe when I was afraid. Then I recalled what I learned about the Vygotsky theory on cultural involvement and how it helps both cognitive and motor development growth. When families are involved the students feel more comfortable, the children become more responsive. Families can learn to demonstrate skills learned in the classroom and implement what is taught at home. I learned with family's involvement, I am helping children reach their individual cognitive goals. Parents and teachers collaborating idea together can make a difference in helping a child reach their highest potential developmental
The artifact represents personal objects and meaningful moments, person influence on our own life. This is one of the assignment in our program to share our artifacts toward our colleagues and professors. This will take in more about different culture, uniqueness, identity and values of our schoolmates and how they reflected in their life.
A second strength of the sociocultural perspective is the emphasis on the role of adults in childhood cognitive development through guided participation. Vygotsky introduced the idea that children learn in a zone of proximal development. Meaning the distance between what an individual can do alone and what they can do with guidance and assistance from a capable member of society (Mcleod, 2010). Any skills outside the zone would be already mastered or still too difficult to attempt alone. “To Vygotsky, learning in collaboration with more knowledgeable companions drives cognitive development (Sigelman).” This is true throughout the world. Children in many cultures learn from a teacher, from family members, and many others. In other cultures, children learn skills from relatives, members of their village or tribe, or from other skilled members in their group. This perspective satisfies the need to recognize the role of adults in
Lev Vygotsky believed that social and cognitive development work simultaneously to build and evolve on one another. He believed that social, cultural and personal experience cannot be detached from each other and many things influence the way children learn and develop, not just their own experiences, thus Vygotsky’s socio-cultural theory. Vygotsky’s ideas were and remain controversial as he had no specific training in psychology or children’s development. His preeminent contribution to children’s development is his recognition of the value of progressing knowledge by means of interaction with educators, peers and family (Mooney, 2000, p. 83). The major ideas of Vygotsky’s theory are scaffolding and the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD). Scaffolding is a process Vygotsky described as the framework or temporary support for children’s learning. In order for scaffolding to be beneficial, it must be responsive to the child’s needs (Coon & Mitterer, 2013, pp. 106-107).
In the book Early Childhood Education Today 11th Edition, we read that “Family-centered practice is one of the cornerstone features of early childhood special education. This follows the fundamental notion that children’s development is influenced by their environment: their family, teachers, school, town, media, governmental systems, and so on.” (MORRISON, 2009) The first thing we as teachers must do is acknowledge that the children’s families are the first and most important teachers of their children and recognize the long-term effect families have on the attitudes and accomplishments of their children . For the edification of today’s youth there are potential positive responses to be obtained through working with a child’s parents as
Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory of development is essential in d primary school and early childhood settings. Through an understanding of the socio-cultural theory, it facilitates pedagogical practices and teaching strategies for educators. The socio-cultural theory is underpinned by the influence of the environment and cultural contexts such as beliefs, values and skills in facilitating development (Mooney 2013, p. 77). Smidt (2009, p. 7) states that children’s understanding of the world and lives is shaped by social interactions from families, peers, educators and community (Nolan & Raban-Bisby 2015, p. 31). Vygotsky theorised that interpersonal relationships and experiences contributed to higher
Specific strategies apply to specific learning disabilities. It is important to know how to accommodate disabled’s needs and differentiate instruction. When developing a teaching for people with disabilities, the nurse assess the need for family involvement and advocacy because the nurse must work together with the family to assess learning needs, and create an environment that will heighten learning Bastable (2014). One of the most effective means of ensuring successful teaching is to engage families in their
The idea of children with disabilities, whether they be mild or severe has been a very controversial and misunderstood topic. In the past inclusion has brought about huge changes for not only the students, but also the parents and families of these children, and staff at schools. Teachers and education professionals were the first to really feel the wrath and intimidation of this dramatic shift in education. There were several different factors that were coming about that made it very difficult for schools and teachers, the unorganized mandates were strict and didn’t allow much time for change. “President Gerald Ford signed the Education for All Handicapped Children Act (EAHCA) into law in 1975. Since the original passage of the EAHCA, the law has been amended four times and renamed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)” (Conroy, Yell, Katsiyannis, & Collins, 2010, para.1).
When I was asked to reflect on my experiences in EDSE 316 and the fieldwork, I had to think long and hard on how I would sum up four months of classes and fieldwork into four pages. I have learned so much about the various disabilities and how it has change the world of special education. I think a better term would be the “endless possibilities of education”. It wasn’t too long ago when children with disabilities would be stuck in a room in the back of school only to be seen in the beginning and end of the school day. They were the ones who rode the other buses and no one really talked about. This class has allowed me to speak of my own family and how special education impacted my life. I have a brother whose whole life was spent in the special education class, and my own sons with speech and learning disabilities who are now receiving special education services. It also allowed me to reflect on my own participation in the special education program in my early elementary years when I was struggling with my own speech disability. This class gave me the chance to see the timeline of special education, from its earliest beginnings to what it is now.
Promoting collaboration and engagement with diverse families is very important. It is because including parents, school staff, teachers and children can help to build mutual trust and respect between each other. It’s also an opportunity for the parents to enhance their skills to help their children’s at home. The teacher can ask the parents to share their difficulties when they are helping their children with the schoolwork. The teacher can listen to the parents and organize activities to support and provide resources to help them. The relationship between the children, parents and teachers should be very open and supportive. It is because children learn the best where they are encouraged and supported in their lives. The home-school relationship helps the teachers to build a strong relationship with the parents and students. Epstein’s theory is about the six types of parental involvement
I find that I learn best when something is delivered to me through a visual medium. If I were to simply look at lesson that is being presented to me and not interact with it. I will become bored and loose interest onto that subject. I must be involved with every step of that lesson so that I may learn properly. I honeslty would not have been so successful with my acddemic carrear if it were not for the efforts of my teachers to incoprate many of their lessons so that I may interact with it. I would have not made this far into
Having a child with a disability can cause various hardships on a family. Families with a child with a disability can cause strains on finances, parental employment, and relationships within the family. After analyzing research done by a variety of sources the following essay should convey the findings in regard to the affects raising a child with a disability has on a family. One idea to keep in mind is disabilities have a variety of different impacts on a family, not all will impact a family the same way.
Parents play a significant role in the lives of all children but more specifically, of those children with disabilities. The participation of the parents and the degree of acceptance of the presence of a disability, determines most of the outcomes when the child is ready for an independent life. The law requires that school districts offer support to parents of children with disabilities. By offering In Home Training, school districts’ staff provides specific skill training to parents in need of other alternatives to manage and cope with the effects of their child’s disability. However, training is not the solution for this, as active parental involvement is. Parents that take a stand accept their reality and are ready to do something about it, are more likely to be successful by learning strategies that will help the child generalize behaviors that are more socially appropriate.
Schooling for the disabled requires a special environment—one that only a few teachers have the gift to care for. Instead of looking out for the child’s
Positive influence the home has on children learning process regardless of the ethnicity or socioeconomic makeup of the family, especially the environment and activities that stimulate as well as parent’s involvement in the learning and developmental process of the children can’t be ignored. Family and the structure they have can impact tremendously in the life of children, however, the home factor can’t be eliminated in the life of a child.
Child development is complex because it is influenced by a wide range of factors such as culture. A child’s culture begins to influence them long before they are born. Parents from around the world hold different beliefs and raise their children in unique ways. Cultural norms can greatly affect which values parents consider important and how they share those values with children (Christensen, 2013). The timing of the development of certain skills and characteristics in children, depends on the importance the culture places on them (Buechner, 2015). For example, a good deal of value is placed on academics in many Eastern cultures, and so children spend many hours each day on math and science activities from the time they are very young. But, in the United States children are given a great deal more freedom to express themselves and experiment with things, because we as a society place value on creativity and innovation (O’Sullivan, 2016). In the U.S., the nuclear family is considered the ideal structure for raising children, but in countries like Japan and India, extended family and community members take a much larger role in child care and parenting (Christensen, 2013). Because each child is unique, caregivers need to form partnerships with families in order to meet the developmental and educational needs of their students. According to Copple and Bredekamp (2009) by understanding a child’s culture, early childhood professionals can “make classroom decisions that are