CHFD 2412 midterm
Class Log List
A method/format to record one or more short, specific pieces of information about each child present on that day
Which is the MOST accurate explanation of typical social development?
A two-year-old who cannot share with another child
Centration
Able to focus on one attribute at a time
Vygotsky and Social Interaction's Role in Cognition
Attention (and learning) are affected by social interactions
Phonemes
Basic unit of sound
Zone of proximal development
Behavioral levels that can be attained with assistance
What are three advantages or purposes of a Running Record
Can be analyzed as documentation for a number of developmental areas; Can focus on one particular area of a classroom rather than a child to document what occurs there; Can be used for evaluation of a child's development and curriculum planning for that child.
What are three advantages or uses of a Time Sample
Can gather data on the whole class at one time; quantitative information; indicates child's choice activities and interests, preferred playmates, uninteresting activity areas
Vygotsky
Child's actions are supported and extended by more mature player Play is constructed with another child or an adult Includes social interaction Cognitive development is enhanced Zone of proximal development
Which statement is true about emotions
Children learn how to express emotions from adults.
Super ego
Conscience
Running Records
Detailed account of segment of time; recording all behaviors and quotes during that time *Similar to anecdotal recording • Factual, detailed account written over a span of time • Written after the event
Using Time Samples
Don't Use Time Samples for Infants and Young Toddlers Infants and toddlers - more appropriate to use anecdotal or running records
A Frequency Count is a qualitative method for measuring frequently occurring behaviors
FALSE
A Time Sample measures how many times a child does something.
FALSE
An Anecdotal Recording is a summarized account of an incident
FALSE
Checklists are never shared with parents or family because they are confidential
FALSE
Checklists are not effective because they do not preserve the raw data or details
FALSE
Checklists can only be used to measure certain types of development.
FALSE
Expressive language is always greater than receptive language.
FALSE
Standards are expectations of content knowledge attained by a certain age or grade.
FALSE
Assimilation
Information received that adjusts previously related info (adding another block)
Scaffold
Linking present knowledge or skills to a higher level assisted. By more skilled individual
Anecdotal Recording
Narrative account of an incident anywhere from a few seconds to several minutes in length. An anecdotal recording is a written replay of an incident
Which of the following types of recording is NOT a subjective recording
One that includes only facts about a situation
Syntax
Order of words in a sentences
Seriation
Ordering of objects
Sensory integration
Organization of sensory information dependent on temperament and the duration and intensity of stimuli
Checklist
Predetermined list of criteria against which the recorder answers yes or no
Describe three aspects of a child's mathematical knowledge development
Rote counting, one-to-one correspondence, classifying, conservation, ordinal numbers
List the senses involved in observing
Seeing Hearing Touching Smelling Instinct
Behavior and social learning theory
Skinner an Watson -reinforcement
Morpheme
Smallest unit of language
A Frequency Count is a closed method that only records tally marks for observed targeted behaviors
TRUE
A Running Record uses the same technique as an Anecdotal Record except that it is used to gather a sample of naturally occurring behavior rather than an incident.
TRUE
Children may be cognitively impaired by genetics, the health and habits of the mother, and the environment after the child is born.
TRUE
Right hemisphere
This hemisphere of the brain is the initial receiver of incoming information and the center of visual, artistic, creative, intuitive, and spontaneous thoughts
Left hemisphere
This hemisphere of the brain is where language and speech are produced. It is the site of analytical, logical, sequential, orderly, verbal, computational, linear, concrete thinking.
What are three disadvantages of a Time Sample?
Time-intensive for recorder; records no details about the nature of the play; inferential; not effective for toddlers; not good for language recording
Id
Unconscious part that demands satisfaction and desires
Give three questions to ask before a standardized test is chosen as an assessment method
What is the purpose of the test? Is it valid and reliable? How will the results be used?
What an observer writes about is limited to
anything that is seen or heard in or out of the classroom
Choose the statement that is MOST true of standardized tests.
b. A standardized test is based on content knowledge children learned by a certain age or grade.
All of the following are true of a checklist EXCEPT
b.it produces the same results from one teacher to the next.
Standards:
defines goals of practice
As you listen to a child talk, you can learn about his or her
development in every area.
Receptive language
is the ability to hear and understand what is being said.
Cognitive development:
knowing, thinking, reasoning, and remembering
Piaget's theory
provides a framework to help us better understand child's thinking
Children's small muscle development can be assessed when they are
putting together puzzles
STEM
science, technology, engineering, mathematics and related content areas
All of the following are acceptable uses for a completed Anecdotal Recording EXCEPT
shown to your father because he is a child psychiatrist
A Frequency Count is
used to count how many times a child or a group of children repeats an action
Give two advantages and two disadvantages of a developmental checklist.
Advantages—efficient; guides observer in what are the important criteria to look for; if sequential, it could alert observer to lags or guide in curriculum planning for next skill; documents changes in development over time; clear illustration of developmental continuum Disadvantages—the actual details of the activity or incident are lost with only the criteria recorded; two observers may observe the same behavior and have different opinions about the meaning and criteria rating; dependent on checklist's match to child's age and ability and on the criteria being easily understood and observable; may be time-consuming to do all developmental areas on all children in the class in a short time
core emotions
Joy, anger, sadness, fear
Holograph
One word sentence that had meaning
Using Frequency Counts
Recording method to measure how often a specified event occurs
If the child feels the observer closely watching and writing, it may change the child's behavior and invalidate the observation.
TRUE
In an Anecdotal Recording, the inferences or judgments are kept separate from the details of the incident
TRUE
You can learn about a child's cognitive development by listening to her conversation.
TRUE
Accommodation
Taking inn new information and balancing it with previous knowledge (somewhat changing structure of what you already knew)
Explain the difference between the Diary and the Reflective Journal
The Diary records the teacher's recollections of children's activities; the Reflective Journal is the teacher's inward look at the day's events
Information gathered from the Class List Log is posted in the Portfolio for the family to read and maybe discussed with the family.
True
The Diary is not an effective way of recording information about children's achievements and behavior at the end of the day because the teacher is tired and may not remember all the children.
True
The Reflective Journal helps the teacher to think about decisions made and considerations about children and the classroom for the future
True
Describe the stages of social play development: unoccupied, onlooker, solitary, parallel, associative,cooperative.
Unoccupied—not focused on any toy or activity Onlooker—watches other children play but does not get involved Solitary—plays alone Parallel—plays alongside another child but absorbed in own play or toy Associative—plays alongside another child in a related play theme or toy Cooperative—plays together with another child working toward a common project or goal
A Class List Log focuses on
a short, specific piece of information about each child.
The Running Record is different from the Anecdotal Record because the Running Record
can be used to compare other kinds of observing methods.
Benchmarks:
descriptions of knowledge, skills, and development that are measurable outcomes of standards
Failure to Thrive Syndrome
developmental delays caused by physical or emotional factors
Expressive language
is the ability to speak and convey a message to another person
Vocabulary
is the acquisition of many words and names for things in the environment
Articulation
is the clarity of the spoken word that is developing through the first eight years
The Time Sample recording method measures
the amount of time a child spends in one area
Grammar
the culturally acceptable pattern of word usage
autonomy
the process of governing ones self
The results of standardized tests on young children should be used
together with other types of assessment methods.
Dispositions
traits that support learning such as curiosity, persisting, questioning
Emotional intelligence
type of intelligence that controls emotions in a socially acceptable way