Resources for Parents Archives - The Daycare Association of Trinidad and Tobago https://daycareassociationtt.com/category/resources-for-parents/ A Resource for Daycare Service Providers and Parents Wed, 04 Oct 2023 19:13:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://i0.wp.com/daycareassociationtt.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-favicon-cdatt-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Resources for Parents Archives - The Daycare Association of Trinidad and Tobago https://daycareassociationtt.com/category/resources-for-parents/ 32 32 230412970 Discipline vs punishment https://daycareassociationtt.com/discipline-vs-punishment/ https://daycareassociationtt.com/discipline-vs-punishment/#respond Tue, 03 Oct 2023 09:39:13 +0000 http://law-firm.bold-themes.com/master-import/?p=1564 Holistically pontificate installed base portals after maintainable products. Phosfluorescently engage worldwide methodologies with technology. Dynamically procrastinate B2C users after installed base benefits. Dramatically visualize customer directed convergence without revolutionary ROI.

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Did you know that there are distinct differences between discipline and punishment?

 

Discipline comes from the Latin words disciplina (teaching, learning, instruction) and discipulus (disciple, pupil). Discipline means teaching through support, guidance, and scaffolding. Punishment means inflicting suffering and shame for past behaviors. No one learns when someone inflicts suffering or shame on them!
While discipline invokes the thinking brain, punishment triggers the emotional brain. The emotional brain triggers a response of fear, rage, and anxiety. This response happens because the nervous system is activated, cortisol levels (stress hormones) rise, and our body sends the alarm to fight, fight, freeze, or fawn. Frequent fear inflicted on early brain development can lead to mental disorders, brain shrinkage, emotional dysregulation, lack of connection/trust, and undesirable behaviors. No one learns when someone inflicts suffering or shame on them!
Effective Discipline Strategies: 
  • Be warm, caring and understanding.
  • Behaviors = communication and needs to be met.
  • Observe the children in your classroom on a regular basis. Sit and be present while observing their interactions with their peers.
  • Focus on the reason behind the behavior.
  • Build an understanding of child development and developmentally appropriate practices. This will help you have realistic expectations.
  • Teach young children how to understand their body’s warning signs and identify their emotions. These are key components of self-regulation.
  • Provide tools and strategies for handling big feelings.
  • Set clear limits, be consistent and understand your own triggers.

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Types of Play https://daycareassociationtt.com/types-play/ https://daycareassociationtt.com/types-play/#respond Thu, 28 Sep 2023 17:07:28 +0000 https://daycareassociationtt.com/?p=1 Did you know that there are different types of play behaviors that adults can observe while children are playing? Bob Hughes developed and shared these play types in his book...

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Did you know that there are different types of play behaviors that adults can observe while children are playing? Bob Hughes developed and shared these play types in his book “A Playworker’s Taxonomy of Play Types (1996).”

As early childhood educators It is important to be able to recognize the different types of play to:

  • understand the benefits of play

  • to monitor the types of play taking place (especially risky play)

  • to support, guide and extend play opportunities

 
Types of Play
  • Communication Play – play using words, nuances or gestures for example, mime, jokes, play acting, mickey taking, singing, debate, poetry.

  • Creative Play – play which allows a new response, the transformation of information, awareness of new connections, with an element of surprise.

  • Deep Play – play which allows the child to encounter risky or even potentially life threatening experiences, to develop survival skills and conquer fear.

  • Dramatic Play – play which dramatizes events in which the child is not a direct participator.

  • Exploratory Play – play to access factual information consisting of manipulative behaviours such as handling, throwing, banging or mouthing objects.

  • Fantasy Play – play which rearranges the world in the child’s way, a way which is unlikely to occur.

  • Imaginative Play – play where the conventional rules, which govern the physical world, do not apply.

  • Locomotor Play – movement in any or every direction for its own sake.

  • Mastery Play – control of the physical and affective ingredients of the environments.

  • Object Play – play which uses infinite and interesting sequences of hand-eye manipulations and movements.

  • Recapitulative Play – play that allows the child to explore ancestry, history, rituals, stories, rhymes, fire and darkness. Enables children to access play of earlier human evolutionary stages.

  • Role Play – play exploring ways of being, although not normally of an intense personal, social, domestic or interpersonal nature.

  • Rough and Tumble Play – close encounter play which is less to do with fighting and more to do with touching, tickling, gauging relative strength. Discovering physical flexibility and the exhilaration of display.

  • Social Play – play during which the rules and criteria for social engagement and interaction can be revealed, explored and amended.

  • Socio-dramatic Play – the enactment of real and potential experiences of an intense personal, social, domestic or interpersonal nature.

  • Symbolic Play – play which allows control, gradual exploration and increased understanding without the risk of being out of one’s depth.

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