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Module Specifications

Archived Version 2018 - 2019

Module Title
Module Code
School

Online Module Resources

NFQ level 8 Credit Rating 5
Pre-requisite None
Co-requisite None
Compatibles None
Incompatibles None
Description

This module builds on Wellbeing, Health and Nutrition 1. The importance of identifying children experiencing physical (hearing , vision, motor development,language and communication), social, relational, communicative and behavioural difficulties is emphasised and key indicators of these difficulties are explored. Students consider the concept of child agency: how it can be defined, manifested and supported in everyday activity. The agentive behaviour of babies as well as that of toddlers and young children is examined, particularly the development of self (e.g. self-care routines). The notion of belonging and boundaries is introduced as a way of supporting children’s prosocial behaviour and of promoting self-regulation (Aistear, 2009; Roberts 2010). Children’s use of repeated patterns of action (schema) is examined and the importance of respect for children’s behaviours is underlined. Food and nutrition issues as they pertain to children aged 3-5 are explored.

Learning Outcomes

1. Identify impairments and recognise difficulties (social, communicative, behavioural,language) that children may experience in participating in day-to-day activities in the early education settings
2. Identify the ways in which the youngest children display their agency
3. Explain the importance of recognising agency in children’s schematic activity
4. Describe how a sense of belonging and its accompanying boundaries contribute to young children’s growing ability for self-regulation
5. Support young children in resolving conflicts
6. Recognise schematic behaviour and support all children’s development from action to thought



Workload Full-time hours per semester
Type Hours Description
Lecture24No Description
Assessment Feedback25No Description
Independent Study76No Description
Total Workload: 125

All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml

Indicative Content and Learning Activities

1
Children with physical difficulties in early childhood: Identifying needs and supporting all children’s participation in day-to-day activities in ECE settings.

2
Young children’s agency. What is it, why it is important and how it is displayed in everyday situations by infants, toddlers and young children.

3
Schema patterns of behaviour as seen in children’s everyday behaviour and their play. Why are they important? (Nutbrown, 1994).

4
Belonging and boundaries: Two sides of a coin. Supporting peer relations and friendships in early education settings.

5
Supporting children in dealing with conflicts in peer relationships in early childhood.

6
Self-regulation and independent learning for children aged 3-5 years (Whitebread, 2007). Why are they important?

7
Food and nutrition issues as they pertain to children aged 3-5 years (e.g. food refusal, food preference).

Assessment Breakdown
Continuous Assessment% Examination Weight%
Course Work Breakdown
TypeDescription% of totalAssessment Date
Reassessment Requirement
Resit arrangements are explained by the following categories;
1 = A resit is available for all components of the module
2 = No resit is available for 100% continuous assessment module
3 = No resit is available for the continuous assessment component
Unavailable
Indicative Reading List

  • Deborah Albon and Penny Mukherji: 2008, Food and health in early childhood, SAGE, 2008., Los Angeles, 1412947227
  • Atherton, F. & Nutbrown, C.: 2013, Understanding schemas and young children, 1st, 10, SAGE Publications Ltd, 1446248941
  • Betsy Evans: 2002, You Can't Come to My Birthday Party, 1st, High/Scope Press, Ypsilanti, 1573791598
  • edited by Margaret Kernen and Elly Singer: 2011, Peer relationships in early childhood education and care, 1st, 11, Routledge, New York, 0415574617
  • Dr Rosemary Roberts: 2010, Wellbeing from Birth, 1st, 10, Sage Publications Ltd, UK, 1848607210
  • Mary Sheridan: 2014, Mary Sheridan’s From birth to five years, 4th, Routledge, UK, 041583354X
  • Robinson, M.: 2011, Understanding behaviour and development in early childhood: A guide to theory and practice, 1st, Routledge, Abington, UK, 0415565618
Other Resources

25995, Website, International Journal of Play, 2014, On ‘becoming social’: The importance of collaborative free play in childhood, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21594937.2013.863440, 25996, Website, Skouteris, H., Hill B., McCabe,M., Swinburn,B., P.Sacher, l.,& Chadwick ,P., 2014, Recruitment evaluation of a preschooler obesity-prevention intervention, Early Child Development and Care, 184(5), 649-657, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2013.808196, 25997, Website, Anderson L. M. & Anderson, J., 2010, Barney and breakfast: Messages about food and eating in preschool television shows and how they may impact the development of eating behaviours in children, Early Child Development and Care, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03004430903040516, 25998, Website, 0, Growing up in Ireland, http://www.growingup.ie/index.php?id=61,
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