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Chapter 4

Chapter 4. Curriculum and Standards in Inclusive Settings. Inclusive Curriculum. Meets all children’s needs Follows federal and state law Follows workplace guidelines Is congruent with personal philosophy Is thoughtfully planned, challenging and engaging Is developmentally appropriate

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Chapter 4

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  1. Chapter 4 Curriculum and Standards in Inclusive Settings

  2. Inclusive Curriculum • Meets all children’s needs • Follows federal and state law • Follows workplace guidelines • Is congruent with personal philosophy • Is thoughtfully planned, challenging and engaging • Is developmentally appropriate • Is culturally and linguistically responsive • Promotes positive outcomes for children

  3. Developmentally Appropriate Practice • Knowledge about • development and learning • individual children • social and cultural contexts in which children learn and grow

  4. Principles Underlying DAP • Developmental domains (physical, social, emotional, and cognitive) are related and influence each other • Development occurs in an orderly sequence • Development varies between and within children • Early experiences have cumulative and delayed effects • Development proceeds toward greater complexity, organization, and internalization • Development is influence by social and cultural contexts

  5. Principles Underlying DAP • Children are active learners • Development and learning are a result of biological maturation and the environment • Play helps children develop and reflect on their development • Children learn by practicing newly acquired skills and challenges just beyond their present level of mastery • Children use different modes of knowing and learning and representing what they know • Children learn best when they feel safe and valued.

  6. Cycle of Learning • Awareness • Exploration • Inquiry • Utilization

  7. Continuum of Teaching Techniques • Withholding attention (planned ignoring) • Acknowledging • Modeling • Facilitating • Supporting • Scaffolding • Coconstructing • Demonstrating • Directing

  8. Self-Awareness: Self-Esteem and Inclusion • No formal standards • Self-esteem and self-regulation impact all other areas of development • Behavioral standards • Social competence and play • Teach classroom rules and procedures

  9. Self-Awareness: Social Studies I Culture II Time, continuity, and change III People, places, and environments IV Individual development and identity V Individuals, groups, and institutions VI Power, authority, and governance VII Production, distribution, and consumption VIII Science, technology, and society IX Global connections X Civic ideals and practices

  10. Language and Literacy: Speaking, Listening, Writing • Formal standards in reading • Speaking • Mean length of utterance • Vocabulary • Listening • Information intake and experience • Writing • Developmental progression

  11. Language and Literacy: Reading • Exposure to a wide range of print and nonprint material • Choose literature from many periods in many genres • Develop strategies to use texts and to write • Learn the structure and conventions of language • adjust language usage to their purpose and audience • Apply knowledge of language structure and conventions to create, critique, and discuss written material • Conduct research • Use a variety of information technologies • Respect diversity in languages and communication • Use first language to increase English competency • Be part of a literacy community • Use spoken, written, and visual language purposefully

  12. Discovery: Mathematics • Numbers and operations • Geometry • Measurement • Algebra • Data analysis and probability • Prekindergarten to grade 2 • Emphasis on numbers and operations, followed by geometry and measurement

  13. Discovery: Science • Goals for sciencing with young children: • Develop innate curiosity about the world • Broaden procedural and thinking skills for investigating the world, solving problems, and making decisions • Increase knowledge of the natural world • Science as inquiry • Science as human endeavor

  14. Discovery: Technology • Basic Operations and Concepts • Use both input devices • Use different media and technology for learning • Discuss technology using developmentally appropriate terminology • Use appropriate multimedia resources (Internet, software, encyclopedias) to support learning • Social, Ethical, and Human Issues • Work cooperatively with others using technology • Demonstrate positive social and ethical interaction • Use technology systems and software responsibly

  15. Discovery: Technology • Technology Productivity Tools • Create developmentally appropriate multimedia products with support. • Use technology resources for problem solving and communication • Technology Communications Tools. • Gather information and communicate with others using telecommunications with support from teachers, family, or peers.

  16. Wellness: Health, Safety and Nutrition • Develop a healthy life style • Self-awareness and injury prevention • Nutrition • Maintain a healthy weight • Establish proper nutrition

  17. Wellness: Physical Education • Demonstrate competency in many movement forms and proficiency in a few • Apply movement concepts and principles to learning and developing motor skills • Exhibit a physically active lifestyle • Achieve and maintain physical fitness • Demonstrate responsible personal and social behavior • Demonstrate understanding and respect for differences among people • Understand that physical activity provides the opportunity for enjoyment, challenge, self-expression, and social interaction

  18. Creative Arts: Creative Movement and Dramatic Play • Nor formal standards • Creative movement combines and enhances the senses • Dramatic play offers opportunities to try out and work through situations

  19. Creative Arts: Visual Arts • Understand and apply media, techniques, and processes • Use knowledge of structures and functions • Choose and evaluate a range of subject matter, symbols, and ideas • Understand the visual arts in relation to history and culture • Reflect on and assess the characteristics and merits of their work and the work of others • Make connections between visual arts and other disciplines

  20. Creative Arts: Music • Sing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music • Perform on instruments, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music • Improvise melodies, variations, and accompaniments • Compose and arrange music within specific guidelines • Read and notate music • Listen to, analyze, and describe music • Evaluate music and music performances • Understand relationships between music, the other arts, and disciplines outside the arts • Understand music in relation to history and culture

  21. Reflections • Reflect on the impact of standards on education • How do you thing the emphasis on standards will impact areas that may have national standards but not state standards?

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