1 / 13

Preschool – Emotional Development

Preschool – Emotional Development. http ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoCaUnBiGGg. 1. Erik Erikson: Initiative VS Guilt. INITIATIVE : is the decision and motivation to accomplish more tasks than expected or asked.

helena
Download Presentation

Preschool – Emotional Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Preschool – Emotional Development

  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoCaUnBiGGg

  3. 1. Erik Erikson: Initiative VS Guilt • INITIATIVE: is the decision and motivation to accomplish more tasks than expected or asked. • The desire to accomplish tasks is based on the child’s motivation and self-worth. • Children supported in these efforts develop self-confidence • GUILT: Repeated discouragement/punishment may lead to feelings of guilt, inferiority, or inadequacy *** Provide more opportunities for SUCCESS than FAILURE

  4. Initiative VS Guilt Initiative Guilt Scold instead of encourage Get angry over mistakes Discourage them from risking Stop their actions because... Focus on failures Set rigid rules and restrictions Be little and ridicule Fail to praise and encourage their ideas and ambitions. • Encourage child to create and to try new things • Teach them that mistakes do not make them bad, but this is how we learn. (miss take = try task again) • Allow and encourage a child’s ambitions, new abilities, ideas, and opinions. • Let them do things on their own.

  5. 2. Emotional Development • A preschooler is gaining stronger inner self-control and self-management of emotions and can begin to relate to other’s emotions

  6. Fears In addition to imaginary dangers (such as ghosts, monsters, and robbers), a preschooler also has real fears of the dark, being left alone or abandoned, school, and loss of social acceptance.

  7. Dealing with these Fears ►A caregiver can help a preschooler deal with these fears by.... • Accept the child’s fears by listening and understanding, do not dismiss it • Let the child express the fear without being ridiculed or made fun of • Help the child feel able to face the fear: talking about it, acting it out, problem solve ways to handle the fear • Taking appropriate actions, if the fear is justified, to remove the source

  8. 3. Imaginary Friends • Imaginaryfriends are common in preschoolers. They show a very healthy and normal emotional and social development.

  9. Social Development

  10. Social Milestones 3 Year Old 4 Year Old Cooperative play Highly social Enjoys others company May play loosely organized group games Talkative Willing to share • Takes turns • Likes to “help” in small ways • Responds to verbal guidance • Enjoys being by others • Will talk to anyone

  11. 1. Preschoolers are peer-oriented. • 2. They are enjoying new socialskills and spending more time outside of the home playing with others their age. • 3. As part of their new social skills, a preschooler is more able and willing to share.

  12. Preschool Environment • 4. Preschool children can learn specific social skills in the preschool environment • Taking turns • Sitting still for longer periods • Raising hands • Improving manners

  13. PLAY! • 5. Play is still a child’s work! • 6. Preschoolers continue to play in solitary, on-looker, and parallel play. • 7. They begin to engage in what is called cooperative play • Cooperative Play: where children play and interact with one another • 8. EXAMPLE: building a sand castle together, playing store

More Related