Tuesday, December 7, 2010

PROBLEM CHECKLIST^^ECED 13....SUMMARY

FIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DOMAINS
There are five different developmental domains of children which all relate to each other. They are easily referred to as the SPICE[5] of life:
§  Social - Refers mostly to the ability to form attachments, play with others, co-operation and sharing, and being able to create lasting relationships with others.
§  Physical - Development of Fine (small) and Gross (large) Motor Skills.
§  Intellectual - The process of making sense of the world around them.
§  Creative - The development of special abilities creating talents. Music, Art, Writing, Reading, and Singing are all ways for creative development to take place.
§  Emotional - Development of self-awareness, self-confidence, and coping with feelings as well as understanding them.
§  Emotional Development - Concerning children's increasing awareness and control of their feelings and how they react to these feelings in a given situation.
§  Social Development - Concerning the children's identity, their relationships with others, and understanding their place within a social environment.

SUMMARY OF THE COMMON PROBLEMS ECOUNTERED BY ECED CHILDREN
Cognitive Development
·         Mental retardation (MR)  is a subtype of intellectual disability
Social Development
·         Peer relationships are important to children's development. Friends not only provide companionship and recreation, but meet other needs as well. Through interactions with peers, children learn valuable social skills.
·         Anxiety disorders  Generalised anxiety disorder, childhood onset social phobia, separation anxiety disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and phobia are demonstrated by a diffuse or specific anxiety predictably caused by certain situations.
·          Working with Shy or Withdrawn Students
This digest focuses on the middle range of such students, who are commonly described as SHY (inhibited, lacking in confidence, socially anxious) or WITHDRAWN (unresponsive, uncommunicative, or daydreaming) and suggests strategies for working with these students.
·         Children's Peer Relationships
Children who are unable to form close or satisfying relationships with peers should be of concern to parents and teachers alike. For one thing, these children miss out on opportunities to learn social skills, skills needed to initiate and maintain social relationships and to resolve social conflicts, including communication, compromise, and tact.
·          Peer Conflicts in the Classroom
Traditionally, many adults have viewed conflicts between children as undesirable and have tried to prevent them or to intervene. Recent theory and research, however, suggest that peer conflict contributes to children's development and represents an important form of social interaction
·         Bullying
Bullying can take many forms; racial discrimination and sexual harassment are examples of abuse students can face. Child rearing influences, the characteristics of the child, and factors of the environment are cited as possible reasons why children bully. Most bullying occurs in the school environment so how schools respond to such interactions impacts the school climate
Emotional Development
Behavior Problem of the children
·         Hyperactive
·         Impulsive
·         Day dreaming
·         Self-fish
·         Self centered
·         Insecure problems
·         Anxious worrier
·         Fearful
·         Low self esteem
·         Shy
·         Compulsive-perfectionist
·         Depressed self injurious
Emotional problems in children have become more widely recognized. A child's emotional problem can become a chronic problem if it's not attended to properly and in a timely manner. Many adult emotional problems can also affect children, but these problems may not be as easily recognized in children. Some emotional problems in children can be treated quite easily, but some require long-term care that can be complicated.

Childhood Bipolar Disorder
Childhood bipolar disorder is an emotional problem that can affect children. This childhood emotional problem can be hard to diagnose, because its symptoms are also symptoms of many other childhood emotional problems. Common symptoms include mood swings, irritability, episodes of extreme happiness and episodes of severe depression. Childhood bipolar disorder is a serious condition and should be treated as such. Treatment most often includes a combination of medication (sometimes more than one) and behavior therapy (teaching the child how to handle certain situations better).

Childhood Depression
Childhood depression is an emotional problem that can affect children. This childhood emotional problem is considered serious, but it can be difficult to diagnose because its symptoms are not unique. Common symptoms include irritability, fatigue, hopelessness, social withdrawal and poor performance in school. 
Childhood depression is most often treated with medication and behavior therapy.

Autism
Autism is an emotional problem that can affect children. This childhood emotional problem is often serious and consists of three distinctive behaviors. These autism behaviors include trouble interacting socially, obsessive and competitive behavior and difficulty with nonverbal and verbal communication. Medications (often more than one) and behavioral and educational therapies and interventions are used to treat autism. Family counseling is also used to help families learn about autistic children and to help them cope.

Childhood Schizophrenia
Childhood schizophrenia is an emotional problem that can affect children. This emotional disorder often affects a child's ability to develop normal social, educational and emotional skills and habits. Children with emotional disorder often have difficulty performing daily tasks, think and act irrationally and have delusions and hallucinations. Childhood schizophrenia is most often treated with a variety of treatments including medications (most often antipsychotics) and psychotherapy (teaches the child to cope with the illness and its challenges).

Tourette Syndrome
Tourette syndrome is an emotional problem that can affect children. This emotional problem is also considered a neurological disorder. Tourette syndrome is characterized by stereotyped and repetitive vocalizations and involuntary movements referred to as tics. Tourette syndrome is most often treated with a combination of medication and psychotherapy.
Physical Development
            From the time of a baby's birth, we eagerly wait for the day when our child will start to roll over, crawl and then walk. Unlike speech and language development, these milestones are at first glance easily determined. Yet, what many parents do not know is that within the field of physical development there are separate areas of development and within those areas the manner in which a child is able to accomplish a certain task, can make a big difference in his life. There are also two areas, which can affect a child's ability to learn and may contribute to difficulty with physical tasks. These are:

Here is an explanation of each of these basic terms:
·                     Gross Motor Development
This is the area of physical development that most parents think of first - the child's general ability to move around and use the various parts of his body. Activities like rolling over; crawling, walking, running and jumping are gross motor skills. These skills usually involve using the entire body or several parts of the body at one time.
Some of the areas that are considered when evaluating the area of gross motor development are:
Muscle Tone: How tightly or loosely a person's body is put together? If a child's body is too tight (high tone) then his movements might be jerky or disconnected. If a child's body is too loose (low tone) then her movements might be slow and lack strength. Some technical terms that are associated with these areas are Hypertonic (someone who has high tone) and Hypotonic (associated with low tone). These are professional terms and do not apply to every child whose tone happens to be either a bit tight or a bit loose. Only a professional can decide if a child's skills fit these criteria.
Muscle strength: How much strength does a child have? How much pressure can she apply with her hands and legs? How much pressure can her body withstand?
Quality of movements: Are a child's movement's smooth or does she seem to jerk her limbs? Does she seem to move either particularly slow or fast? Does it take effort for her to move around?
Range of movement: An important area in physical development is a child's ability to make movements that span the entire length of her body. A significant milestone is the ability to make movements that go from one side of the body to the other, referred to as "crossing the midline." This skill is necessary for a child to do tasks such throwing a ball or passing an object from one hand to another. This concept is also important for the area of fine motor development.
·                     Fine Motor Development
This term refers to skills that require smaller movements and more intricate capabilities. A generalization that is often made is that fine motor activities are skills that a child does with his hands. While this is not totally accurate, it is true that most fine motor activities involve a child's ability to use his hands properly. Overall, when we say that a child has appropriate fine motor skills, it means that he can use his hands appropriately for a child of his age.
Here are terms that are used to describe specific fine motor skills.
·                     Visual Motor Skills
These skills require coordination between the child's ability to see (visual skills) and his hands. In early childhood, this includes activities such as putting together puzzles and building with construction toys. (blocks, leggos)
·                     Grapho-Motor Skills
Any task that involves using a writing tool is considered a grapho-motor skill. These tasks include drawing, coloring, and using a pencil. (Grapho-Motor skills are also visual motor skills.)
An important term related to these areas and fine motor development in general, is eye-hand coordination. This refers to a person's ability to coordinate the information that she sees with her eyes in order to tell her hands what to do.
·                     Motor Planning
Professionals use the term motor planing to describe a child's ability to interact successfully with his physical environment; which means to plan, organize and carry out unfamiliar motor actions. When a child sees a new puzzle for the first time, it is not enough to have the physical ability to move the pieces around and fit them together. He also needs to know how to organize the activity so that he will be successful. (i.e. start with the ends, put the ones of the same color together, etc…). If a child has difficulty with a task, it is important to consider if he is unable to physically complete the task or if he is unable to figure out how to go about doing so.
While you can evaluate a child's fine motor skills from a very young age, until age two, the line between fine and gross motor skills is often very difficult to ascertain. The skills most closely associated with fine motor skills (drawing, puzzles, building, etc…) generally start to develop in children from ages two and up. Up until age two, a young child is not able to use her hands in a more intricate way. Among infants, babies and toddlers, therefore, physical development difficulties are not always clearly defined as gross motor or fine motor difficulties. By age three, however, the difference between these two areas is more obvious and the tasks that the child has difficulty with are defined as falling into either only one or both of these areas.
Contributing Factors:
When considering a child's motor skills the following factors need to be taken into consideration:
·                     Attention Skills
Another area that can contribute significantly to a child's ability to perform physical tasks is his attention span. In the last few years, a condition called Attention Deficit Disorder has become very well known and commonly diagnosed among both pre-school and school age children. While this condition can not be properly explained in a few lines, the main point is that a child's attention span can affect his ability to complete activities. It is important to point out that when a child is having difficulty learning to perform physical tasks, it is essential to consider if his abilities are affected by his ability to pay attention to what he is doing. Is he truly unable to build a tower of ten blocks -- Or is he simply too easily distracted by the child next to him who is coloring with markers?
·                     Sensory Integration
While many parents have heard of attention deficit disorder, few parents are aware of how their child's relationship to his senses, can affect his physical development. All children and adults, in one way or another have sensory sensitivities. There will always be certain smells that make one person feel sick and do not bother someone else, or a certain sound that makes a person's skin crawl while it does not affect someone else. But what many parents and professionals do not realize, is that there are children for whom this sensitivity keeps them from learning in a classroom or at home.
In fact, in addition to the five senses of touch, taste, smell, hearing and sight, there are two more senses that are also essential to a child's development: the movement sense (vestibular) and position in space (propriception).
All seven of these senses need to properly take in information from the environment and organize them in a way that our bodies can use. This is called sensory integration. Sometimes there are imbalances in this system that can lead to over or under sensitivity in one or several of these areas.
Being either over or under sensitive in one or several of these seven areas can affect a child's ability to perform physical tasks.

Here are some examples:
·                     Touch - A child might be sensitive to the feel of objects against his skin. He might hate activities such as dress up, pretend play with makeup, or arts and craft activities that involve working with playdough or clay. A child who is overly sensitive to touch may overeact when touched even lightly on the shoulder by a teach or a friend. A child who is underly sensitive may have no reaction if he falls or hurts himself.
·                     Smell - A child might react strongly to unusual or strong smells or not seem to notice even unusual smells such as food burning or gas leaking.
·                     Taste - Some children are particularly sensitive to the taste of different foods.
·                     Sight - Strong lights or certain types of colors may bother a child.
·                     Hearing - A child may be disturbed by sudden or loud noises.
·                     Position in Space - Some children have difficulty evaluating how much space is needed to reach a certain item. This would include putting a pegboard down on the table without tipping it over, judging if there is room for a child to crawl underneath a jungle gym and sitting down on the center of the chair. A child who seems to eternally "miss the chair" when sitting down may be having difficulty in this area.
·                     Movement - an overly sensitive child may fear climbing on a jungle gym, and have difficulty with gross motor activities. An underly sensitive child may be fidgety, jump on the couch all afternoon, and have difficulty sitting down to do table activities such as a puzzle.
These are but a few examples of how a child's ability to use the information he receives from his environment is critical to his ability to perform physical tasks.
When a child is having difficulty in the area of physical development, it is essential for parents and professionals that treat a child to consider how his sensory environment affects his development. In this way a parent can determine if a child really "can't" put together that puzzle or if the lights or other sounds in the room are just so disturbing to him that he is unable to do so.
It is also important for parents to understand that sensory integration is a real issue and not just a child being "picky" or "fussy." While to some children a strong smell or bright lights might be annoying, to others, the experience can be unbearable.
Evaluating Contributing Factors:
How can a parent or professional know if a child's problem is a purely physical one or if it is being affected by contributing factors such as sensory integration or attention skills? Often, making this discrimination is the hardest task of all. The first tip off that a contributing factor is affecting a child's development, is if a child can perform a task in some situations, but not in others. If a child can sit and put together 20 piece puzzles at home, but in pre-school he just moves around the pieces, then clearly the problem is not just physical. Instead, a parent and professional should consider if the child's difficulty in school is in the area of attention (too much is going on) or if he has trouble with the sensory stimuli in school (i.e. the lights are too bright, the noise of the children is too loud.)
While it is often easy to determine if a child can or cannot do a particular physical skill it can be difficult to decide if this is an exclusively physical problem or if there are other factors contributing to the child's difficulty. The key for a parent and a professional is to determine how a child's physical skills are developing. Then, if there are any difficulties, it is essential to determine if this is purely a physical difficulty or if other factors may be affecting the child's development.





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