Title: Assessment should be designed for administration by infant
1- Key Considerations in the Development of Ohios
- Infant Toddler Guidelines
Presenter Peter L. Mangione, WestEd
2School ReadinessBirth To 3
- School Readiness, to be a useful
construct,has to recognize social competence and
emotional well-being as critical to school
success.
3Social Emotional CompetenceFrom FAN The
Child Mental Health Foundations Agencies Network
-
- Confidence
- Friendliness
- Good peer relationships
- Tackles persists at challenging tasks
- Has good language development
- Effectively communicates frustrations, anger
joy - Listens to instructions is attentive
4-
- Emotional competence establishes the
foundation for success in all other developmental
domains.
5The Power of Early Interaction
-
- I am listened to or not.
- What I choose to do is valued or it isnt.
- How I express my emotions is accepted or it
isnt. - I am allowed to explore or I am not.
- Mostly my needs are met or they are not.
6Emotions Drive Learning
-
- Emotional motive drives skill development.
- It is the pleasure and delight that babies get
from interaction with people that drive them to
relate to people more frequently and more
skillfully.
7Being Held In Anothers Mind
-
- Attachment to a significant other.
- Feeling of loss when other is gone.
- Reminded of others thoughts about you when not
present. - Incorporation of ongoing emotional connection
with those thinking about you.
8National Context
- Early Learning Guidelines have already been
developed by several states and are under
development in many more - Early Learning Guidelines for Infants and
Toddlers are sometimes aligned with Guidelines
for Preschoolers, which in turn are aligned with
K-2 Content Standards and Performance Standards - Early Learning Guidelines in some states are
being used as the basis for defining a Curriculum
Framework and Assessment Strategies
9 Terminology
- The terms Early Learning Guidelines and
Learning Standards are most commonly used - Early Learning Guidelines or Standards are
distinct from Program Guidelines or Program
Standards
10Process in Ohio
- Start with the development of Infant Toddler
Guidelines - Infant Toddler Guidelines are to become the
focal point of professional development and
public awareness
11To Be Developmentally In Tune with Infants
Toddlers, Guidelines Should
- Reflect what we know from theory and research
(evidence-based) - Emphasize social-emotional development, in
particular the development of relationships and
self regulation - Reflect an image of the child as an active,
motivated learner at every stage and age of
development
12To Be Developmentally In Tune with Infants
Toddlers, Guidelines Should (continued)
- Define the child as competent for her or his
stage and age - Emphasize a positive outlook on early development
and learning - Take into account the influence of both
individual differences and cultural diversity on
development and learning
13To Be Developmentally In Tune with Infants
Toddlers, Guidelines Should(continued)
- Show that infants and toddlers progress through a
sequence of qualitatively distinct levels or
stages development - Take into account the interplay of nature and
nurture as contributing to the childs
developmental progress - Reflect the integrated nature of early
development and learning - Present teaching as facilitating early
development and learning
14Ohios Guiding PrinciplesEach Guideline Must
- Be evidence-based
- Take into account differences in temperament,
development and culture - Be sensitive to both cultural and linguistic
differences - Be inclusive of children with special needs
- Link to best practices that support childrens
optimal development - Be useful to parents, providers and policy makers
- Be possible to assess or measure throughout the
birth to three period
15Assessing the Developmental Progress of Infants
Toddlers
- A general orientation to facilitating development
and learning across key domains at each stage and
age - Avoidance of narrowly defined items or measures
16Assessing the Developmental Progress of Infants
Toddlers
- Importance of assessing each childs
developmental progress across domains - Assessment should focus on progress variables
- Each progress variable should be defined as a
sequence of qualitatively distinct levels
17Assessing the Developmental Progress of Infants
Toddlers
- Assessment should focus on the level of
development at which the child performs rather
than behavior the child has not yet or only
partially mastered (Positive Orientation) - Assessment should be inclusive of infants and
toddlers with disabilities or other special needs
(principles of universal design and provisions
for accommodating all children) - Assessment should be designed for administration
by infant care teachers
18Assessing the Developmental Progress of Infants
Toddlers
- Focus on everyday interactions and routines
- Based on the observation and documentation of
each child across time, i.e., a broad sampling of
behavior - Situations should not have to be set up to
observe and document behavior that is assessed
(observational assessment rather than direct
assessment) - Documentation process does not interfere with the
ongoing interactions and routines in the care and
education setting
19Assessing the Developmental Progress of Infants
Toddlers
- Reporting Methods
- Help infant care teachers and parents gain
insights into the childs development and
learning - Give ideas on how to continue to facilitate the
childs development and learning - Allow infant care teachers and parents to compare
the childs progress at different points in time
20Early Learning Guidelines, Assessment,
Curriculum Planning
- Assessment links directly to developmentally in
tune early learning guidelines that in turn link
to developmentally in tune recommendations for
curriculum planning.
21Conclusions
- The birth to 3 period is unique
- The K-12 scheme maps to the infant/toddler age
period in a general sense - At the infant/toddler age, the content of
development and learning evolves from the
interplay of nature and nurture - At the K-12 level, content generally refers to
skills and knowledge that are the focus of
instruction
22Conclusions
- Early Learning Guidelines should
- Support good quality education and care
- Help infant care teachers and parents deepen
their understanding of early development and
learning - Help infant care teachers and parents improve
their capacity to provide responsive nurturance
and foster early learning - Be studied to document how they are used in
practice and the extent to which infant care
teachers and families learn from them
23Conclusions
- Early Learning Guidelines alone will not lead to
good quality infant/toddler care - Many factors contribute to the quality of
caresmall group size, relationships, education
and professional development of infant/care
teachers, the environment, just to name of few. - Program Guidelines comprehensively address
factors that contribute to the quality of
infant/toddler care and education
24Conclusions
- Infant care teachers need to learn
- How to use early learning guidelines
appropriately, - How to assess childrens progress appropriately,
and - How to use assessment information for planning
and meeting the needs of each child in a group
25Conclusions
- Appropriate training for infant care teachers is
essential in efforts to create developmentally in
tune early learning guidelines. With training,
teachers can learn to provide the kind of care
that infants and toddlers need to thrive.
26Key Features of Ohios Development of Early
Learning Guidelines
- Included multiple perspectives (multi-disciplinary
) - Writing teams for each domain with shared vision
role of leadership team - Effort to communicate the perspective of infants
and toddlers throughout the guidelines - Clear purpose Public awareness, educational and
professional development focus - Plan to create complementary resources (training
and education)