Title: SLO 3
1SLO 3 4Emotional
2Social competence
-
- Depends largely on how well children
- express their emotions and understand
- the emotions of others.
- (Kostelnik Pg. 134)
3What are emotions?
- the affective (feeling) part of our
- consciousness
- a state of feeling
- a conscious mental reaction
- http//www.m-w.com/dictionary/
4What emotion do you see?
5What emotion do you see?
6What emotion do you see?
7What emotion do you see?
8What emotion do you see?
9What emotion do you see?
10What emotion do you see?
11What emotion do you see?
12What emotion do you see?
13What emotion do you see?
14What emotion do you see?
15What emotion do you see?
16Where do emotions come from?
- Internal and external events
- that send signals to the brain and
- central nervous system
17Parts to emotion
18Physical
- Facial expression
- Posture
- Voice
- Body movement
- Heart rate
- Sweaty palms
- Dry throat
19Expressive
- Laughing
- Smiling
- Frowning
20Cognitive
- Brain interprets what is happening
- A judgment is made happiness, sadness, anger,
fear
21- Choose one of the emotions on
- your word search and describe the
- physical, expressive and
- cognitive part of the emotion.
22What is important about emotions?
- Survival
- Provide information about our well being
- (Table 5-1, pg. 135)
- Serve as a form of communication
23Our role is to
- understand
- be sensitive
- offer support in managing
- provide the words
- help children find opportunities to talk about
feelings - express our feelings honestly model
- help children read cues
24We must remember
- Emotions are real
- There are no right or wrong emotions
- Children cannot help how they feel or change on
command - Emotions serve useful functions
25TRUE OR FALSE?
- Children with greater emotional awareness and
understanding are - not liked by peers adults.
- more apt to experience difficulties in social
interaction. - associated with cooperative friendly behaviour
- better able to get along with others.
- Kostelnik et al. 4th edition. p. 125
26(No Transcript)
27Stages in
28Primary emotions
- joy (6 weeks)
- anger (4 6 months)
-
- sadness (5 7 months)
- fear (6 12 months)
29TRUE OR FALSE?
- Real emotions dont appear until weeks after
birth. - Primary emotions are the intense and relatively
pure emotions that are first to develop in
infancy.
30TRUE OR FALSE?
- Childrens understanding of their
- emotions becomes more complex as they
- mature.
- Children are unable to recognize others
- emotions until the preschool years.
31Emotional IQ
- Everyone has emotions
- Emotions are prompted by different situations
- There are different ways to express emotions
- Other people may not feel the same way I do about
things - I can do things to affect how I feel and how
others feel
32Erik Eriksonthe emotional tasks of childhood
- Trust versus mistrust I am lovable and my world
is safe and secure. - Autonomy versus shame doubtI can decide.
- Initiative versus guilt I can do and I can
make. - Industry versus inferiority I can learn, I can
contribute, I can work with others.
33What do you think?
- Read Kostelnik Chapter 5
-
- Gender differences in childrens emotional
expression (pg. 145) - Family and cultural variations in childrens
emotional development (pg. 145) - Childhood fears from birth to adolescence
- (pg. 146)
34Emotional expression learned through
- Imitation
- Feedback
- Direct instruction
35In your program
- Can you think of examples of children
- learning about emotional expression
- through imitation, feedback and
- direct instruction?
36Responding to childrens emotions
- Kostelnik et al. text, read Nonsupportive adult
behaviour pg. 149 - Discuss with a partner
37Things to avoid
- Sounding all-knowing
- Accusing
- Trying to diffuse too quickly
- Coercing into talking about their feelings
- Ignoring
- Lying
- Denying
- Shaming
38Appropriate responses to childrens emotions
- Talking about feelings
- Affective reflection
- Help children express through words
39Affective Reflections
- Non-judgmental statements that describe the
emotion of the child or adult. - Kostelnik et al. 4th ed. p. 491
40When formulating affective reflections
- Make a brief statement
- describing the emotion you
- observed
- Use a variety of feeling
- Words over time
- Acknowledge emotions
- Revise inaccurate reflections
- Observe carefully
- Be sensitive to a
- wide range of
- emotions
- Be non-judgmental
- in your assessment
41Benefits of using affective reflections
- Helps recognize own
- feelings
- Verbal labels help
- child remember past
- situations how to
- handle
- Labeling helps to
- differentiate similar emotions
- Adult acknowledgement makes children feel heard
accepted - Helps to recognize that their emotions are not so
different from others - Gives children words/phrases to use in emotional
situations
42- Are you
- in control of your
- emotions?
43Anger
- a primary emotion
- normal
- unpleasant
- stressful - for those feeling it
- - for those targeted
- - and those helping others handle it.
44What causes anger?
- When a goal is blocked or needs are frustrated
- For infants toddlers that could be
- For preschoolers that could be
- For school-agers that could be
45Children express anger by
- VENTING facial expressions, crying, sulking or
talking but do little to solve or confront the
issue. - ACTIVE RESISTANCEphysically or verbally defend
their positions, self-esteem, or possessions in
non-aggressive ways i.e. give it back its mine!
46- AGGRESSIVE REVENGEphysically or verbally
retaliate i.e. hitting, name calling - Also, can express by
- Expressions of dislike I.e. telling a child they
cant play - Avoidance / escape from person
- Adult seeking - for comfort or solutions
47Childrens understanding of anger
- As children develop cognitively they gradually
understand anger - Memory
- Language
- Self-regulatory behaviours
- (Marion. NAEYC, 1997)
48How can we help children deal with anger?
- Create a safe emotional climate
- Model responsible anger management
- Help children develop self-regulatory skills
- (Marion. NAEYC, 1997)
49- 4. Encourage children to label feelings of anger
- 5. Encourage children to talk about
anger-arousing interactions - 6. Use books and stories about anger
- 7. Communicate with parents
- (Marion. NAEYC, 1997)
50ECE Skills for supporting children