Title: Responsive Caregiving:
1-
- Responsive Caregiving
- The Foundation of Quality
- Sandy Petersen
- ZERO TO THREE
2-
- Responsive Caregiving
- The Foundation of Quality
- Sandy Petersen
- ZERO TO THREE
3Responsiveness as the Foundation of Relationships
and Learning
Responsiveness is the adult sensitivity and
reaction to a childs facial expressions, body
postures, gestures and words.
4Responsiveness as the Foundation of Relationships
and Learning
- Responsiveness refers to both how well the adult
understands what the infant or toddler is trying
to communicate (their Cues) and how the adult
acts in response to the child.
Wittmer Petersen, 2010
5Responsiveness Matters
- Infants and toddlers need sensitive responses to
their attempts to learn everything - Motor Skills
- Language
- Social Skills
- Learning and Thinking
6Responsiveness Matters
- It matters most in emotional development
because emotional reactions are the building
blocks of the brain - They create the architecture of the brain
through connections between neurons and setting
off the hormones that constantly bathe the brain.
7Responsiveness Matters
- With the help of responsive adults, infants and
toddlers achieve important emotional milestones
which contribute to all other learning - Regulation
- Emotional expression
- Attachment relationship
- Sense of identity
8Respect, Reflect, Relate
-
- Respect, reflect, relate is a process used for
every part of curriculum planning, when the baby
really leads the way. -
9Respect
- RESPECT involves observing infants and toddlers
with a desire to understand their interests,
feelings, and intentions. Respect means the care
teacher approaches each encounter or observation
with the expectation of seeing the infant or
toddler learning.
10Reflect
- REFLECT describes your thought process as you
wonder about the infants or toddlers
intentions, examine your own internal responses,
and determine how you might best respond to a
child.
11Relate
- RELATE explains the actions the infant and
toddler care teacher takes (or chooses not to
take) to best serve the relationship and the
infants or toddlers intentions.
12Regulation
- Provides increasing control over reactions to
internal sensations and external events. - Helps the infant and toddler
- Pay attention
- Develop memory
- Solve problems
- Categorize
- Engage in symbolic play
13Emotional Expression
- Is the key to understanding others and having
others understand you. - Very young babies use universal expressions of
interest, happiness, and sadness. - Very young infants are distressed to see a video
of a happy face with a sad sound coming out of
it.
14Achieving an Attachment Relationship
- Secure attachment comes from the earlier
development of trust and safety - Secure attachment allows the mobile infant to
explore - Secure attachment leads to better relationships
in school
15Developing a Sense of Self
- Everything you do or dont do - registers in
the infants brain adding to his picture of who
he is with others and how to act with others - Every time an infant or toddler figures out
what to do with a toy, getting in or out of a
space, or solving any problems, he adds to his
picture of being a confident, competent person.
16Responsiveness as the Foundation of Relationships
and Learning
Responsiveness is the adult sensitivity and
reaction to a childs facial expressions, body
postures, gestures and words.
17Responsiveness as the Foundation of Relationships
and Learning
- Responsiveness refers to both how well the adult
understands what the infant or toddler is trying
to communicate (their Cues) and how the adult
acts in response to the child.
Wittmer Petersen, 2010
18Responsiveness Matters
- Infants and toddlers need sensitive responses to
their attempts to learn everything - Motor Skills
- Language
- Social Skills
- Learning and Thinking
19Responsiveness Matters
- It matters most in emotional development
because emotional reactions are the building
blocks of the brain - They create the architecture of the brain
through connections between neurons and setting
off the hormones that constantly bathe the brain.
20Responsiveness Matters
- With the help of responsive adults, infants and
toddlers achieve important emotional milestones
which contribute to all other learning - Regulation
- Emotional expression
- Attachment relationship
- Sense of identity
21Respect, Reflect, Relate
-
- Respect, reflect, relate is a process used for
every part of curriculum planning, when the baby
really leads the way. -
22Respect
- RESPECT involves observing infants and toddlers
with a desire to understand their interests,
feelings, and intentions. Respect means the care
teacher approaches each encounter or observation
with the expectation of seeing the infant or
toddler learning.
23Reflect
- REFLECT describes your thought process as you
wonder about the infants or toddlers
intentions, examine your own internal responses,
and determine how you might best respond to a
child.
24Relate
- RELATE explains the actions the infant and
toddler care teacher takes (or chooses not to
take) to best serve the relationship and the
infants or toddlers intentions.
25Regulation
- Provides increasing control over reactions to
internal sensations and external events. - Helps the infant and toddler
- Pay attention
- Develop memory
- Solve problems
- Categorize
- Engage in symbolic play
26Emotional Expression
- Is the key to understanding others and having
others understand you. - Very young babies use universal expressions of
interest, happiness, and sadness. - Very young infants are distressed to see a video
of a happy face with a sad sound coming out of
it.
27Achieving an Attachment Relationship
- Secure attachment comes from the earlier
development of trust and safety - Secure attachment allows the mobile infant to
explore - Secure attachment leads to better relationships
in school
28Developing a Sense of Self
- Everything you do or dont do - registers in
the infants brain adding to his picture of who
he is with others and how to act with others - Every time an infant or toddler figures out
what to do with a toy, getting in or out of a
space, or solving any problems, he adds to his
picture of being a confident, competent person.