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Creating learning environments for children under two

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Title: Creating learning environments for children under two


1
Every day learning in home environments
  • Creating learning environments for children under
    two

Helen Lynch, PhD Candidate, Occupational Science
Occupational Therapy Dept., UCC Dr. Noirin
Hayes, PhD supervisor, Dublin Institute of
Technology IFDCO Conference, UCC, July 2009
2
Nature of early childhood sector
  • Crosses boundaries between child-care, child
    development, child education, health promotion
    and services for children who are not developing
    typically
  • Influences from psychology, health, education,
    care
  • In health and health-care in Ireland
    traditionally related to screening and health
    checks now moving into the realm of well-being
    and participation
  • Health viewed more from a social model- the
    impact on child's ability to engage in typical
    life experiences, in the context of family and
    communities

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Childrens Occupational Profile changing
  • Impact of globalisation
  • Family life and employment patterns
  • A protectionist viewpoint of parenting
  • Nature of play and leisure the marked rise in
    sedentary activities alongside a reduction in
    physical activity
  • the complexity of society in which unsafe urban
    spaces, time pressured parents and the
    entertainment focus of new technologies in
    combination are creating a generation of
    occupationally deprived children
  • Whiteford 2001

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(No Transcript)
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Resulting in developmental concerns
  • review of research on impact of sleep/play
    positions and motor development (Liao, Zawacki
    Campbell ,2005)
  • Link with motor development and equipment use
    (Abbott Bartlett, 2001)
  • Increase in children presenting with coordination
    disorders- better identification or a decrease in
    play skills?
  • Too little risk leads to weak resilience in
    children

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Resulting in health and well-being concerns
  • Increase in sedentary activity in children
  • Increase in obesity levels
  • activity patterns are more focused on organised
    play dates, TV watching,
  • patterns of activity acquired throughout
    childhood and adolescence are more likely to be
    maintained throughout the life span-
  • WHO, Physical activity and Health in Europe
    report 2006

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Leading to some interesting questions that we all
need to ask
  • As early childhood practitioners, do we really
    know what typically developing children do?
  • How do children of today typically spend their
    time?
  • What is the role of the environment in supporting
    child development/learning?

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Aims of the seminar
  • Play, development and learning
  • To consider what we know about children in the
    Ireland of today
  • Researching childrens environments the
    relationship with child development, learning and
    play
  • The power of the ordinary natural learning
    environments and everyday learning opportunities
  • Some exploratory research work to date
  • Implications and considerations

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General agreement
  • Children learn by doing
  • Doing usually takes the form of play
  • Play is more focused on process than product
  • Play is a vehicle for child development/ learning

Think of a time when you were young What would
you say your favourite memory of play is? Write
down your memory of this experience
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Important elements to play
  • Is it about toys and commercial objects?
  • Is it about your intrinsic motivation and desire
    to develop the play?
  • Is it about the physical and social environment
    you were in?

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Definition of play
  • Play is freely chosen, personally directed,
    intrinsically motivated behaviour that actively
    engages the child
  • (NPFA, PLAYLINK and CPC, 2000, p6) cited in the
    National Play Policy,)

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So what do we know about childrens lives in
Ireland today?
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In 2007EXPLORATORY STUDY
  • What are the typical activity (play) profiles of
    Cork city
  • children in middle-childhood (aged
    5-8 years)?
  • Do these profiles compare or differ to those of
    other cultures?
  • 34 children kept time-diaries for 1 school day
  • 1 week-end day in March

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Some findings
  • Favourite activities include
  • catching ladybirds,
  • playing with cousins,
  • playing hurling,
  • GAA football,
  • playing in the terrace,
  • dancing for my nan
  • playing soccer
  • 60 walk to and from school
  • Average walking time per day to and from school
    31 mins so 15 mins walk to school per child
  • 20 go shopping at the weekend with their parents
  • 55 play outside in the park at weekends50
    during the week
  • 23 are taken for a treat to eat out at the
    weekend
  • 34 engage in religious practice visiting
    graves, saying prayers, going to church
  • 17 visit relatives during the week 38
    relatives at the weekend

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TABLE 1 comparison of sample activities between
Canadian and Irish cultures
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Some implications from findings
  • The environment appears to have a significant
    role in the activity/play profile of children
    (impact of grade/class in school)
  • Occupations/play has a cultural dimension we
    need to ensure we do not take a globalised view
    of childrens play development consideration to
    context
  • childs environment hugely influenced by
    parents/carers

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practitioners must be masters of the norms and
expectations inherent in activity ideas and the
palette of activities typically considered by
persons of different ages, genders or cultural
backgrounds
  • (Pierce, 2000, p. 140)

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2008
  • EARLY CHILDHOOD EVERY DAY LEARNING IN HOME
    ENVIRONMENTS

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Early learning and development
The link with Learning
  • Clear association between play and development as
    well as play and learning (Hutt Hutt 1970
    Bruner, 1972 Siegler, 2000 Piaget, 1952, 1962
    Vygotsky, 1978)
  • Human development needs to be situated within
    relevant sociocultural contexts (Valsiner, 1987
    Rogoff, 1993 Bronfenbrenner Morris, 1998
    Rogoff, 2003)
  • Contemporary developmental psychology is moving
    towards context e.g. dynamic systems theory of
    learning (Thelen Smith 1998), and Gibsons
    ecological approach to visual perception (Gibson,
    1986).

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Environmental research
The link with Environment
  • Children learn by doing learning and development
    is a result of the interaction between the child
    and the environment (Bronfenbrenner, 1979
    Wohlwill Heft, 1987)
  • Sociocultural environments have been the focus of
    the majority of environmental research studies to
    date with little attention to the physical
    environments (Muniers, Teeters Myers Pierce,
    2008).
  • The physical environment has been identified as a
    key factor in learning outcomes in children
    (Elardo, Bradley Caldwell, 1975 Wachs, 1978
    Wachs, 1979)

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Where is the environment in child-care/child
development?
  • Research found that quality of physical, designed
    environment and quality of outdoor spaces is
    related to child's cognitive, social and
    emotional development (Moore 1987, Moore
    Sugiyama 2007)
  • Wachs (1987)
  • Study of physical features of the home strongly
    associated with cognitive development identified
    5 key features
  • Physically responsive environment
  • Presence of sheltered areas
  • Degree to which the physical environment allowed
    for exploration
  • Noise levels and confusion
  • Degree of temporal regularity

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Context- how each piece interacts and effects the
other
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The Irish context..?
St. Patricks Day
Gaelic sports
Different communities
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An Irish profile
Statistics for children
  • 2005 Ireland has the higher percentage of
    children under 18 than any other EU member state
    (25 of the population).
  • 2002 86 live with both parents or guardians,
    compared to 14 who live with a lone
    parent/guardian.
  • 2005 59.7 preschoolers minded by their own
    parent/guardian compared to 62.1 in 2002
  • 2005 22.1 attend a creche/montessori or paid
    carer
  • 2005 total no of preschoolers minded by parent
    or relative 75.7

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In the Irish context, the home is still the main
environment for baby/toddler care
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Home as learning environment
  • In early childhood education, Home Learning
    Environments (HLE) has been identified as
    significant
  • In early childhood intervention, importance of
    environment is being noted- e.g. and Natural
    Learning Environments (NLE)
  • NLE research based on legislation in the USA-
    Part C of IDEA legislation
  • In recent years, changing the way practitioners
    work in early childhood intervention

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Why natural learning environments?
  • Linked to an inclusion philosophy
  • Values daily, routine-based activities,
    incidental learning
  • Integrates learning and family-centred practice
  • Contextualised understanding of child development

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How children learn-from a NLE perspective
  • Everyday life is made up of experiences and
    opportunities (social and physical settings) that
    are contexts for meaningful and functional child
    learning and development, and mutually beneficial
    parent-child interactions, strengthening both
    child and parent competence and confidence
    (Dunst, 2004)
  • How children learn
  • Natural learning opportunities
  • Participation in existing activity settings
  • Child and family interests (resources)
  • Planned and spontaneous activities (Dunst et al
    2000)

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Definitions
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • environment objects, places, events and other
    people features in a setting that invite,
    permit or inhibit engagement in sustained
    progressively more complex interactions with and
    activity in immediate environment
    (Bronfenbrenner, 1993, p. 11)

30
How to identify resources for natural learning
environments
  • Affordances
  • Affordances are opportunities for action that
    objects, events or places in the environment
    provide for the child (Hirose 2002)
  • Identify routines and activities typical in your
    home (resource-based)

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A look at Sarah, 22 months
33
A look at Sarah, 22 months
  • What did you see in the environment
  • Bowls
  • Spoons
  • Playroom
  • Childs table
  • Kitchen
  • Mother/carer
  • Family pet
  • What did you see in terms of affordances?
  • Objects that hold food
  • Things for stirring
  • Space to move and play
  • An object for putting things on
  • A place for cooking/washing
  • A person who enables play experiences (scaffolds)

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Sources of everyday natural learning
environments- in the home
  • Family routines
  • Parenting routines
  • Child routines
  • Literacy activities
  • Play activities
  • Physical play
  • Entertainment activities
  • Family rituals
  • Family celebrations
  • Socialisation activities
  • Gardening activities
  • (Dunst et al, 2004)

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Things for hiding under play activity
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Places for activity family routine
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Things to explore physical-sensory play
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Places to share socialisation activity
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Place to dig gardening activity
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Place to move family routine
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What is the evidence for NLE?
  • Does working with infants and toddlers in natural
    learning environments result in better
    developmental outcomes?
  • Research review of 150 abstracts
  • Young children learn best through naturalistic
    learning opportunities
  • Authentic activities that are meaningful and
    appropriate for the child was the most important
    issue
  • Children developed skills specifically in
    relation to self-help (independent living skills)
    and social development
  • (research review Stewart, 2009)

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A note on the outdoor environment Same approach
applies
  • Think of affordances and opportunities
  • Places to explore
  • Places to shelter
  • Places to experience movement- rolling, crawling,
    running, hiding, climbing, chasing, sliding,
    swinging, rocking, skipping, catching and
    throwing balls
  • Places for hanging-out!
  • Places for exploring
  • Objects for manipulating- ropes, pushing or
    riding toys, boxes, scoops and shovels, buckets,
  • Objects for sitting on, climbing on, jumping off

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Concern regarding lack of outdoor play
  • Research Institutes such as the NLI in North
    Carolina, USA
  • Mission to help communities create stimulating
    places for play, learning and environmental
    education- environments that recognise human
    dependence on the natural world
  • Researching different types of layouts of outdoor
    play spaces for children- to see which was the
    most active play area
  • Grass and play equipment area
  • Pathways, vegetation and play equipment
  • Natural environment with segregated play
    equipment area
  • (Costa, 2007, NLI)

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How to incorporate natural learning opportunities
into your setting
  • Take an affordances approach
  • Think out-side the box- i.e. dont always think
    of what toy first, but what opportunity
  • Use manuals such as the Siolta Frame work
  • Think of

THE POWER OF THE ORDINARY!
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  • Consider typical home environments and see how
    you can use them to support learning
  • In the garden
  • Kitchen
  • At the table
  • On the floor
  • On the stairs
  • Consider typical home routines and see how you
    can use them to support learning
  • Mealtimes
  • Cooking
  • Cleaning
  • Sorting and tidying
  • Weeding
  • Hanging out clothes

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The universal child
  • Universal child approach supports understanding
    of child care, health and development from an
    activity and participation perspective
  • Supports an inclusive philosophy- inclusive
    programmes that value similarities rather than
    differences in children
  • while globalised theories about the universal
    child might be very powerful, at a local level,
    good early childhood education is dependent on a
    thorough understanding of the culture in which
    the children and their families are embedded
    Munn, P (2008, p. 187)

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The universal environment?
  • Focus on design and promotion of outdoor play
    areas in communities has been increasing in
    recent times
  • Guided by principles of the universal child- a
    place for everyone Inclusion philosophy
  • e.g.
  • www.freeplaynetwork.org.uk
  • NLI natural learning initiative, North Carolina
    State University

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Points to ponder
  • Where does this fit with current practice in
    child-care environments?
  • Is there a universal approach to home
    environments indoor and outdoor that can support
    this?

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Indoor and outdoor learning environments for
children under twoCommissioned by the
CECDECentre for Early Childhood Development and
Education
  • A brief introduction to the research study

50
Research purpose
  • To begin to address the lack of research that
    exists in early play development in the context
    of the home environments of young children
  • To explore and identify ways in which young
    children develop and learn to negotiate objects
    and spaces of everyday life in the home
  • To supplement developmental theories by
    describing child-environment interactions
    involved in childrens interaction in
    activity/occupation

51
with a focus on infants and toddlers under 2
  • Question 1 What is the developmental sequence of
    the child in relation to his interaction with the
    physical environment in the home
  • Question 2 What are the attributes/affordances
    of the physical environments that match/support
    this developmental progression?
  • Question 3What are the environmental and
    curriculum implications for provision of child
    care in typical home environments?

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RESEARCH DESIGN
  • To carry out a sequential analysis over time of
    the child in natural home environments, engaging
    in self-directed play sessions with usual objects
    (indoors and outdoors). A qualitative
    ethnographic approach, using grounded theory to
    produce substantive descriptions is to be used
    (Charmaz, 2006). Some quantitative data will be
    collected in relation to the identification of
    objects and spaces in the home environments.
  • Analysis will be guided by transactional theory
    and the Bioecological model of Bronfenbrenner
    Morris (1998)

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Observation and interview
  • Observation and use of video
  • Interview

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Sampling Procedure
  • sampling will be done by targeting a specific
    group of people rather than seeking a random
    sample (purposive sampling), using a snowball
    technique to connect to other potential
    participants (snowball sampling) with the aim of
    employing a theoretical sampling plan over the
    course of the study to ensure depth.
  • at least 10 children (5 new-borns and 5 at
    1-year of age) will form the sample group
  • Aim for mixed gender and different socioeconomic
    levels (families of different family types and
    backgrounds).
  • Parents caring for their children at home
  • 2 age-groups beginning in August/September 2009,
    babies from birth and infants aged 1 year.

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Exploratory work to date
  • Student projects supervised Ni Bhriain and
    Coughlan
  • impact of parents experiences of parenting
  • Values and attitudes determining play choices and
    opportunities afforded the child
  • Meaning of place to the child-determining the use
    of space in the home
  • Preference for natural play objects over
    commercial ones

POWER OF THE ORDINARY!
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Pilot observations
  • Space, place and object use social/cultural
    meaning for the child
  • Proximity of parent determined use of space and
    objects
  • Objects used for affordance rather than for
    purpose (child determined how objects were used)

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If you are interested in being involved in the
study
  • If you are the parent of a child who will be 1
    year old in August/September 2009, or about to
    have a new baby in August/September 2009, you
    might be able to help

CONTACT Helen Lynch, Department of
Occupational Science Occupational Therapy
University College Cork, Phone 086 0564132
E-mail h.lynch_at_ucc.ie
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Potential challenges beyond the study
  • How to translate the research in the power of
    the ordinary to practice in early child care,
    education, health and well-being
  • To educate professionals in the sector on the
    settings approach- the importance of natural
    learning environments
  • Implications for the design of play (learning)
    spaces, homes and child-care environments
  • How to ensure quality evaluating physical
    environments
  • In times of recession- where does evidence-based
    practice fit in service provision?

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  • References available on request h.lynch_at_ucc.ie
  • Thank You!
  • Helen Lynch, University College Cork
  • Dr. Noirin Hayes, Dublin Institute of Technology

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