COAD RegionCOAD RegionSpring 2013 Head Start Spring 2013 Head Start
SummitSummitMarch 22, 2013March 22, 2013
COAD RegionCOAD RegionSpring 2013 Head Start Spring 2013 Head Start
SummitSummitMarch 22, 2013March 22, 2013
Information on Preschoolers
• Young children are being expelled from child care settings at 3 x the rate than children K through 12 (Walter Gilliam, Yale).
• Preschool teachers and child care providers report that disruptive behavior is the single greatest challenge they face. (Arnold, D.H.;McWilliams, l.; & Arnold, E.H.)
“The kids are sad, mad and bad, it’s not that they can’t add”
(From the National Center for Children in Poverty article by Raver & Knitzer)
Social and Emotional Competence and School Readiness
Young children who act in anti-social ways are provided with less instruction and less positive feedback, they tend to like school less, learn less and attend less
These children are at greater risk of dropping out and engaging in delinquent acts
Across studies, the social and emotional competence of young children predicts their academic performance in 1st grade, OVER and above their cognitive skills and family
background!
• Forty-six percent of kindergarten teachers said that half their class had specific problems in basic social and emotional development
• Children who have poor academic achievement early on are at risk for delinquent and antisocial behavior
• Risk and protective factors need to be identified early, and interventions should target both
Challenges Facing Young Children
The most prevalent psychosocial risk factors are:
• Poverty (1 in 4 children are born poor)
• Quality of early attachments
• Parental depression (1 in 10 women experience postpartum depression)
• Parental substance abuse (the majority of parents with children in child protective services have problems with alcohol and drugs)
Challenges Facing Young Children
• Divorce (1 in 60 children sees their parents divorce each year)
• Inconsistent or harsh parenting (3 million children are maltreated each year)
• Exposure to domestic violence (1 million incidents of intimate partner violence in 1998)
• Exposure to community violence (40 to 60 percent of urban youth reported seeing a shooting)
Challenges Facing Young Children
What is Challenging Behavior?
Defining “Challenging Behavior”
Challenging Behavior has three components:
• interferes with children’s learning, development and successful play.
• is harmful to the child, other children or adults.
• puts a child at high risk for later social problems or school failure.
Head Start Survey 2012 SFY 2007 Early Childhood Mental HealthConsultation Program Report
SFY 2006 Early Childhood Mental HealthConsultation Program Report
Hitting 1) aggression and anger issues 1) aggression (hitting, kicking)
Defiance 2) typical development of children, behavioral and emotional development anddevelopmental delays in young children
2) self-regulation/tantrums/out of control behaviors/impulse control
Physical aggression 3) noncompliance to the directives of teachers and parents as well as working withoppositional children
3) not following directives of teachers/parents/noncompliance/working with oppositionalchildren
Biting 4) inattentiveness and ADHD symptoms and identification
4) typical development of children/behavioral & emotional/developmental delays
Tantrums 5) adjustment to traumatic life events (death, divorce, removal from home for abuse/neglect)
5) behavior issues in early childhood setting/biting/acting out at transitions/out of control
Acting out non-aggressively 6) self-regulation, tantrums, impulse control and out of control behaviors
6) peer social skill problem/social skills training
Non-Compliance 7) behavior problems in early childhood settings such as biting, acting out at transition times,and verbal and physical aggression
7) high activity level (hyperactivity)
Unable to self-regulate 8) peer social skill problems and social skills training
8) engaging parents/ communication
Overly active 9) engaging parents and family communication patterns
9) classroom management/structure
Lacks self-control 10) mood, anxiety, depression, and withdrawal 10) adjustment to an event (death, divorce, removal from home for abuse/neglect issues
A Major Key to Helping Any Child with Challenging Behaviors is…
• A trusting, reflective relationship:
- open-mindedness
- whole-heartedness - responsibility
(John Dewey, How We Think)
Some challenging behaviors are a typical part of development
A Decision Making Model
• Step 1: Focus your attention
• Step 2: Factor in Development
• Step 3: Consider Context
• Step 4: Identify Problem Ownership
• Step 5: Match Strategy to Development
• Step 6: Match Strategy to Situation
• Step 7: Implement and Evaluate
• Step 8: Refer, If Necessary• Adapted from Marion, M.(2007). Guidance of Young Children
• Page 7 of SE Field Guide
Early Childhood Mental Health Resources and Tools to Support Social
and Emotional Development• WEBSITES
• TOOLS
• DVDs and CDs
• BOOKS
• PUBLICATIONS and ARTICLES
• Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation Resources
Guiding Young Children’s Behavior by Supporting Social and Emotional Development: A Core Knowledge Early Childhood Field Guide
– Overview– Professional Development– Observation and Assessment– Learning Environments and Experiences– Family and Community Relations– Child Growth and Development– The Administrators Role
Other Considerations• Classroom environment• Transitions• Temperament (Goodness of Fit)• Observations• Teacher experience• Relational Presence/poverty• Rhythm, music and movement
Effects on teachers• stress (15)• frustration (4)• burnout (4)• workers comp claims (3)• injury (3)• discouragement (3)• tired (3)• failure (2)• disrespect (1)• lack of patience (1)• exhaustion (1)• change positions/relocate staff (1)
Strengthening our own Protective Factors
How full is your pitcher?
Developed for
COAD RegionSpring 2013 Head Start Summit
Created by
Marla Himmeger
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