In order that people may be happy in their work, these three things are needed: They must be fit for it: They must not do too much of it: And they must have a sense of success in it.
-John Ruskin
In the Beginnings Workshop Book — Behavior, Nancy Carlsson-Paige and Diane Levin outlined the developmental factors that influence how young children think about conflict and conflict resolution:
- Young children tend to focus on one thing at a time. The one thing they think about is often their own point of view. This can lead to their being unable to think about what they want and what someone else wants at the same time. And, when they are caught up in thinking about what they want, it is hard to think about a possible positive solution at the same time...
- Young children usually focus on the concrete and visible aspects of a conflict rather than on internal, less visible factors. The conflicts they have and the ways they think of to resolve them are usually based on concrete actions, materials, and physical features.
- It is hard for young children to figure out the effects of their actions on others in a logical way, especially when it comes to thinking about the consequences of their behavior in advance.
- Young children have a hard time working out how to get from one state of affairs to another — making the transformation from a conflict to a positive solution. To do this requires such skills as thinking about more than one thing at a time, planning actions in advance, and taking two points of view into account.
With Beginnings Workshop Books you'll have the hottest curriculum topics down cold. Every issue of Exchange magazine includes a hands-on staff development guide that provides a wealth of practical ideas on specific curriculum topics from leading authorities in the field of early care and education. Each Beginnings Workshop book is a comprehensive collection of these articles on a particular topic. Now you can purchase the following 9 Beginnings Workshop Books at a 40% discount, 48 hours only!
Sale ends 07/18/2014 11:59 pm
Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentPodar Jumbo Kids
Vadodara, India
Very true said,young children just beleive what they see.......visualisation.
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