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Motor Skills: Age 3 

i. Large Motor skills - 3 year olds use all of their senses to increase physical capabilities.  They can  jump in place, throw a ball underhand, complete a summersault, walk up stairs with alternating feet, and move creatively to music.  Most 3 year olds can hop on one foot.  They can walk in a straight line without catching their feet.

ii.  Fine Motor Skills - Fine motor control for 3 year olds concentrates on increasing hand-eye coordination. They work on using scissors to cut paper, building towers out of small blocks, pouring drinks from a pitcher and using a knife to spread foods.  

They like to draw straight lines, create circles, rectangles, ovals, and squiggles.  They like to invent shapes. This is a time of gluing, pasting, and making things out of scraps of paper, cloth, and every other material available.

b. Motor Skills: Age 4

i. Large Motor Skills - 4 year olds continue the work of large muscle development.  They can walk up and down stairs one foot per step.  They can ride a tricycle skillfully, ready for their Indy 500. 

This is the time for learning to pump on a swing, allowing the wind to blow past their faces. A time to skip, run obstacle courses, and play games involving complex motor skills.  They like to jump rope and climb on jungle gyms.

ii.  Fine Motor Skills - The fine motor development of 4 year olds concentrates on the expansion of skills they have just learned.  They work on buttoning and unbuttoning.  Putting on articles of clothing including shirts, pants, socks, and coats.  

They are more precise when it comes to cutting, now being able to follow an outline carefully.  They can successfully work small puzzle pieces, are capable of creating extravagant Lego castles and sorting small manipulatives into specific categories.

 

 

 

Play is the work of the child, during which they will experiment, practice, imitate, negotiate, prepare and rehearse real life situations.  They will develop confidence, independence, self-esteem and many, many skills.

There are six (6) types of play that we will be discussing in this class for preschool children ages 3 and 4:

  1. Physical
  2. Manipulative
  3. Creative
  1. Discovery
  2. Imaginative
  3. Social

 

 

a.  Physical Play

Preschoolers continue physical growth and need all the movement they can get.  A preschool child will become more confident and adventurous.  Although he/she may still be a bit clumsy, that does not stop the desire to get going and keep going.  Encourage them to test their boundaries by trying out new activities.  Let's look at ages 3 and 4 years individually.

 i. Age 3 - 3 year old children are learning to pedal and steer a tricycle.  They need to practice balancing and controlling the different parts of their bodies needed to make the tricycle go where they want it to go.

3 year old children require a lot of praise for their efforts.  Any accomplishment is a reason for celebration. This gives them the needed confidence to go on and try something else.  They are working on hopping, skipping, rolling, spinning, standing on their tiptoes, and other muscle control actions.

ii. Age 4 - 4 year olds enjoy games like “Simon Says” or “Follow the Leader".  They like to be the leader and be in charge of a group.  They love music and love to play with moving their bodies to the music.

It is important to plan several active movement times into your daily schedule. When you find a group of preschoolers getting too squirrelly, get them up and get them moving.

 

 

b.  Manipulative Play

Manipulative play develops fine muscle control, concentration and hand-eye coordination.  Each child will develop at his own pace.  Experimenting through trial and error is part of this development. There is not a right or wrong way to do things.  It is important that each child builds on their own confidence and self-esteem skills by practicing manipulative play.

 i. Age 3 - 3-year-old children will be experimenting more with shape sorters and construction blocks.  They like to work with stringing beads and pasta.  Play dough is a favorite activity.  They are entranced by magnetic toys and the chance to move them any way they like.

They are excited about cards and the opportunity to "be big" and play card games.  This is an opportunity to introduce the concept of small, medium and large through manipulative materials.

ii. Age 4 - 4 year olds like to use leftover household materials to create their own "masterpieces".  They like to plan the activity and explain how they will build it and then finally get to the construction.  Their creations are more elaborate and contain many different stages of completion.  They like to manipulate sewing cards and threading opportunities.

c.  Creative Play

Creative play can help a child express their own ideas and feelings by making something original. Creative play can be things such as drawing, painting, making play-dough models, sticking and gluing, cooking, or writing stories and poems.

It is important to display creative projects in a prominent place in the room.  Children can be proud of their achievements and share them with the rest of the class.

i. Age 3 - There is a great deal of emphasis on concentration, recognition, fine finger movement and muscle control for 3 year olds.  It is important to supply children with a variety of materials and enough of each material to go around for each student.

Food is a great object for creativity.  Not only can it stretch their imagination, but it provides them with a snack.  Creative play works very closely with language development.  Encourage your children to explain their creations and provide new vocabulary for describing the details.

 ii. Age 4 - This is a great time to introduce different textures into paints and other art materials for 4 year old children. Add sand, oats, or whatever else you might have to create a new substance.  Help them make their own books and create stories.  

This is a good time to introduce skits and story telling actions.  Let them act out the stories they are familiar with, and then expand to stories they make up themselves.  Creative play is limited by your boundaries. Try to erase your limitations and let the children go as far as they can into the fantasy realms they can imagine.

 

d. Discovery Play

Discovery play enables a child to find out about different things.  Children discover what things are like: the size, shape, color, smell, and texture.

They find out how things are made, what can be done with them, how some things can be changed by adding something else.  For example when water is added to dry sand, what can you do with it? Younger children have been working on cause and effect. Now the 3 and 4 year old child can take that concept and experiment further.

i. Age 3 - Be sure not to take over and direct a child during this type of play.  The object is for them to discover for themselves.  Three year olds love sensory experiences.  Encourage them to further develop their sensory skills.  Place items in  bags and let them feel it to identify the item.  

Set up simple experiments and ask the child to guess what will happen, then let him find out.  This is a great opportunity to develop the senses of smell, feel, and taste.  Cover their eyes and ask them to guess items by their different qualities.

 ii. Age 4 - Four year old children enjoy experimenting to find out why and how things work and what will happen IF.  This is a good time to start planting seeds, to use tubes, sieves and funnels, and to discover what happens when you mix several things together.  This is also an excellent opportunity to develop vocabulary.

. Imaginative Play

Imaginative play is "pretend" or "fantasy" play.  The child can imagine that he is something or someone else.  Children love dressing up and playing "let's pretend".  It can sometimes be a form of escapism.  For instance the normally quiet introvert child may completely change once they have donned a costume and can pretend to be someone else.

Children imitate the adults they come into contact with when they are playing these games.  It can provide an interesting and sometimes eye-opening insight into how the child perceives these adults.

i. Age 3 - 3 year old children do not really need any guidance when playing pretend games.  They are able to establish who or what they want to be.  They will be happy playing on their own or with other children.  The best thing to do for this type of play is to offer the materials needed to do a great job of pretending.  

Large cardboard boxes are a necessity for pretend play.  They become houses, cars, boats, anything your child needs it to be for the moment.  Pretend play can be used to help prepare your child for an event that will be happening, for example, a visit to the dentist or a new baby arriving in the family.

ii. Age 4 - Four year old children will very seldom need the interaction of adults unless it is to suggest a theme of play. They can pick up on any suggestion and run with it.  Dress up clothes need not be extravagant.  Simple is much better.  A bright piece of material is all they need to create an elaborate costume.  Ask your children what they need.  They will let you know.

 

f. Social Play

Social play takes place when there is more than one child or person involved in the play activity.  It  teaches them to cooperate, share and take turns.

Try to ensure that children do not always play in the same group.  Children learn by example and from watching others.  They will learn that anti-social behavior like bullying and cheating leads to isolation and loss of friendship.  They learn from each other's reactions, such as, when quarreling or fighting happens. Adults are the main role model for social behavior.  Children will copy examples set by you.

i. Age 3 - Three year olds are becoming socially aware.  They are able to mix with other children in a way that adults will recognize as sociable.  You need to have realistic expectations.  They are still 3 years old and just learning social skills.

Organize games in which the children can take turns or make choices or decisions involving other children.  In this way the child will learn how to make decisions and respect other children's feelings and wishes.

ii. Age 4 - It is quite common for four year old children to split into their own "social" groups.  Try to organize games where they can join in with other children in the classroom.  It will become noticeable who are the leaders or more dominant personalities.

Encourage (but never force) the more reserved children to take the lead or make choices.  Try introducing "Role Play" where one child is being unfair or hurting the other child's feelings.  Get the rest of the children to point out why this is not "nice".  Discuss the situation with the children.  This will help them to relate to others.

 

 

 

Nutrition

 

 

Important Nutrients

There are five important nutrients that may be missing from children’s diets. 

  1. Calcium- strengthening bones/teeth: milk, Oj, cheese, yogurt, cabbage, spinach, beans, rhubarb and fortified cereals
  2. Iron- Prevent anemia/ helps red blood cells deliver oxygen to the body. Food: hamburger, cream of wheat, eggs, potatoes, rice, pumpkin seeds, and whole wheat toasts
  3. Zinc- Promotes cell reproduction and helps wounds heal. Baked beans, yogurt, milk, turkey, chicken, beef or red meat
  4. Vitamin A- Promotes healthy eyes, skin, hair, nails, teeth, and gums.: Raw broccoli, ground beef, spinach, pumpkin, carrots, sweet potatoes, and chicken
  5. Vitamin C- Heal cuts and scrapes and help shorten colds. Strawberries, tomatoes, cauliflower, oj, and peaches

Grain: 6 servings per day.  Each serving should be equal to 2/3 slice of bread, 1/3 cup cooked pasta, rice, cereal, or 1/2 cup of dry cereal.

Protein:  2 servings per day.  Each serving should be equal to 2 oz of cooked lean meat, poultry, or fish, 1 egg, or 1/3 cup cooked beans.

Dairy: 2 servings a day.  Each serving should be equal to  1 cup milk, 2/3 cup yogurt, or 1 oz of cheese. 

Fruit:  2 servings a day.  Each serving should be equal to 1/3 cup fruit, or 1/2 cup fruit juice.

Vegetables:  3 servings a day.  Each serving should equal to 1/3 cup vegetables.The evidence is clear, kids and adults need a diverse diet.  A diet full of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and protein to keep immunity high.

 

 

 

Children between the ages of 4 and 6 years of age need to have a second MMR (mumps, measles, rubella) and Varicella, the last in the IPV (inactivated polio) series, a final DPT (diphtheria, tetanus,pertussis) injection and a yearly influenza.   The next set of immunizations are not due until age 11 or 12.

Children should have a physical examination once a year.  Be sure to have your health care provider check vision, hearing, and children's general health.  Children should also see the dentist regularly.

 

 

 

Children start to form a conscience around 4 years old

 

Children who have trouble learning and/or enacting these types of coping skills often exhibit acting out types of behavior, or conversely, can become withdrawn when confronted with fear or anxiety-provoking situations.

 

 

Psychologists call these skills emotion "display rules".  These are culture-specific rules regarding the appropriateness of expressing emotions in certain situations.  External emotional expression need not match one's internal emotional state.

The ability to use “display rules” is complex.  It requires that children:

  • understand the need to alter emotional displays
  • take the perspective of another
  • understand that external feeling displays need not match how you feel inside
  • have the muscular control to produce emotional expressions
  • be sensitive to social contextual cues that alert them to alter their expressions
  • have motivation to display the "correct" expression 

 

 

Two types of emotional display rules have been identified:

Pro-Social: Displays rules involve altering emotional displays in order to protect another's feelings.  For example, a child might not like the sweater she received from her aunt, but would appear happy because she did not want to make her aunt feel badly. 

Self-Protective: Displays rules involve making emotion in order to save face or to protect oneself from negative consequences.  For instance, a child may feign toughness when he trips in front of his peers and scrapes his knee in order to avoid teasing and further embarrassment.

 

The important thing to teach children is that communication, specifically verbal communication, is a valuable tool for getting along in the world.  Teach them the skills and abilities, let them explore the language and sit back and enjoy.

 

A preschooler is beginning to show an interest in science and nature.  Pets are a good project for children of this age. They learn responsibility by taking care of an animal.  They like to experiment and ask the "what will happen if...?" questions and they like to learn things that surprise them. They are developing better memories and can be told more than one thing to do at a time.  This is a time for improved attention spans.  They can stay focused on a single activity 20 to 30 minutes.

 

Role modeling is the strongest, most effective teaching method there is.

 

 

 

 

 

1. Development proceeds at varying rates from child to child and within each child.

2. Development occurs in a fairly orderly sequence with more complex skills and knowledge building on those already completed.

3. Development goes from simple to more complex, and to more organized and internalized learning. This process is predictable.

4. Children learn in many ways using different parts of their brain and body.

5. Learning and development happen when children have an opportunity to practice new skills and when they are challenged to reach beyond theirpresent ability level.

6. Development and learning occur in and are greatly influenced by multiple social and cultural contexts.

7. Early experiences and the child's cultural setting will influence development and these experiences may have cumulative and/or delayed effects on children.

8. Children are active learners who use their physical and social experiences to guide them and use theirculturally transmitted knowledge to build their own understandings of their world.

9. Children learn best when they feel safe, secure, and valued. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Early childhood sees several areas develop:

  1. the brain stem or the survival brain
  2. the cerebellum where coordination develops, and
  3. the sensory regions of the cerebrum that rule visual, auditory, touch, and movement

 

The brain is divided vertically intohemispheres, the right and the left,each with a different set of functionsthat myelinate (forming an insulating sheath of white, fatty substance about certain nerve fibers) and mature during different stages of life.

 

 

When puberty hits, the brain develops the limbic system which is referred to as the feeling brain. 

During late adolescence the prefrontal cortex (anterior or front part of the frontal lobes which are situated in the front portion of the brain) of the frontal lobes develop, which fine tune the higher level thinking and emotional regulation of the brain.

 

 

There are at least 100 billion neurons in the adult human brain.  There are support cells, called glial cells that number 10 times more than neurons.  The neurons communicate with each other through billions of tiny web connections in an electrochemical process. There are about 500 trillion connections in the adult brain.  When you do the math the minimum number of possible thought patterns in the brain is the number 1 followed by over 6 miles of typed zeros.  

 

 

Your brain is about the size of a cantaloupe and wrinkled like a walnut.  You brain weighs between 3 and 3.5 pounds and has the consistency of jello.  This lump of matter is the best organized most functional awesome three pounds of matter in the known universe.

 

 

Dendrites

Dendrites receive information in the brain. The number of dendrites on a neuron varies from a few hundred to thousands. They are covered with tiny 'spines' that are neurotransmitter receptor sites.

Cell Body

The cell body and its DNA genetic system use the nutrients that the blood brings to maintain the cell and to synthesize neurotransmitter molecules (chemical messengers).

Axons and Terminals

Axons send information.  Neurons generally have one axon branching out into many terminals.  Axons vary in length:  some can be up to 3 feet long.  Mature axons are covered in an insulated coating called myelin. Neurons don’t actually touch each other, there is a gap between the terminals. This is called a synaptic gap. The neurotransmitters are released into the gap that acts as a chemical messenger for the receiving neuron.

How do neurons transmit information? The axon sends a message through a series of electrical impulses.  When the impulses reach the end of the axon, the electrical activity ceases.  A chemical process then takes place at the synaptic gap.

Although the process is complex, the end result is chemicals released by Neuron #1 turn Neuron #2 on or off, telling it to "transmit" or "don't transmit" the message.  Neuron #2's dendrite receives the message and sends it electrically through the axon to Neuron #3.  This process repeats until the message has reached its destination.  A single neuron can fire up to 50,000 times a minute if necessary.

Let’s break it down- 

The cell body (that's easy enough) has dendrites (the receivers) and axons (the senders). The axons are covered in an insulation layer called myelin.The neurons send information from the cell body down the axon to the next cell's dendrite across a synaptic gap.  The information goes through as many neurons as it takes to get the message to the appropriate place.

Let’s think of this whole process in another context.    Think of your brain as a phone system in a very large city.   The city is “alive” with calls being made between millions of senders (axons) and dendrites (receivers) all day and all night.  And this city is a completely wireless system, which explains the gap between the axons and dendrites, no phone cords.  Sometimes the “call” is made directly, but most of the time it is like calling your local phone company's main office.  It takes many connections for the message to get to the correct place!

 

Myelinization

This helps explain why infants can’t see very well, and don’t have good motor coordination, among other things.  Their neurons just aren’t working fast enough, so they can’t coordinate very well.  

Wrapped around many of the axons are cells which form myelin sheaths, composed mainly of fat.  These sheaths serve to insulate the axon, letting its signal travel about 100 times faster than in an unmyelinated axon.  Why is this important?Well, if you have more myelinated axons in your brain, then your circuits are working much faster, and certain activities may be easier for you to learn.  This myelinizationis extremely important in children, because as newborn infants, we have very few myelinated axons.

 

 

 

 

The chemicals released into the synaptic gap are called neurotransmitters. 

 

FAS: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is a serious medical condition due to exposure to high levels of alcohol during pregnancy. Recent research has discovered that alcohol interferes with the development of the cerebellum (controls coordination), the hippocampus (controls memory and learning), and the migration of neurons up to the cortex of the brain resulting in a severe deficiency in the prefrontal lobes which control executive functions of the brain.

FAE:  Fetal Alcohol Effect is similar to FAS, but involves children exposed to a lesser amount of alcohol during the mother’s pregnancy.  They are usually smaller at birth, and can have lower than average IQ’s.  

 

 

 

A healthy brain must have the right conditions in the womb to develop.  The mother's general health, stress level, nutrition and exposure to external and internal toxins all dramatically impact the developing brain.

 

 

According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-V) children must show at least 6 symptoms in one domain prior to age 12.

Inattentive-type symptoms are:

  • lack of close attention to details
  • difficulty sustaining attention
  • does not appear to listen
  • does not follow through on instructions
  • struggles difficulty with organization
  • avoids or dislikes tasks requiring sustained mental effort
  • loses things
  • easily distracted
  • orgetful in daily activities

Hyperactivity-impulse type symptoms:

  • fidgets with hands or feet or squirms in chair
  • has difficulty remaining seated
  • runs about or climbs excessively
  • difficulty engaging in activities quietly
  • acts if driven by a motor
  • talks excessively
  • blurts out answers before questions have been completed
  • difficulty waiting or taking turns
  • interrupts or intrudes upon others

Combined-type symptom is:

  • individual that meet both sets of inattention and hyperactive/impulsive criteria

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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