Guidelines
for decisions about Developmentally
appropriate practices occur within a context that supports
the development of relationships between adults and
children, among children, among teachers, and between
teachers and families. Such a community reflects what is
known about the social construction of knowledge and the
importance of establishing a caring, inclusive community in
which all children can develop and learn. B.
Consistent, positive relationships with a limited number
of adults and other children are a fundamental
determinant of healthy human development and provide the
context for children to learn about themselves and their
world and also how to develop positive, constructive
relationships with other people. The early childhood
classroom is a community in which each child is valued.
Children learn to respect and acknowledge differences in
abilities and talents and to value each person for his or
her strengths. Adults
are responsible for ensuring children's healthy development
and learning. From birth, relationships with adults are
critical determinants of children's healthy social and
emotional development and serve as well as mediators of
language and intellectual development. At the same time,
children are active constructors of their own understanding,
who benefit from initiating and regulating their own
learning activities and interacting with peers. Therefore,
early childhood teachers strive to achieve an optimal
balance between children's self-initiated learning and adult
guidance or support. Teachers
accept responsibility for actively supporting children's
development and provide occasions for children to acquire
important knowledge and skills. Teachers use their knowledge
of child development and learning to identify the range of
activities, materials, and learning experiences that are
appropriate for a group or individual child. This knowledge
is used in conjunction with knowledge of the context and
understanding about individual children's growth patterns,
strengths, needs, interests, and experiences to design the
curriculum and learning environment and guide teachers'
interactions with children. The following guidelines
describe aspects of the teachers' role in making decisions
about practice: B.
Teachers make it a priority to know each child
well. D.
Teachers make plans to enable children to attain key
curriculum goals across various disciplines, such as
language arts, mathematics, social studies, science, art,
music, physical education, and health (see "Constructing
appropriate curriculum," pp. 20 -21). E.
Teachers foster children's collaboration with peers on
interesting, important enterprises. F.
Teachers develop, refine, and use a wide repertoire of
teaching strategies to enhance children's learning and
development. G. Teachers
facilitate the development of responsibility and
self-regulation in children. The
content of the early childhood curriculum is determined by
many factors, including the subject matter of the
disciplines, social or cultural values, and parental input.
In developmentally appropriate programs, decisions about
curriculum content also take into consideration the age and
experience of the learners. Achieving success for all
children depends, among other essentials, on providing a
challenging, interesting, developmentally appropriate
curriculum. NAEYC does not endorse specific curricula.
However, one purpose of these guidelines is as a framework
for making decisions about developing curriculum or
selecting a curriculum model. Teachers who use a validated
curriculum model benefit from the evidence of its
effectiveness and the accumulated wisdom and experience of
others. In
some respects, the curriculum strategies of many teachers
today do not demand enough of children and in other ways
demand too much of the wrong thing. On the one hand,
narrowing the curriculum to those basic skills that can be
easily measured on multiple-choice tests diminishes the
intellectual challenge for many children. Such
intellectually impoverished curriculum underestimates the
true competence of children, which has been demonstrated to
be much higher than is often assumed (Gelman &
Baillargeon 1983; Gelman & Meck 1983; Edwards, Gandini,
& Forman 1993; Resnick 1996). Watered-down,
oversimplified curriculum leaves many children unchallenged,
bored, uninterested, or unmotivated. In such situations,
children's experiences are marked by a great many missed
opportunities for learning. On
the other hand, curriculum expectations in the early years
of schooling sometimes are not appropriate for the age
groups served. When next-grade expectations of mastery of
basic skills are routinely pushed down to the previous grade
and whole group and teacher-led instruction is the dominant
teaching strategy, children who cannot sit still and attend
to teacher lectures or who are bored and unchallenged or
frustrated by doing workbook pages for long periods of time
are mislabeled as immature, disruptive, or unready for
school (Shepard & Smith 1988). Constructing appropriate
curriculum requires attention to at least the following
guidelines for practice: A. Developmentally
appropriate curriculum provides for all areas of a
child's development: physical, emotional, social,
linguistic, aesthetic, and cognitive. B. Curriculum includes a broad range of content across
disciplines that is socially relevant, intellectually
engaging, and personally meaningful to
children. C.
Curriculum builds upon what children already know and are
able to do (activating prior knowledge) to consolidate
their learning and to foster their acquisition of new
concepts and skills. D.
Effective curriculum plans frequently integrate across
traditional subject-matter divisions to help children
make meaningful connections and provide opportunities for
rich conceptual development; focusing on one subject is
also a valid strategy at times. E.
Curriculum promotes the development of knowledge and
understanding, processes and skills, as well as the
dispositions to use and apply skills and to go on
learning. F.
Curriculum content has intellectual integrity, reflecting
the key concepts and tools of inquiry of recognized
disciplines in ways that are accessible and achievable
for young children, ages 3 through 8 (e.g., Bredekamp & Rosegrant 1992, 1995). Children directly
participate in study of the disciplines, for instance, by
conducting scientific experiments, writing, performing,
solving mathematical problems, collecting and analyzing
data, collecting oral history, and performing other roles
of experts in the disciplines. G.
Curriculum provides opportunities to support children's
home culture and language while also developing all
children's abilities to participate in the shared culture
of the program and the community. H.
Curriculum goals are realistic and attainable for most
children in the designated age range for which they are
designed. I.
When used, technology is physically and philosophically
integrated in the classroom curriculum and teaching. (See "NAEYC Position Statement: Technology and Young
Children Ages Three through Eight" [NAEYC
1996b].) Assessment
of individual children's development and learning is
essential for planning and implementing appropriate
curriculum. In developmentally appropriate programs,
assessment and curriculum are integrated, with teachers
continually engaging in observational assessment for the
purpose of improving teaching and learning. Accurate
assessment of young children is difficult because their
development and learning are rapid, uneven, episodic, and
embedded within specific cultural and linguistic contexts.
Too often, inaccurate and inappropriate assessment measures
have been used to label, track, or otherwise harm young
children. Developmentally appropriate assessment practices
are based on the following guidelines: A. Assessment of
young children's progress and achievements is ongoing,
strategic, and purposeful. The results of assessment are
used to benefit children -- in adapting curriculum and
teaching to meet the developmental and learning needs of
children, communicating with the child's family, and
evaluating the program's effectiveness for the purpose of
improving the program. B.
The content of assessments reflects progress toward
important learning and developmental goals. The program
has a systematic plan for collecting and using assessment
information that is integrated with curriculum
planning. C.
The methods of assessment are appropriate to the age and
experiences of young children. Therefore, assessment of
young children relies heavily on the results of
observations of children's development, descriptive data,
collections of representative work by children, and
demonstrated performance during authentic, not contrived,
activities. Input from families as well as children's
evaluations of their own work are part of the overall
assessment strategy. D.
Assessments are tailored to a specific purpose and used
only for the purpose for which they have been
demonstrated to produce reliable, valid
information. E.
Decisions that have a major impact on children, such as
enrollment or placement, are never made on the basis of a
single developmental assessment or screening device but
are based on multiple sources of relevant information,
particularly observations by teachers and
parents. F.
To identify children who have special learning or
developmental needs and to plan appropriate curriculum
and teaching for them, developmental assessments and
observations are used. G.
Assessment recognizes individual variation in learners
and allows for differences in styles and rates of
learning. Assessment takes into consideration such
factors as the child's facility in English, stage of
language acquisition, and whether the child has had the
time and opportunity to develop proficiency in his or her
home language as well as in English. H.
Assessment legitimately addresses not only what children
can do independently but what they can do with assistance
from other children or adults. Teachers study children as
individuals as well as in relationship to groups by
documenting group projects and other collaborative work.
(For
a more complete discussion of principles of appropriate
assessment, see the position statement Guidelines for
Appropriate Curriculum Content and Assessment for Children
Ages 3 through 8 [NAEYC & NAECS/SDE 1992]; see
also Shepard 1994.) Developmentally
appropriate practices derive from deep knowledge of
individual children and the context within which they
develop and learn. The younger the child, the more necessary
it is for professionals to acquire this knowledge through
relationships with children's families. The traditional
approach to families has been a parent education orientation
in which the professionals see themselves as knowing what is
best for children and view parents as needing to be
educated. There is also the limited view of parent
involvement that sees PTA membership as the primary goal.
These approaches do not adequately convey the complexity of
the partnership between teachers and parents that is a
fundamental element of good practice (Powell
1994). When
the parent education approach is criticized in favor of a
more family-centered approach, this shift may be
misunderstood to mean that parents dictate all program
content and professionals abdicate responsibility, doing
whatever parents want regardless of whether professionals
agree that it is in children's best interest. Either of
these extremes oversimplifies the importance of
relationships with families and fails to provide the kind of
environment in which parents and professionals work together
to achieve shared goals for children; such programs with
this focus are characterized by at least the following
guidelines for practice: A. Reciprocal
relationships between teachers and families require
mutual respect, cooperation, shared responsibility, and
negotiation of conflicts toward achievement of shared
goals. B.
Early childhood teachers work in collaborative
partnerships with families, establishing and maintaining
regular, frequent two-way communication with children's
parents. C.
Parents are welcome in the program and participate in
decisions about their children's care and education.
Parents observe and participate and serve in
decisionmaking roles in the program. D.
Teachers acknowledge parents' choices and goals for
children and respond with sensitivity and respect to
parents' preferences and concerns without abdicating
professional responsibility to children. E.
Teachers and parents share their knowledge of the child
and understanding of children's development and learning
as part of day-to-day communication and planned
conferences. Teachers support families in ways that
maximally promote family decisionmaking capabilities and
competence. F.
To ensure more accurate and complete information, the
program involves families in assessing and planning for
individual children. G.
The program links families with a range of services,
based on identified resources, priorities, and
concerns. H.
Teachers, parents, programs, social service and health
agencies, and consultants who may have educational
responsibility for the child at different times should,
with family participation, share developmental
information about children as they pass from one level of
a program to another.
Sonoma
State University
Education
420
Child Development in the Family, School, and
Community
developmentally appropriate practice
1. Creating a caring
community of learners
A. The early
childhood setting functions as a community of learners in
which all participants consider and contribute to each
other's well-being and learning.
C. Social relationships are an important context for
learning. Each child has strengths or interests that
contribute to the overall functioning of the group. When
children have opportunities to play together, work on
projects in small groups, and talk with other children
and adults, their own development and learning are
enhanced. Interacting with other children in small groups
provides a context for children to operate on the edge of
their developing capacities. The learning environment
enables children to construct understanding through
interactions with adults and other children.
D. The learning environment is designed to protect
children's health and safety and is supportive of
children's physiological needs for activity, sensory
stimulation, fresh air, rest, and nourishment. The
program provides a balance of rest and active movement
for children throughout the program day. Outdoor
experiences are provided for children of all ages. The
program protects children's psychological safety; that
is, children feel secure, relaxed, and comfortable rather
than disengaged, frightened, worried, or stressed.
E. Children experience an organized environment and an
orderly routine that provides an overall structure in
which learning takes place; the environment is dynamic
and changing but predictable and comprehensible from a
child's point of view. The learning environment provides
a variety of materials and opportunities for children to
have firsthand, meaningful experiences. 2. Teaching to enhance
development and learning
A. Teachers respect,
value, and accept children and treat them with dignity at
all times.
C. Teachers create an
intellectually engaging, responsive environment to
promote each child's learning and development.
3. Constructing appropriate
curriculum
4. Assessing children's
learning and development
5. Establishing reciprocal
relationships with families