Philosophy of Parental InvolvementParental involvement is critical in a child's education. I believe that parents and teachers should be partners in the educational process. Being a source of encouragement and a resource for a child throughout their educational journey is important in helping them reach their full potential. Development and Learning: I believe development is the process over time as a child grows. Be it cognitive, social-emotional or physical development. For elementary school children, there are three types of development a child grows into: psychological development, cognitive development, and moral development. (Snowman and McCown, 2015, p. 89). Psychological development means when a child learns industry against inferiority. Cognitive development occurs when a child begins to be concrete and operational. The third type, moral development, occurs when a child begins to develop a morality of compulsion. (Snowman & McCown, 2015, p. 89) I believe learning is the skill you acquire through experience or through teaching. There is a difference in these. Development takes longer. Learning means looking at something and memorizing it or understanding how to do something. There are many theories about learning. Jean Piaget and Lev Vygotsky contributed to these theories. Area of Development: There are three main areas of development. These are: cognitive, social-emotional and physical. Cognitive development is the ability to think and understand. So, when your child reads a book, he uses the skills he used during cognitive development to look at the words and understand what the book says. One of the ways your child at this age displays cognitive characteristics is when he begins to understand… half of the paper… rations. Some efforts I will make to individualize children's learning in this class include doing a variety of activities for each lesson, encouraging each child to learn in every way, and allowing each student to do whatever style they like when assigned the task is up to each child to do so. do it yourself. With your child in second grade, it's important that you let him know that you are there for him, that you help him with his homework, and that you are interested in knowing how school is going for him. Children of this age need self-esteem and encouragement. As a teacher, I will teach to the best of my ability, I will treat every child equally, I will be fair in how I teach, and I will be someone your child can rely on. Remember, parental involvement, including being a source of encouragement and a resource for a child throughout his or her education, is important in helping a child reach his or her full potential.
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