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Social-Emotional Development Domain California Preschool Learning Foundations Volume 1. Published by the California Department of Education (2008). Social-Emotional Development. California Preschool Learning Foundations .
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Social-Emotional Development DomainCalifornia Preschool Learning FoundationsVolume 1 Published by the California Department of Education (2008) Social-Emotional Development
California Preschool Learning Foundations • Describe typical development, under conditions appropriate for healthy development, rather than aspirational expectations for children's behavior. • Assume learning for all children occurs in everyday environments through social interactions, relationships, activities, and play. • Are guidelines and teaching tools, not a list of items to be taught or used for assessment.
California Preschool Learning Foundations • Are intended to be representative of and accessible to all learners, including children with disabilities and those learning English as a second language. • Incorporate universal design for learning by encouraging multiple and various meansof: • Representation • Engagement • Expression
Preschool Learning Foundationsin Social-Emotional Development • Describe behaviors in the domain of social-emotional development that are typical of children who are making good progress toward readiness for kindergarten. • Provide age-appropriate competencies or goals for older 3 and older 4 year olds. • Are intended to be guidelines and tools for instructional practice, not limits on the way teachers support children’s learning at different levels.
Children have different temperaments, personalities, family backgrounds, languages, cultures, values, and prior experiences. • These variances affect how individual children may demonstrate the skills and behaviors described in the foundations for social-emotional development.
Play is a central context for social and emotional development in early childhood (p.1, PLF, V1).
School Readiness • Social-emotional competencies, as well as other cognitive and motivational competencies, required for success in school (p. 1, PLF, V1).
Assumptions of the Foundations • Children have access to social interactions, experiences, and environments that support healthy development.
Assumptions of the Foundations • The foundations describe typical development, rather than aspirational expectations for children's behavior under the best possible conditions or behaviors to be instilled in children. • The foundations are not a list of items to be taught or used for assessment items; they are guidelines and teaching tools.
Self • Includes the substrands of self-awareness and self-regulation, social and emotional understanding, empathy and caring, and initiative and learning (p. xii, PLF, V1).
Self 1.0 Self-Awareness
Self 2.0 Self-Regulation
Self 3.0 Social and Emotional Understanding
Self 4.0 Empathy and Caring
Self 5.0 Initiative in Learning
Social Interaction • Includes the substrands of interactions with familiar adults, interactions with peers, group participation, and cooperation and responsibility (p. xii, PLF, V1).
Social Interaction 1.0 Interactions with Familiar Adults
Social Interaction 2.0 Interactions with Peers
Social Interaction 3.0 Group Participation
Social Interaction 4.0 Cooperation and Responsibility
Relationships • Includes the substrands of attachment to parents, close relationships with teachers and caregivers, and friendships (p. xii, PLF, V1).
Relationships 1.0 Attachment to Parents
Relationships 2.0 Close Relationships with Teachers and Caregivers
Relationships 3.0 Friendships