This PowerPoint leads on from my other PowerPoint which talks about cognitive psychology. Now I provide you with everything you need to know for AQA students studying for PSYA1 (unit 1) AS PSYCHOLOGY
Montessori education is an educational approach developed by Italian physician and educator Maria Montessori based on her extensive research with "phrenasthenic" or "special needs" children and characterized by an emphasis on independence, freedom within limits, and respect for a child’s natural psychological, physical, and social development. Although a range of practices exists under the name "Montessori", the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) and the American Montessori Society (AMS) cite these elements as essential:
child psychology is something very complicated to know about.
This presentation gives a detailed overview on the psychology of children that even helps in the architecture designing of their dwelling and stuffs :)
Montessori education is an educational approach developed by Italian physician and educator Maria Montessori based on her extensive research with "phrenasthenic" or "special needs" children and characterized by an emphasis on independence, freedom within limits, and respect for a child’s natural psychological, physical, and social development. Although a range of practices exists under the name "Montessori", the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) and the American Montessori Society (AMS) cite these elements as essential:
child psychology is something very complicated to know about.
This presentation gives a detailed overview on the psychology of children that even helps in the architecture designing of their dwelling and stuffs :)
As a Parent
- Frustrated from kids not listening?
- Tired from yelling at the people you love the most?
- Exhausted from feeling everything being a battle?
Being a parent is one of the most challenging roles we will ever have in our lives and unfortunately our contemporary society gives absolutely no training on how to be a good parent. We all love our kids but from my experience the ABC’s of parenting which are the love, common sense and natural instinct were not enough for me to help me raise my kids in a way that was serving them.
Learning the EFG’s of Parenting helped me transform my life and the lives of parents who learn them.
Acknowledgement of early childhood developmental psychology is necessary for you as a parent because this is the crucial period for your child’s physical, cognitive, social and emotional development. Child psychology is important in understanding your child’s wants and needs. Social, cultural, and socioeconomic are the three context of child psychology. Go through the slide to get the detailed view of these contexts & know how to understand child psychology.
Dr Daniel Murray of Industrial Phycology presents his patented system to harness the power of algae to remove nutrients from waste water, avoiding use of chemicals and resulting in biomass that can be used for energy production.
As a Parent
- Frustrated from kids not listening?
- Tired from yelling at the people you love the most?
- Exhausted from feeling everything being a battle?
Being a parent is one of the most challenging roles we will ever have in our lives and unfortunately our contemporary society gives absolutely no training on how to be a good parent. We all love our kids but from my experience the ABC’s of parenting which are the love, common sense and natural instinct were not enough for me to help me raise my kids in a way that was serving them.
Learning the EFG’s of Parenting helped me transform my life and the lives of parents who learn them.
Acknowledgement of early childhood developmental psychology is necessary for you as a parent because this is the crucial period for your child’s physical, cognitive, social and emotional development. Child psychology is important in understanding your child’s wants and needs. Social, cultural, and socioeconomic are the three context of child psychology. Go through the slide to get the detailed view of these contexts & know how to understand child psychology.
Dr Daniel Murray of Industrial Phycology presents his patented system to harness the power of algae to remove nutrients from waste water, avoiding use of chemicals and resulting in biomass that can be used for energy production.
Blue and White Simple Minimalist Life Guide Presentation.pptx.pdfjhoeriel
According to Erikson's theory, individuals don't experience integrity or despair all the time. Instead, According to Erikson's theory, individuals don't experience integrity or despair all the time. Instead, most healthy individuals experience a balance between each as they begin to make sense of their lives.each as they begin to make sense of their lives.
This presentation is an Introduction to Bowlby attachment theory and its extension researches which are still applicable when it comes to mother-child attachment. They also cover the predicted nature of adults analyzing their childhood attachment styles. These slides were prepared for class presentation. Sharing these here as these can be helpful to others too.
The increased availability of biomedical data, particularly in the public domain, offers the opportunity to better understand human health and to develop effective therapeutics for a wide range of unmet medical needs. However, data scientists remain stymied by the fact that data remain hard to find and to productively reuse because data and their metadata i) are wholly inaccessible, ii) are in non-standard or incompatible representations, iii) do not conform to community standards, and iv) have unclear or highly restricted terms and conditions that preclude legitimate reuse. These limitations require a rethink on data can be made machine and AI-ready - the key motivation behind the FAIR Guiding Principles. Concurrently, while recent efforts have explored the use of deep learning to fuse disparate data into predictive models for a wide range of biomedical applications, these models often fail even when the correct answer is already known, and fail to explain individual predictions in terms that data scientists can appreciate. These limitations suggest that new methods to produce practical artificial intelligence are still needed.
In this talk, I will discuss our work in (1) building an integrative knowledge infrastructure to prepare FAIR and "AI-ready" data and services along with (2) neurosymbolic AI methods to improve the quality of predictions and to generate plausible explanations. Attention is given to standards, platforms, and methods to wrangle knowledge into simple, but effective semantic and latent representations, and to make these available into standards-compliant and discoverable interfaces that can be used in model building, validation, and explanation. Our work, and those of others in the field, creates a baseline for building trustworthy and easy to deploy AI models in biomedicine.
Bio
Dr. Michel Dumontier is the Distinguished Professor of Data Science at Maastricht University, founder and executive director of the Institute of Data Science, and co-founder of the FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) data principles. His research explores socio-technological approaches for responsible discovery science, which includes collaborative multi-modal knowledge graphs, privacy-preserving distributed data mining, and AI methods for drug discovery and personalized medicine. His work is supported through the Dutch National Research Agenda, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, Horizon Europe, the European Open Science Cloud, the US National Institutes of Health, and a Marie-Curie Innovative Training Network. He is the editor-in-chief for the journal Data Science and is internationally recognized for his contributions in bioinformatics, biomedical informatics, and semantic technologies including ontologies and linked data.
Cancer cell metabolism: special Reference to Lactate PathwayAADYARAJPANDEY1
Normal Cell Metabolism:
Cellular respiration describes the series of steps that cells use to break down sugar and other chemicals to get the energy we need to function.
Energy is stored in the bonds of glucose and when glucose is broken down, much of that energy is released.
Cell utilize energy in the form of ATP.
The first step of respiration is called glycolysis. In a series of steps, glycolysis breaks glucose into two smaller molecules - a chemical called pyruvate. A small amount of ATP is formed during this process.
Most healthy cells continue the breakdown in a second process, called the Kreb's cycle. The Kreb's cycle allows cells to “burn” the pyruvates made in glycolysis to get more ATP.
The last step in the breakdown of glucose is called oxidative phosphorylation (Ox-Phos).
It takes place in specialized cell structures called mitochondria. This process produces a large amount of ATP. Importantly, cells need oxygen to complete oxidative phosphorylation.
If a cell completes only glycolysis, only 2 molecules of ATP are made per glucose. However, if the cell completes the entire respiration process (glycolysis - Kreb's - oxidative phosphorylation), about 36 molecules of ATP are created, giving it much more energy to use.
IN CANCER CELL:
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
introduction to WARBERG PHENOMENA:
WARBURG EFFECT Usually, cancer cells are highly glycolytic (glucose addiction) and take up more glucose than do normal cells from outside.
Otto Heinrich Warburg (; 8 October 1883 – 1 August 1970) In 1931 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology for his "discovery of the nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme.
WARNBURG EFFECT : cancer cells under aerobic (well-oxygenated) conditions to metabolize glucose to lactate (aerobic glycolysis) is known as the Warburg effect. Warburg made the observation that tumor slices consume glucose and secrete lactate at a higher rate than normal tissues.
Professional air quality monitoring systems provide immediate, on-site data for analysis, compliance, and decision-making.
Monitor common gases, weather parameters, particulates.
Slide 1: Title Slide
Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Slide 2: Introduction to Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Definition: Extrachromosomal inheritance refers to the transmission of genetic material that is not found within the nucleus.
Key Components: Involves genes located in mitochondria, chloroplasts, and plasmids.
Slide 3: Mitochondrial Inheritance
Mitochondria: Organelles responsible for energy production.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA): Circular DNA molecule found in mitochondria.
Inheritance Pattern: Maternally inherited, meaning it is passed from mothers to all their offspring.
Diseases: Examples include Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and mitochondrial myopathy.
Slide 4: Chloroplast Inheritance
Chloroplasts: Organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plants.
Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA): Circular DNA molecule found in chloroplasts.
Inheritance Pattern: Often maternally inherited in most plants, but can vary in some species.
Examples: Variegation in plants, where leaf color patterns are determined by chloroplast DNA.
Slide 5: Plasmid Inheritance
Plasmids: Small, circular DNA molecules found in bacteria and some eukaryotes.
Features: Can carry antibiotic resistance genes and can be transferred between cells through processes like conjugation.
Significance: Important in biotechnology for gene cloning and genetic engineering.
Slide 6: Mechanisms of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Non-Mendelian Patterns: Do not follow Mendel’s laws of inheritance.
Cytoplasmic Segregation: During cell division, organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts are randomly distributed to daughter cells.
Heteroplasmy: Presence of more than one type of organellar genome within a cell, leading to variation in expression.
Slide 7: Examples of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Four O’clock Plant (Mirabilis jalapa): Shows variegated leaves due to different cpDNA in leaf cells.
Petite Mutants in Yeast: Result from mutations in mitochondrial DNA affecting respiration.
Slide 8: Importance of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Evolution: Provides insight into the evolution of eukaryotic cells.
Medicine: Understanding mitochondrial inheritance helps in diagnosing and treating mitochondrial diseases.
Agriculture: Chloroplast inheritance can be used in plant breeding and genetic modification.
Slide 9: Recent Research and Advances
Gene Editing: Techniques like CRISPR-Cas9 are being used to edit mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA.
Therapies: Development of mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT) for preventing mitochondrial diseases.
Slide 10: Conclusion
Summary: Extrachromosomal inheritance involves the transmission of genetic material outside the nucleus and plays a crucial role in genetics, medicine, and biotechnology.
Future Directions: Continued research and technological advancements hold promise for new treatments and applications.
Slide 11: Questions and Discussion
Invite Audience: Open the floor for any questions or further discussion on the topic.
This pdf is about the Schizophrenia.
For more details visit on YouTube; @SELF-EXPLANATORY;
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAiarMZDNhe1A3Rnpr_WkzA/videos
Thanks...!
3. Attachment – Formations of attachment in babies
Attachment: An emotional tie or relationships between two people shown in their behaviour towards one another. E.g.
mother and child.
• Babies are reliant on other for their own survival and they communicate in very simple ways, for example crying. They
survive because they have the ability to make their biological parents care for them and protect them.
• There are differences in the meaning for both ‘attachments’ and ‘bonds’. Bonds are formed instantly whereas
attachments take much longer to be made.
• Attachments are formed continuously throughout our lives such as family members and close friends, but it is the first
attachments that we make which are the most important, usually occurring after about 7-8 months.
• Signs of an attachment:
• Seeking proximity, they will want to be near to one another. Young babies will try to maintain maximum proximity to caregiver and will cry if they get too
far away.
• Distress on separation, young baby will show signs of distress such as crying when a caregiver leaves for a short period of time. Older child may feel
homesick if for example is on a school trip.
• Joy of reunion, clinging onto their caregiver when they return from somewhere.
4. Attachment – Evolutionary explanation
John Bowlby
• Believed that attachment was an evolved mechanism that ensured the survival of infants.
• He also believed that we are born with innate tendencies to form attachments in order to survive. This attachment is generally to a
biologically parent (mother). This also means that adults are innately programmed to ensure that their child survives.
• The biological process of forming attachments must take place in critical period otherwise it may not happen at all. A sensitive period of
time is where something is likely to happen, for example infants usually start talking between the ages of 12-18 months. However
development can take place outside of this sensitive period.
• Supporting Research:
Konrad Lorenz – Imprinting
• He divided a number of fertile geese eggs into two groups, half with mother and half in an incubator.
• He ensured that he was the first large moving object that the incubator group saw and then the geese attached very quickly to Mr Lorenz.
• Critical period was found to be 13-16 hours, after 32 hours no attachment was formed at all.
• After concluding his findings he called this formation of attachment Imprinting.
x Obviously it is very difficult to generalise findings based on animals onto human beings.
Does support the idea of being innately programmed to form attachments in order to survive.
Other studies that support the evolutionary explanation could be Harlow's monkeys and Schaffer & Emerson. For any opposing evidence look
at supporting evidence of the learning theory.
5. Dollard & Miller
• Dollard and Miller based their theory on the principles of classical and operant conditioning .
• The first attachments that we form will be to the individuals that looks after us, feeds us, changes nappies, comforts etc…
• This gives a powerful source of pleasure to a baby.
• Supporting research:
Skinner - Operant Conditioning
• Skinner explains the role of operant conditioning through the use of rats in his investigation.
• He put the rats in cages and discovered that they started to explore their surroundings. The rat then accidently found a way to get food, this behavior is then
repeated and learnt as the rat needs food in order to survive.
• To relate this back to how operant conditioning works in human babies is that a child cries due to a discomfort for example hunger, the caregiver will feel
uncomfortable with the child's behavior and looks for a way to make the baby stop crying and therefore has the idea of feeding the baby. The baby will
quickly begin to learn that whenever it cries they will be fed.
• Social releasers such as crying, cooing, laughing and smiling play a big role in the learning theory and the evolutionary explanation.
x Difficult to generalize to humans as the investigation was carried out on rats.
Pavlov – Classical Conditioning
• Pavlov noticed that dogs quickly associated sound with mealtime.
• He measured the salivary response. Unconditional stimulus = FOOD, Unconditional response = SALIVATION, Conditional stimulus = BELL, Conditional
response = SALIVATION.
• In Human babies this would correspond as Unconditional stimulus = MILK and Unconditional response = Relief of Hunger.
Classical conditioning clearly has a role in human babies, this is strong supporting evidence.
For any opposing evidence look at supporting evidence of the evolutionary theory such as Konrad Lorenz.
Attachment – Learning theory
6. Attachment – Schaffer & Emerson
• Schaffer and Emerson produced strong descriptions concerning formations of attachments.
• Research:
• The study was carried out on 60 babies from a working class area in Glasgow.
• Bothe Schaffer and Emerson visited these infants monthly for the first years of their lives and then returned again after 18 months.
• By this stage in their investigation two types of behaviours were found.
1. Separation anxiety: If the child shows signs of anxiety when the caregiver left then this indicates that an attachment has been formed between both child
and caregiver.
2. Stranger distress: Child feels distressed when approached by a stranger. This indicates that the child has started to recognize familiar faces and feels
anxious among unfamiliar people.
• In order to obtain these findings Schaffer and Emerson carried out observations and interviews.
• Checked if baby cried, whimpered or showed signs of distress at a strangers face.
• Interviewed the children's mothers at each visit asking about the baby's responses in different situations and then asked them to rate their behaviour in these situations.
• He found that most babies formed their first attachment between 6-8 months and then went to form multiple attachments.
• 65% formed fist attachment with mother, 3% with father and 27% with both parents.
The data is rich in detail and has high ecological validity.
x Mother can lie to make their children seem better, this is known as social desirability bias.
x Difficult to generalize results to entire population as it was only carried out in Glasgow on working class families.
7. Ainsworth
• ‘Strange situation’ is the investigation carried out by Ainsworth in two purpose-built laboratory playrooms with the children's
mothers.
• Observations were taken through video cameras in each of the rooms.
• The mother and infant enter the room, child is left to explore, stranger enters the room and approaches the child, mother
leaves both stranger and child alone in the room, after 3 minutes the mother returns and the stranger leaves, the mother then
leaves the room a second time and the stranger comes in to comfort the child who is alone in the room.
• Ainsworth could then monitor the child's behaviour in each of the situations. He wanted to measure stranger anxiety and
separation anxiety.
• Findings resulted in 3 types of distinct behaviour being discovered:
• Secure infants (type B), these infants sue their mothers as a safe base and were happy to explore the new environment. Showed distress when mother left
and welcomed her on her return. Wary of stranger and treated them differently to mother. 70% in this category.
• Insecure-avoidant (type A), showed distress on mothers departure and did not seek her comfort when she returned. Rejected strangers attempt to comfort
them. 15% in this category.
• Insecure-ambivalent (type C), very upset on separation, not easily comforted by mother when she returned. Appeared to be angry and holding a grudge
against their mother for leaving them alone in the new environment. These babies altered between seeking closeness and wanting distance. 15% fell into
this category.
х Lacks external validity because of the environment used, children's behaviours may be different in a familiar environment in
which this investigation cannot be generalized to.
х Babies would have experienced distress and some would consider the use of babies in this study to be unethical.
This investigation is easy to replicate and also led to a rapid increase in experiments carried out on attachment both within
and between cultures.
Attachment – Attachment types
8. • Unfortunately there are disruptions such as separation from parents that can cause changes in child's behaviour.
Short term response to separation: PDD
• E.g. mother goes to hospital because she is ill.
Protest, child cries, screams and protests angrily when the parent leaves. They are also clingy to parent.
Despair, the child becomes calmer but still upset, they reject other peoples attempt to comfort them. They become withdrawn and uninterested in
anything.
Detachment, if the separation continues then they begin to accept others and reject the caregiver that left when they return, also showing signs of
anger.
Long term responses of separation:
E.g. when child is often left by parent
Extreme clinginess, clingy to mother when she leaves and then clingy to babysitter when she arrives.
Detachment, detached from caregiver, refuses cuddles or hugging in order to protect themselves from not being hurt again.
Factors affecting child's response:
Age of child, separation is strongest between 12-18 months.
Type of attachment, securely attached children will cope better then the other two types of attachment.
Sex of the child, boys respond more strongly to separation.
Who the child is left with.
Attachment – Disruptions of attachment
9. • Lack of any attachment at all in early childhood can lead to permanent changes in behaviour for adult life.
• Generally happens when a child is separated from their parent due to institutional care or their parent passed away.
Koluchova twins: case study
Two boys born in Czechoslovakia were brought up in care and then were returned to father and stepmother.
They went through serious privation until the age of 7.
• Locked in an unheated cellar
• Away from human interaction
• Starved
• Beaten
The twins had no speech, were terrified of people and had serious health problems
Fortunately the early damage had ben totally repaired after being raised properly by two adoptees.
x Ethical issues, this case study did not obtain any fully informed consent from the twins and could make them feel like objects
x There is a lack of control of extraneous variables in this case study.
Attachment – effects of privation
10. • Due to a family breakdown or an inability for a caregiver to look after their child then they may be
placed in an institutionalisation.
• When children are in these institutions they have limited time for interaction or play, babies spend all
day in cots.
• In developed countries most children are likely to be placed with foster parents however it is far more
common to put children into institutions in other parts of the world such as Romania. This is because
they had a civil war which lead to many orphaned children.
Research: Rutter (2007)
• Longitudinal study where Romanian orphans were adopted by UK families, Rutter assessed these children that were aged 6
months and some older.
• 58 were adopted before and up to 6 months of age.
• 59 babies were adopted between the ages of 6-24 months.
• At the ages of 4, 6 and 11 some of these children were interviewed and observed in order to see any changes in their behaviour.
• Babies adopted before 6 months had developed a lot better than those who were adopted after 6 months. These older children
showed signs of disinhibited attachments and had problems forming peer relationships
• This suggests that the effects of privation can be overcome if the child is adopted into a stable family before the age of 6 months,
after 6 months the negative effects tend to be more permanent.
x Researchers must be careful when investigating children as ethical issues could arise, being sensitive to their needs is important
and in earlier investigations this was not a concern for researchers.
Attachment – Effects of institutionalisation
11. • Researchers have looked into the effects of day care and try to observe the child's relationships with peers, ability to
make friends, communication skills, whether they share or not. They also look at negative behaviour such as signs of
aggression.
• Two types of care:
1. Nursery based, this would be staffed with trained worker, children would benefit from better facilities.
2. Family based care:
• registered child-minders, child would be away from their own house and the child-minder generally has children of their own, they must be registered
as child-minders.
• nanny/au pair, children get looked after in their own home and the children will most likely be with siblings rather than meeting new children from
other families.
• informal arrangements, on short notice a family member or a neighbour may look after children for a short period of time.
• It is important that children get a lot of individual attention and this can be difficult at nurseries as there are many other
children attending at the same time, children will get much more attention in family based care.
• It is however very important that children get to interact with other children and this can only be achieved in nursery
based care as there would be many more children to play with. This also means that there is an increased opportunity
to enhance skills such as talking and sharing when there are other children instead of siblings in family based care.
Attachment in everyday life – Day care
12. • Campbell studied children who attended child care continuously between the ages of 18 months and 3 and a half years of age.
• 9 children were in family based care and 30 were in nursery based care, during the study a further 9 children switched from family
based care to nursery based.
• These children were compared with a group of children whose parents had applied for day care however did not obtain them due to
competition.
• They were observed in their homes where researchers assessed the standards of care.
• Children were observed in both family based care and nursery based care. At home children played with familiar peers and the
researcher assessed the standard of care the children were receiving. In day care children were observed playing with others for around
30 minuets. This gave researchers a baseline condition at 18 months to see how socially skilled they were before care started.
• These assessments were repeated at 2 and a half years and 3 and a half years old.
• At 6 and a half years old the children's competence and behaviour was assessed by asking parents or carers to describe the child’s social
skills.
• At 8 and a half years old researchers asked teachers to describe the children's behaviour in class.
• At the age of 15 the children were visited at their own homes and were asked to complete two self report measurements of social
development.
• Findings:
• Children who spent long days in care under the age of 3 and a half years old were found to be less socially competent.
• Those that spent more days in day care however for fewer hours each day were more socially competent. Longer days may make the children more tired
and therefore frustrated.
Attachment in every day life – Campbell et al. Sweden, Gothenburg
13. • Belsky has found that children who have experienced day care tend to develop bad behaviours including
aggression towards peers. This has also led to children becoming a lot more disobedient to authoritative
figures and this could become and issue for children as they get older.
• Maccoby and Lewis supported these findings and added that children who spent longer hours in day care resulted in having more
problems in school, a greater amount of conflicts with teachers and lower social skills.
• Further research carried out by Field elaborated on these findings as teachers were asked to rate children who had been in full-time
day care, results showed us that these children were more aggressive and assertive with their peers.
Assessing the effects of day care:
• Variety of settings, they differ in terms of adult-child ratio and child-child ratio leading to both positive and negative outcomes for
either of the settings.
• Time spent, children start at different ages and attend for different amounts of time. Does not make sense to compare children who
start at 6 months old and those who start at 3 years old and only attend for a few hours a week.
• Quality of care, has a massive effect on the outcome of the experience.
• Melhuish carried out a quasi-experiment on 3 groups of children in London who started day care before 9
months of age. The groups consisted of care by relatives, childminders and a private nursery. These
settings varied in adult-child ratio, high In relative group and lowest in nursery setting. Obviously it was
the other way round when it came to contact with children.
Attachment in everyday life – Effects of day care/Comparing different types
14. Research has told us that a child needs to have a secure attachment with adults in order to be successful at
forming bonds and attachments.
We also now understand that a child can form multiple attachments with various adults.
We have discovered that children use adults as a safe base so that they can explore their surroundings
whilst knowing that they can rely on attachment figures to aide them in times of stress or when they are
frightened.
Good day care:
• A low adult to child ratio so that each child has plenty of time with key figures (adults).
• Small groups of children and trained workers, easier for younger children as there are fewer strangers.
• A mixed group of children including various ages and those of the opposite sex. Gives them the chance to observe how older
children behave and will then hopefully ensure positive development in their behaviours.
• A well structured day including lots of play time and a balanced amount of learning, this could be anything from drawing activities
to basic time together in groups. Routines allow children to feel at ease with their environment and can predict what will happen,
this makes them feel safe.
• Well trained staff ensures that the children will never feel insecure when their parents leave them for the day. This links to the
quality of the day care and what experience the children will get from day care if they have either good or bad staff caring for
them.
Attachment in everyday life – implications of research into attachment and day
care
15. Please leave any comments below if you believe that I have missed anything
out that is necessary for the A2 course and I will make changes asap.