Developing Content for My Philosophy

My Vision for working with children has always been a very child-led approach and as I reflect on a visit we had in the class last year from an educator named Lesly Henderson, I realized that my natural approach was actually being taught by many and this was a great source of confidence in my ability to work with children, as I had been told to be ‘more structured’ by some, I didn’t feel right for me and I now claim a child-led approach with confidence and one of the main components of my practice working with children.  Inclusivity is at the forefront of my vision and being flexible is something I’m good at and now know is a super valuable characteristic in a human relations field of work.

In three years I see my greatest strengths with children to be my patients, flexibility and building strong relationships with and for the families in my care as well as the community. I have seen how valuable it is for kids to build strong bonds with each other and their parents get to know each other and let the relationships flourish outside of the daycare environment, all the way through to elementary school and in there own private lives as well . Families can rely on each other in times of need. The Empowering Pedagogy textbook states that in the province of New Brunswick, one of the core values the province has is for its youngest learners is that the children and families be respected and share responsibility for one another in order to enhance communities and cultures.

I envision the early years environment as flexible and nurturing, The environment as the third teacher. The Empowering pedagogy text says on page 177, “the Environment is directly correlated to the depth of learning the child will experience.” The early years environment has to be a place for children, caregivers, parents, and educators to feel included and valued and build pride within the community.

I see children as capable individuals with individual wants, needs and expectations. As we learned more about Regio Amelia, it speaks of the child as capable of speaking one hundred languages, if we see children as protagonists of their own experience of learning, we support them in having the right to express their understanding of their world through many languages.

I view families as diverse and know best for their children. All Families need to feel valued, respected and engaged.  On page 40 of our textbook, it states that for families to feel they are members of a community, they must feel engaged. The family’s sense of worth and empowerment has a positive effect on the parents, the children and the early learning professionals.

I suspect that cultural diversity is something very important to strive to better understand as it is our responsibility to do as early learning professionals. Cultural competency is the ability to facilitate mutually rewarding interactions and meaningful relationships in the delivery of services for children and families whos cultural heritage differs from our own. This is called an essential skill in the Empowering Petagodgy textbook and having practiced and learned my own cultural awareness I’ve been able to see this as an essential skill.

I envision my colleagues as individuals with diverse backgrounds of education and life in which to draw knowledge from and gain inspiration. It is shown in the textbook on page 44 that adults learn when they have opportunities to engage in practical learning and feel respected as a learner, also it says an integral part of being effective in planning and developing learning experiences and programs for families and children is being able to engage in dialogue with other professionals. This is something I am learning and now realize it is an important part of being a professional.

 

Personal Growth and Professionalism: A look at my first philosophy statement in 2009!

Before I write my philosophy statement for this final class, I would like to share a philosophy statement I made eleven years ago after completing my required 30 hours of professional development to start my in-home Daycare. This is a reflective tool for me to recognize how I’ve changed and how my philosophy has remained the same, even after completing a College Certificate course.

Philosophy Statement 2009-

Every child is unique and has limitless potential. As a caregiver, I will support them by providing a safe nurturing environment to allow the child to thrive physically, cognitively, socially, emotionally and foster an opportunity to gain a spiritual understanding of themselves and the world around them.

 

 

 

Philosophy Assignment: A Reflective Moment

My vision for working with children: a child-led playful space that is open and inviting, inclusive and flexible from day to day.

In three years I see my greatest strengths with children to be: my patients, flexibility, and relationship building with families as well as my ability to adapt to the needs of the kids in my care.

I envision the early years environment: as flexible and nurturing. It should foster wonder and creativity in children as well as build pride within the community, a place for children, parents and educators to all feel included and valued.

I see children: as capable individuals with individual wants and needs.

I view families: to be very different, they know best for there child. All families need to be respected and valued as individuals.

I suspect that cultural diversity: will be something we can strive to understand better as it is part of our responsibility to do so.

I envision my colleagues: as knowledgeable collaborators with individual values and backgrounds of education or life in which to learn from and offer advice to.

 

Thoughts on Ethics

I have most certainly had many ethical dilemmas as a childcare provider.  I think I have a good understanding of ethical responsibilities but I feel like reading the code of Ethics is such an important document and a reminder that when caring for a child, you are also nurturing the entire family and the diversity of families means leave your own bias out of the equation. I am very thankful for documents like the code of Ethics as it ads consistency of quality of care to our field where otherwise there is not a lot of unified decision making as it is a relationship based line of work which can vary dramatically.

Wow, me…having a website?

I feel like I may look back at this fledgling website one day and think to myself that I had a lot to learn! I am excited to be so close to completing my ECCE certification but on the first day of this last curriculum course, I am reminded of the amount that I have to learn still, and the time it may take me to be comfortable with using technology in this way is a little daunting. While I would love to live in the woods and have limited connection to the outside world, it’s my love of children and family connections that keep me in my neighborhood and surrounded by people. I have an interesting “old school” love-hate relationship with the cyberworld so this class should really solidify for me where I stand on connectivity in this way.