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Assessment guide for meeting Element 3.2.1 (for all services) Environments that support participation and quality experiences

Im Dokument GUIDE TO THE NATIONAL QUALITY (Seite 192-195)

Assessors may observe:

• clear pathways that direct children and adults around rather than through areas being used by others

• spaces organised to ensure that routine activities (such as toileting, nappy changing, eating and sleeping) promote positive interactions and opportunities for learning

• safe shelving and storage areas from which children can access equipment and resources that are age and capability appropriate

• challenging elements of outdoor and indoor environments that allow for experiences that scaffold children’s learning and development and offer opportunities for appropriate risk taking and risky play

• children:

» actively engaged in a variety of rich, meaningful, enquiry-based

experiences in both indoor and outdoor environments, with appropriate levels of challenge to support exploration and experimentation

» initiating their own experiences using equipment and resources that they can access independently

» exploring relationships with living things and observing, noticing and responding to change

» being encouraged to use their senses to explore natural and built environments

» accessing areas with natural features such as plants, trees, edible gardens, sand, rocks, mud and water

• educators:

» setting up and adapting the indoor and outdoor environments to:

• offer both built and natural features and structures

• meet the range of ages, interests and abilities of all children

• facilitate the inclusion of every child and support every child to be able to participate in all daily experiences

• promote small and large group interactions and meaningful play and leisure

• stimulate and reflect children’s interests

• assist children to function autonomously in distinct learning or interest areas

• encourage a free flow of activity throughout the day

• facilitate positive interactions between children, educators and families

• enable small groups of children to work together on their own projects

observe

Inclusive environmentElement 3.2.1

• support children to create their own games and experiences

» planning, implementing, modifyingor changing play materials to encourage each child’s participation and to allow them to experience success

» planning learning environments that include a range of materials and equipment with appropriate levels of challenge where children are encouraged to explore, experiment and take appropriate risks in their learning according to their current capacities, strengths and interests

» engaging with children in constructing and adapting their own play settings/environments

» supporting children to move between environments

» encouraging the use of natural materials in all learning environments

» involving children in the arrangement of spaces to increase aesthetic appeal

» re-organising and re-setting the environment with assistance from children to provide order and predictability for children, attract their interest to the area and stimulate learning

• a relaxed atmosphere maintained by using positive and effective strategies to modify inappropriate noise levels in the environment

• comfortable and protected areas both indoors and outdoors where children can:

» rest, roll, sit, crawl and stand, alone or with others

» experience sensory activities

» safely explore their environment with their mouths, hands and bodies, and minimise time spent in high chairs, cots, playpens and strollers

» be cuddled or held by an adult

• built and natural environments that provide access to opportunities for play and leisure activities in which the children experience fun, enjoyment, challenge and success.

Assessors may discuss:

• how educators:

» involve children in discussions about the use of space and resources

» set up the environments to manage the balance of active and quieter spaces for play, and responds to the individual requirements of all children throughout the day

» adjust the environment to support each child’s participation and provide for their learning and development

• how resources, materials and equipment are chosen to enhance children’s learning

birth to three

school age children discuss

Inclusive environmentElement 3.2.1

• strategies the service has for working collaboratively with family members, specialists and/or resource agencies to support the inclusion of individual children

• how the indoor and outdoor spaces have been designed to invite open-ended interactions, spontaneity, risk-taking, exploration, discovery and connection to nature

• how the service implements strategies to support the development of children’s creativity, engagement and understanding of indoor and outdoor environments.

Assessors may sight:

• documented learning programs that:

» pay equal attention to planning outdoor and indoor environments to support children’s learning outcomes and extend on child-led learning

» outline opportunities for children to engage in outdoor and indoor experiences, such as dramatic play, construction, music and exploration

» incorporate opportunities for children to:

• be active and wholly engaged for long periods of uninterrupted play

• spend time in a quiet area away from other children if they wish

• choose whether they wish to participate in large and small group activities

» indicate that the outdoor and indoor spaces are re-organised to continuously engage children

• the statement of philosophy that describes the service’s approach to inclusion

• documented evidence that indicates the educational leader, nominated supervisors, educators and co-ordinators work collaboratively with family members, specialists and/or resource agencies to:

» plan for the inclusion of children with additional needs

» access adaptive equipment to support children’s requirements

» facilitate access to support services required while the child is at the service

• evidence that strategies are in place to ensure that children in residences without direct access to outdoor environments—for example, high-rise units—have opportunities to access outdoor environments.

sight

family day care

Resources support play-based learningElement 3.2.2

ELEMENT 3.2.2

RESOURCES SUPPORT

Im Dokument GUIDE TO THE NATIONAL QUALITY (Seite 192-195)