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De-mystifying the EYFS Session 2

Promoting children’s well being through good practices Liz Corr. De-mystifying the EYFS Session 2. Reminder: Learning Agreement. Homework -.

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De-mystifying the EYFS Session 2

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  1. Promoting children’s well being through good practices Liz Corr De-mystifying the EYFS Session 2

  2. Reminder: Learning Agreement

  3. Homework - • All -Complete a Risk Assessment for your home and the proposed areas/activities you intend to use and provide. Eg sleeping, eating, sand, water, cooking, construction,( include Pets if you have them) • Complete Questions ….Preparing for your Registration Visit form 14,15,16,17,18,20,22,36,37 • Group 2 Complete a Fire Evacuation Procedure (include flats on/or above 3rd floor) • FEEDBACK AT NEXT SESSION

  4. Useful sites for safety….. • Fatally flawed • //www.fatallyflawed.org.uk/ • http://www.capt.org.uk/who-we-are

  5. Aims for this session To understand what is meant by providing an environment that promotes good Health & Hygienic practices including nutrition.

  6. How can you ensure your practice and home is a healthy place for children? Word storm

  7. How can you ensure your practice and home is a healthy place for children? Hand washing Providing an hygienic environment that enables children to explore and play freely. Fresh air Food Hygiene Dealing with accident and emergencies Healthy choices of food Infection Control: notifiable diseases, separate towels/sheets Keeping children safe around animals Daily Outdoor Play that encourages children to explore freely First Aid

  8. How can you ensure your practice and home is a healthy place for children Organisation of space: access to hand washing, nappy changing and toileting Natural Light Resources: Books, games, songs, rhymes and activities which promote healthy eating, personal care, doctors, dentists, hospitals etc. Smoking Access to fresh drinking water Update Skills and knowledge through training and workshops

  9. Group Exercise – Discuss in your groups 1.You are caring for a child who develops a high temperature • Q. What do you do next? • http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/feverchildren/Pages/Introduction.aspx 2. A parent arrives with an epipen and asks you to give the child an injection if he starts to have an allergic reaction. • Q. What do you do next? 3. A child sustains has an accident (they have fallen over) at park. Two days later you find out from parent that the child was taken to the hospital as they were very complaining about their injury, you find out they have broken their arm and they stayed in hospital for 2 days. • Q. What do you do next?

  10. Group Exercise – Discuss in your groups 4. Someone in your setting smokes. Q Who would you manage this, what would you include in your policy about smoking? 5. An 18mth old nappy needs changing both when indoors and outdoors Q What is in your procedure? 6. A 18mth and 2 yr old have a sleep at the same time whilst your 3 yr old is awake and playing • Q How do you manage this? What sleeping arrangements will you provided? Think about safe facilities for sleeping. • http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/pregnancy-and-baby/pages/reducing-risk-cot-death.aspx

  11. Group Exercise 7. A parent brings jarred baby food for their baby Q. How would you approach this? 8. You are in the park with your children and one of them falls off a swing banging their head on the ground Q. What do you do next? • Q. What information will you need to give to the ambulance crew?

  12. Watch the clip and discuss in your groups http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5CStF9nB1_8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ybv7tElJAHs Outdoor Play –

  13. Effective outdoor provision requires an ethos and vision, underpinned by a strong rational- ---that toddlers must have access to outdoor environment for plenty of time every day, every day of the year. • How can you plan for this in your setting, what the issues you may face? • How can you ensure you provide opportunities for young children to explore their natural world? • Dirt and germs as a health concern is a difficult issue which has to be carefully considered and discussed with parents. How can you enable toddlers to explore in a safe enough way? • There are benefits from being able to walk bare feet. How do we balance our fear of bumps and bruises with developmental value for toddler exploration outdoors.?

  14. How could you overcome the barriers to enable young children to explore outdoors?

  15. Sleeping Practices

  16. Group Exercise – Discuss in your groups • Parent of a 8 month requests that their child has two sleeps at specific times, she mentions that he will cry himself to sleep, as this is usual for him. • Q How do you manage this? What sleeping arrangements will you provide? • (Attachment video)

  17. Sleeping Practices Good Sleep Practices- comfort objects, familiar bedding, lighting, noise, physical comfort—cuddles, rocking and patting, where? Sleep positions- positional asphyxia can occur due to the prominence of the occiput (back of the head), as well as the overall lack of neck muscle strength, which forces the head to slouch forward pushing the chin down against the chest (Healthy Childcare IOWA 2008) Transferring sleeping children. Bedding- cross infection (FCCERS) Sleep routines being personalised– Parent partnership Activities for children who are not sleeping http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/children_shealth/3489638/Babies-who-face-away-from-mothers-in-buggies-could-be-left-emotionally-impoverished

  18. Group Exercise • Parent of 18 month old asks that you start to toilet train their child, placing him on the potty every time he has a drink. You don’t feel the child is ready. • How will you manage this?

  19. Scenario • How would you deal with this?

  20. Toilet training • When?

  21. What does the EYFS say? • Development matters statement • Physical Development: Health and Self Care: • 16-26mths- “clearly communicates wet or soiled nappy and pants” • “shows some awareness of bladder and bowel urges” • “shows awareness of what a potty or toilet is used for”

  22. Food/Drink • Mealtimes provide good opportunities for young children to……….

  23. Mealtimes should; • Be individualised routines for each child according to parent wishes, • Allow children to eat at own pace, never rushed • Be a calm environment • Be a social occasion, • promote independence, • Give children choices, likes, dislikes, • link to settling in – invite parents to visit during meal times

  24. Plan two days menu for the following scenarios • For a 8 mths old who is weaning • A two year old with a dairy allergy • A 7 yr old and 5 yr old after school • A 4 yr old who eats organic foods only and a 3 yr old who does not.

  25. Baby-led weaning • Baby-led Weaning is a practical and authoritative guide to introducing solid food, enabling your child to grow up a happy and confident eater. It shows parents why baby-led weaning makes sense and gives them the confidence to trust their baby's natural skills and instincts. With practical tips for getting started and the low-down on what to expect, Baby-led Weaning explodes the myth that babies need to be spoon-fed and shows why self-feeding from the start is the healthiest way for your child to develop. Your baby is allowed to decide how much he wants to eat, how to eat it and to experiment with everything at his own pace. Baby-led weaning is a common-sense, safe, easy and enjoyable approach to feeding your baby. No more purées and weaning spoons, and no more mealtime battles. Simply let your baby feed himself healthy family food. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4QbO7RTOrM

  26. Group Activity What experiences and activities can you provide that encourage children to know about and choose healthy foods? How could you provide opportunities to develop children’s awareness of different cultures and customs around food.

  27. SWR –Health Page 21- 23 Page 21 3.42 Medicines The provider must have a procedure, discussed with parents for responding to children who are ill or infectious, take necessary steps to prevent the spread of infection, and take appropriate action if children are ill Providers must have a policy for administering medicines. Medicines must not usually be administered unless they have been prescribed for a child be a doctor, dentist nurse. Medicines must only be administered to a child where written permission for that particular medicine has been obtained for the child’s parent/carer Page22 3.45 Food and Drink Before a child is admitted the provider must obtain information about special dietary requirements, preferences and food allergies and any special health requirements Where children are provided with meal, snack and drinks, they must be healthy, balanced and nutritious. Fresh drinking water must be available and accessible at all times.

  28. Safer food, better business for childminders • The Food Standards Agency has produced a 'Safer food, better business' (SFBB)pack especially for childminders. The pack gives simple, straightforward advice on food safety, including information on feeding babies and children, cooking, cleaning, chilling and looking after a child with a food allergy. • It is designed to help childminders: • make safer food • protect the health of the children they look after • comply with food hygiene regulations • Who is this pack for? • You can download the full pack in pdf format (2.5MB), or download individual parts of the pack, set out section by section below. • http://www.food.gov.uk/business-industry/caterers/sfbb/sfbbchildminders/#.U472C51wbct

  29. FOOD SAFETY • TO BOOK ON FOOD HYGIENE COURSE AS SOON AS YOU ARE REGISTERED AS A CHILDMINDER • Ofsted inform Hackney Environmental Health of all registered childminders • Therefore childminders can be inspected by EH at any time to ensure they are meeting Food Regulations!!!!

  30. Homework • Write your own Policy and Procedure for Health and Hygiene Practices—i.e sick child policy, accidents and incidents, medication, food and drink policy, smoking. • Safer food, better business for childminders • http://www.food.gov.uk/business-industry/caterers/sfbb/sfbbchildminders/ • Health Protection Agency (HPA) - http://www.hpa.org.uk/Topics/InfectiousDiseases/InfectionsAZ/SchoolsGuidanceOnInfectionControl/ • Childminding website - http://trustnet.learningtrust.co.uk/childminders/pages/doc.aspx?NAME=EYFS%20Welfare%20Requirements • Complete Question of the Preparing for your Registration Visit form 3, 19, 24, 25, 26, 27, 37

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