Developing High Quality Observation, Assessment and Planning in the Early Years

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Sancisi
Keyword(s):  
1991 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. W. von Althen

For satisfactory growth, most high-value hardwood species demand a deep, fertile, moist but well drained soil. Intensive competition control during the early years after planting is a necessity. Close spacing is recommended, with gradual release of crop trees to promote high-quality stem development. For good hardwood growth on soils of marginal fertility or poor drainage or on sites where intensive management cannot be guaranteed, it is recommended that a mixture of several hardwood species be planted.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 947-947

The American Academy of Pediatrics supports the continued expansion of high quality day care programs for the nation's children. It is preparing a booklet, Recommendations for Day Care Centers for Infants and Children, to serve as a guideline for establishing quality day care. The Academy also has embarked on a program to help pediatricians understand their role in fostering high quality day care. All children should have the opportunity to optimally develop their physical, intellectual, and social potential. The care and guidance they are given in their early years are of critical importance for such development. For most children, this child care and guidance are best given in their own homes, by their own families, but may need to be supplemented by child care services provided by private or governmental agencies. Because they are working, an increasing proportion of mothers are not at home to fulfill the maternal role in care and guidance. In 1971, 43% of mothers in the United States were employed: one-third of the mothers of preschool children and one-half of the single mothers of young children. For some children the home may not be the best place because of social or financial poverty or family discord which inhibit child development. Alternative methods of caring for children to help them achieve their fullest potential are needed more now than at any time in our history. Day care services should be a supplement to, not a substitute for, the family as the primary agent for the child's care and development.


Author(s):  
Matthew R. Sanders ◽  
Karyn L. Healy ◽  
Julie Hodges ◽  
Grace Kirby

Abstract Parent-child relationships influence learning throughout a child’s formal schooling and beyond. The quality of parenting children receive has a major influence on their learning and developmental capabilities. Parental influence is important in the early years of life and extends throughout a child’s schooling. Parenting has a pervasive influence on children’s language and communication, executive functions and self-regulation, social and peer relationships, academic attainment, general behaviour and enjoyment of school. Schools can further enhance educational outcomes for students by developing the resources and expertise needed to engage parents as partners in learning. This can be achieved by delivering and facilitating access to a comprehensive system of high-quality, culturally informed, evidence-based parenting support programs. In this article, recent developments in the Triple P system of parenting support are used to illustrate how schools can develop a low-cost, comprehensive, high-quality parenting support strategy that blends universal components with targeted components for more vulnerable children. We identify potential organisational and logistical barriers to implementing parenting support programs and ways to address these.


Ars Adriatica ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
Damir Tulić

Stylistic changes in a sculptor’s oeuvre are simultaneously a challenge and a cause of dilemmas for researchers. This is particularly true when attempting to identify the early works of a sculptor while the influence of his teacher was still strong. This article focuses on the Venetian sculptor Giovanni Bonazza (Venice, 1654 – Padua, 1736) and attributes to him numerous new works both in marble and in wood, all of which are of uniform, high quality. Bonazza’s teacher was the sculptor Michele Fabris, called l’Ongaro (Bratislava, c.1644 – Venice, 1684), to whom the author of the article attributes a marble statue of Our Lady of the Rosary on the island of San Servolo, in the Venetian lagoon, which has until now been ascribed to Bonazza. The marble bust of Giovanni Arsenio Priuli, the podestat of Koper, is also attributed to the earliest phase of Bonazza’s work; it was set up on the façade of the Praetorian Palace at Koper in 1679. This bust is the earliest known portrait piece sculpted by the twenty-five-year old artist. The marble relief depicting the head of the Virgin, in the hospice of Santa Maria dei Derelitti, ought to be dated to the 1690s. The marble statue of the Virgin and Child located on the garden wall by the Ponte Trevisan bridge in Venice can be recognized as Bonazza’s work from the early years of the eighteenth century and as an important link in the chronological chain of several similar statues he sculpted during his fruitful career. Bonazza is also the sculptor of the marble busts of the young St John and Mary from the library of the monastery of San Lazzaro on the island of San Lazzaro degli Armeni in the Venetian lagoon, but also the bust of Christ from the collection at Castel Thun in the Trentino-Alto Adige region; they can all be dated to the 1710s or the 1720s. The article pays special attention to a masterpiece which has not been identified as the work of Giovanni Bonazza until now: the processional wooden crucifix from the church of Sant’Andrea in Padua, which can be dated to the 1700s and which, therefore, precedes three other wooden crucifixes that have been identified as his. Another work attributed to Bonazza is a large wooden gloriole with clouds, cherubs and a putto, above the altar in the Giustachini chapel in the church of Santa Maria del Carmine at Padua. The article attributes two stone angels and a putto on the attic storey of the high altar in the church of Santa Caterina on the island of Mazzorbo in the Venetian lagoon to Giovanni’s son Francesco Bonazza (Venice, c.1695 – 1770). Finally, Antonio Bonazza (Padua, 1698 – 1763), the most talented and well-known of Giovanni Bonazza’s sons, is identified as the sculptor of the exceptionally beautiful marble tabernacle on the high altar of the parish church at Kali on the island of Ugljan. The sculptures which the author of the article attributes to the Bonazza family and to Giovanni Bonazza’s teacher, l’Ongaro, demonstrate that the oeuvres of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Venetian masters are far from being closed and that we are far from knowing the final the number of their works. Moreover, it has to be said that not much is known about Giovanni’s works in wood which is why every new addition to his oeuvre with regard to this medium is important since it fills the gaps in a complex and stylistically varied production of this great Venetian sculptor.


eye brings you another batch of the latest products and books on offerYoga for You Rebecca Rissman ISBN 9781784936105 £8.99. Paperback Publisher QED Orders Tel: 020 7812 8633 Review by Neil HentyA Guide to Early Years Teaching & Primary Teaching Dominic Wyse and Sue Rogers (editors) ISBN 9781473906945 £24.99. Paperback Publisher SAGE Publications Orders Tel: 020 73248500; www.sagepublications.com Review by Neil HentyEffective leadership for high quality early years practice Michael Read ISBN 9781907478284 £10.95 members; £13.95 non-members Publisher Pre-school Learning Alliance Orders Tel: 020 76972500 www.pre-school.org.uk/shop Review by Neil HentyWhat on Earth? Water by Isabel Thomas and Paul Morgan [£8.99 from QED; ISBN: 9781784935542].Free the lines by Clayton Junior [£11.99 from Words and Pictures; ISBN: 9781784936266].The Liszts by Kyo Maclear and Julia Sarda [£12.99 from Andersen Press; ISBN: 9781783445158].Honk, Honk! Hold Tight! by Jessica Souhami [£6.99 from Frances Lincoln Children's Book; ISBN: 9781847805416].A Bottle of Happiness by Pippa Goodhart and Ehsan Abdollahi [£12.99 from Tiny Owl; ISBN: 9781910328200].Striker, Slow Down! A calming book for children who are always on the go by Emma Hughes and John Smisson [£9.99 from Singing Dragon; ISBN: 9781848193277].Understanding Early Years Policy 4th Edition Damien Fitzgerald and Janet Kay ISBN 9781412961905 £23.99. Paperback Publisher SAGE Publications Orders Tel: 020 73248500; www.sagepublications.com Review by Neil HentyThe Early Years Foundation Stage: Theory and Practice 3rd Edition Ioanna Palaiologou (editor) ISBN 9781473908208 £24.99. Paperback Publisher SAGE Publications Orders Tel: 020 73248500; www.sagepublications.com Review by Neil HentyThe Multiple Identities of the Reception Teacher: Pedagogy and Purpose Anna Cox and Gillian Sykes (editors) ISBN 9781473959521 £22.99. Paperback Publisher Learning Matters Orders Tel: 020 73248500; www.sagepublications.com Review by Neil Henty

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 46-48

2008 ◽  
Vol 76 ◽  
pp. 75-98
Author(s):  
Mariarosaria Barbera ◽  
Sergio Palladino ◽  
Claudia Paterna

This article describes the discovery of an area of habitation of the domus of the Valerii, a family with yen ancient origins, said to descend from the first consul, Valerius Publicola. The excavation, undertaken in 2005, investigated deposits beneath the Ospedale dell'Addolorata where, in the early years of the twentieth century, the construction of the southeast block destroyed the upper levels and a complex row of structures along the northern side, towards via Santo Stefano Rotondo. Since the middle of the sixteenth century, uncontrolled excavation and research have recovered an important inheritance of knowledge and of high-quality finds — often sold or dispersed in some way. The excavation has revealed part of a frescoed corridor, 3.8 m wide and originally c. 3 m high, with a pavement in black mosaic, with windows opening onto a garden. Of this imposing structrure, datable to the late Hadrianic period, various phases of building activity, abandonment and reuse have been identified, amongst which the construction of a hidental is of particular interest.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
Abdullah Karatas

Liquidity management has always been a major issue in Islamic banking. In the early years of the industry, a major problem was a general tendency toward excess liquidity. In the future, the main issue in the context of depressed oil prices, a rising global interest-rate environment, and a tightened regulatory landscape under Basel III is likely to be a relative scarcity of high quality liquid assets (HQLA), or high quality liquid sukūk (Note 1). The incoming U.S. Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin has already indicated that the Trump administration’s plans could rapidly turbocharge the U.S. economy, thereby altering the prevailing low-interest rate dynamic at the U.S. Federal Reserve (“U.S. Fed”), leading many to anticipate higher interest rates (Wigglesworth & Moore, 2016).Among the available liquidity management instruments in Islamic banking, only sukūk of a particular type meet the requirements of HQLA (in principle) as defined by the Basel Committee and adapted for Islamic finance by the IFSB (Islamic Financial Services Board). Candidates for HQLA are only international sukūk, i.e. sukūk that are issued in an international currency, listed, and traded not only locally but also internationally. Sovereigns and international institutions such as the IDB have issued almost all sukūk of this caliber. In this paper, we will make empirically informed qualitative projections on the outlook for HQL (high quality liquid) sukūk in the context of a rising global interest-rate environment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Hatcher

AbstractThis article, written by Mark Hatcher, provides an overview of the background and achievements of the Bar Council, the professional body for barristers in England and Wales, since its formation in 1894. It traces the early years of the council and its expansion after the second world war, following the growth in legal aid and other post-war reconstruction measures. It describes changes in the structure and organisation of the Bar Council culminating in the implementation of reforms which followed the Legal Services Act 2007, which resulted in the separation of representation of the Bar from regulation of the profession which was delegated to the Bar Standards Board in 2006. It concludes with an overview of the key issues that are driving the Bar Council's activity to promote the Bar's high quality specialist advocacy and advisory services, and to promote access to justice for all.


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