|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Young Children's Experimental Cookery encourages Early Years
practitioners and teachers to take an innovative and creative
approach to introducing young children to food and cooking. The
book addresses wider issues such as healthy eating and food
preparation skills, but also moves beyond the concept of
traditional cookery lessons to celebrate food as a creative medium,
offering immense scope for multi-sensory exploration and a variety
of high quality learning experiences. Practitioners are encouraged
to abandon recipes, take a step back, and afford children the
freedom to chop, mix, stir and concoct their own creations,
exploring fresh ingredients and experimenting with new tastes and
smells along the way. Bridging the gap between food preparation and
the development of confidence, imagination and creative-thinking
skills, this open-ended approach to cooking sessions will equip
children with skills which go far beyond those needed in the
kitchen. Featuring full-colour photographs throughout, as well as
detailed case studies and practical tips for various seasons and
food groups, this accessible and exciting resource is ideal for
practitioners, teachers, parents and budding chefs! Every school
and Early Years setting should have at least one copy in their
staff room.
Young Children's Experimental Cookery encourages Early Years
practitioners and teachers to take an innovative and creative
approach to introducing young children to food and cooking. The
book addresses wider issues such as healthy eating and food
preparation skills, but also moves beyond the concept of
traditional cookery lessons to celebrate food as a creative medium,
offering immense scope for multi-sensory exploration and a variety
of high quality learning experiences. Practitioners are encouraged
to abandon recipes, take a step back, and afford children the
freedom to chop, mix, stir and concoct their own creations,
exploring fresh ingredients and experimenting with new tastes and
smells along the way. Bridging the gap between food preparation and
the development of confidence, imagination and creative-thinking
skills, this open-ended approach to cooking sessions will equip
children with skills which go far beyond those needed in the
kitchen. Featuring full-colour photographs throughout, as well as
detailed case studies and practical tips for various seasons and
food groups, this accessible and exciting resource is ideal for
practitioners, teachers, parents and budding chefs! Every school
and Early Years setting should have at least one copy in their
staff room.
This book challenges traditional beliefs and practices of teaching
'written' mathematics in early childhood. It gives theoretical
underpinnings and offers exciting insights and context to
children's early mathematical thinking and in particular into
children's mathematical graphics, showing how this supports their
understanding of the abstract symbolic language of mathematics.
Drawing on a wide range of examples, it illustrates and explains
how children explore and communicate their mathematical thinking
through their mathematical graphics, and how this begins in
play.The book looks at the power of children's own marks, symbols
and other graphical representations to convey meanings, exploring
how they support complex thinking. The authors explore the
relationship between children's play and meaning making. Rather
than viewing mathematics as a separate subject or as a set of basic
'skills' to be transmitted, they demonstrate that in supportive
learning cultures children develop their own mathematical thinking
to solve problems.Key features include: Numerous new examples and
case studies of children from birth to 6 years,highlighting the
complexity and richness of children's thinkingExplanation of
pedagogical issues - showing how they can support rich play and
mathematicsDraws on the authors' latest research This book is
valuable reading for students, teachers, primary mathematics
coordinators' and all early years' professionals working in the
Early Years Foundation Stage and Key Stage One.
For anyone who has been in good health all their life, to be told
that they now have a debilitating illness like Multiple Sclerosis
can be devastating, as is the acceptance of such an illness. I have
tried to write about my own problems and experiences in a way that
gives a practical guide to managing the illness. Topics include
being diagnosed, employment, pregnancy, relationships, medical
treatment and complimentary therapies. I hope that my book shows
that staying positive is an important factor in dealing with your
MS. My book will answer the question for a person who as newly been
diagnosed and also for fellow MS sufferers.
'In Case Study 5 (a grassroots 'Children's Mathematics Network
group') the initiative supported the participants in their
professional change by giving them a space for the detailed and
joint consideration of children's mathematical thinking. Another
significant feature of this initiative is its focus on careful
consideration and analysis of children's mathematics, and the ways
in which professionals can support and encourage the children's
mathematical thinking and reasoning... The standard of the
mathematical understanding, thinking and reasoning that the
displays revealed was far higher than the specified curriculum
objectives for children of this age...' - Researching Effective CPD
in Mathematics Education (RECME) project: (NCETM, 2009) 'The review
also plays great score by play-based learning of a mathematical
nature, and makes specific recommendations regarding early
mark-making as a precursor to abstract mathematical symbolism'.
Section 115 features children's mathematical graphics and
emphasises: 'The role of mark-making in children's cognitive
development is set out in the taxonomy (Carruthers and Worthington,
2006)'. The report recommends that 'local authorities, leaders,
managers and head teachers should provide a culture with a
significant focus on mathematical mark-making' and 'a learning
environment that encourages children to choose to use their own
mathematical graphics to support their mathematical thinking and
processes' - The Williams Maths Review: (DCSF, 2008) `At the very
heart of the success of the book is the authors' ability to see
mathematics through young children's eyes by listening to and
reflecting on the constant efforts made by children to make sense
of their world. This is a liberating book which proposes that the
teaching of mathematics could and should be a highly creative and
enjoyable proceess' - Branwen Llewelyn Jones, Early Years
Consultant at PACE Ltd / TACTYC 'Ground breaking... To single out
any one chapter would be unfair because there is something
thought-provoking and inspirational throughout. If you want to
expand your understanding upwards and outwards then get a copy
soon' - Times Educational Supplement 'I first read Children's
Mathematics, Making Marks, Making Meaning a couple of years ago and
it had an immediate impact on my own thinking and teaching, and the
work I do with trainee teachers. I'm sure you will find it
compelling reading too. I think it has the potential to change, in
a fundamental way, how we think about early mathematical
development' - Lynne McClure, Editor, Math Co-ordiator's File,
Mathematics Association 'In their exceptionally readable and
informative book, Children's Mathematics, Making Marks, Making
Meaning Carruthers and Worthington (2006) draw attention to one of
the main goals of early years teaching, that is, to help children
make links between the mathematics they have already encountered
(and continue to engage with) at home and the more abstract
mathematics of the school. These authors suggest that by
encouraging children to represent mathematical ideas in their own
ways and, crucially, by talking to the pupils about the marks they
have made, we are given a "window" onto their thinking that may
otherwise be inaccessible' - Liz Pumphrey, NRICH This book draws on
the authors' many years of teaching children aged three to eight
years and also on their extensive research with children in the
home, nursery and school. The authors explain the development and
range of young children's mathematical marks and visual
representations, showing how children make mental connections
between their own early marks and subsequent abstract mathematical
symbolism, and go on to develop their own written methods.
Combining theory and practice, this acclaimed book demonstrates how
children's own mathematical graphics are highly creative and show
deep levels of thinking. The authors show how this is the key to
success in school mathematics and to higher levels of achievement.
The authors are winners of TACTYC's (2003) Jenefer Joseph Award for
the Creative Arts (3 - 8) - awarded for their innovative work with
children on mathematical graphics.
|
|