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  2. Individualizing Care for Infants and Tod...
  3. Considerations for Individualizing Care
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Individualizing Care for Infants and Toddlers

Individualizing Care for Infants and Toddlers

    Expand All

  • Why Is Individualizing Care Important for Infants and Toddlers?
  • Considerations for Individualizing Care
    • School Readiness
    • Curriculum
    • Interactions
    • Interactions and Temperament
    • Routines
    • The Daily Schedule
    • Experiences
    • Environment
  • Regulations, Structures, and Practices That Effectively Support Individualized Care
    • Small Group Size
    • Low Ratios of Teachers and Family Child Care Providers to Children and Small Caseloads of Families for Home Visitors
    • Primary Caregiving
    • Continuity of Care
  • Developing and Strengthening Staff Competence in Individualizing Care
  • Context for Individualizing Care
    • The Role of Ongoing Child Assessment in Individualizing Care
    • Individualizing Care and Ongoing Child Assessment in Home-Based Programs
    • The Role of Curriculum in Individualizing Care
    • Revisiting Observation
  • Reflecting and Interpreting: A Closer Look
    • Reflecting and Interpreting in the Moment
    • Reflecting and Interpreting for Daily and Weekly Planning
    • Reflecting and Interpreting Over Time
    • More about Interpretation
  • Planning for Individualization: A Closer Look
    • Planning for Possibilities
  • Implementing Plans
  • Reflecting on Implementation
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix: Questions and Suggestions for Reflection
  • References

Curriculum

Parents and children on the floor of their living room playing games.

At the heart of the curriculum is the child, who depends on adults to support and nurture exploration and learning. Early Head Start (EHS) and Migrant and Seasonal Head Start (MSHS) program staff keep this in mind as they select a curriculum that meets the unique needs of their children, families, and community. Staff make sure the curriculum is based on research,  aligns with the ELOF and state early learning and development standards, and supports children’s progress toward the program’s school readiness goals (45 CFR §1302.32). Additionally, a home-based curriculum promotes the parents’ role as their child’s teacher through experiences that focus on the parent-child relationship and, as appropriate, the family’s traditions, cultures, values, and beliefs (45 CFR §1302.35(d)(1)(i)-(iii)). Programs also look at how easily staff can use the chosen curriculum to meet the interests, needs, and abilities of each child in the program.

An appropriate curriculum for infants and toddlers in any program setting provides guidance and strategies for supporting infant and toddler development and learning. This is done through an organized developmental scope and sequence, which include plans and materials for learning experiences based on developmental progressions and how children learn. An appropriate curriculum also offers education staff some flexibility in how it is implemented. In these curricula, staff:

  • Have opportunities to discover an infant or toddler’s “individual curriculum” (e.g., the child’s interests, motivations, and needs)[1]
  • Choose and offer experiences that match a child’s (or small group of children’s) interests and developmental level
  • Use everything that happens (planned and spontaneous) during the day, home visit, or group socialization as learning opportunities
  • Create environments that reflect children and families served in the program

In other words, these curricula support child-initiated and child-pursued learning and allow staff to individualize learning for each child. To aid this process, use the following 15-minute In-service Suite:

  • Implementing a Curriculum Responsively: Supporting Children’s Development and Learning

Each suite contains a home-based version of the presentation, videos, and handouts, focused on implementing a curriculum responsively in home and group socialization settings.

[1]J. Ronald Lally, “Infants Have Their Own Curriculum: A Responsive Approach to Curriculum Planning for Infants and Toddlers,” in Curriculum in Head Start, Head Start Bulletin No. 67 (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Administration for Children, Youth and Families, Head Start Bureau, 2000); U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Child Care, National Infant & Toddler Child Care Initiative, Infant/Toddler Curriculum and Individualization (Washington, DC, 2010), 9.

Read more:

Curriculum

Resource Type: Article

National Centers: Early Childhood Development, Teaching and Learning

Age Group: Infants and Toddlers

Audience: Teachers and Caregivers

Last Updated: June 8, 2023

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