Resources

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Resources for Early Childhood
Part 2: Global Support for Children’s Rights and Well-Being
Part 3: Selected Early Childhood Organizations
Part 4: Selected Professional Journals
  • YC Young Children
  • Childhood
  • Journal of Child & Family Studies
  • Child Study Journal
  • Multicultural Education
  • Early Childhood Education Journal
  • Journal of Early Childhood Research
  • International Journal of Early Childhood
  • Early Childhood Research Quarterly
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Social Studies
  • Maternal & Child Health Journal
  • International Journal of Early Years Education
Additional Resources

The Brazelton Institute
http://www.brazelton-institute.com/

Touchpoints
http://www.touchpoints.org/

The Program for Infant/Toddler Care
http://www.pitc.org/

Special Quest-regarding inclusion
www.specialquest.org/about.htm


http://www.teachingstrategies.com/  This website you can find curriculum aligned to state standards.


http://www.stepuptoquality.org/   This website is Ohio's star rating system.

http://www.ohio4kids.org/   This website was designed for parents to get information when looking for child care, child development information or fun activities to do at home with their children.

7 comments:

  1. Amy thanks for the Program for Infant/Toddler Care website resource that you added to the resources. This resource will help me when working with my infant/toddler teachers. I love the quote on the homepage; "Good infant care is neither baby-sitting nor preschool. It is a special kind of care that resembles no other"(Retrieved from website http://www.pitc.org)

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  2. You are very welcome. I hope you find it useful!
    Amy

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  3. GREAT additional resources, Amy! I am especially interested in any infant/toddler resources, so I looked in depth @ the PITC web site. Their philosophy is AMAZING and straight from my heart. I am going to add this resource to my own blog resources page. Thanks for sharing it.
    Cindy

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  4. Cindy
    I am glad you found value in the PITC web site. Two of my colleagues are PITC certified and they speak very highly of the training they were given. I know it was expensive for our agency to send them to California to become certified but now they are certified for life and they can pass on such valuable information to caregivers and parents.
    Amy

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  5. Amy,good resources.I was very interested in Touchpoints and Special Quest-regarding inclusion. I will add these to my personal list. Touchpoints will definitely be useful to me because its my passion to work with family development and helping children to have a better future. Special Quest-regarding inclusion will also help me because I work in an inclusion classroom in pre-k. Thanks!!

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  6. Special Quest is such a great resource, thank you for including it in your list. I am certified on two of the PITC modules, but left my previous position/employeer before finishing my "homework" to get officially certified on Modules 3 and 4. One of the many things on my "to do " list.

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  7. I really like the website on play. It is very important in the work I do when I explain to parents that is how children learn the BEST!!!! Some parents often think that if we are not drilling the abc's or making them sit and count, then they are not learning. I've heard parents say "well all you do is play all day, you don't learn anything." What they don't realize is all the developmental areas play facilitates. Social/emotional, physical, cognitive....you get the idea. So many concepts of learning can be taught through play, that children don't even realize that they are learning something new!

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