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Results: Page 31 of 41
Resource Name Description Resource Type
Practicing Proper Handwashing Handwashing is one of the best ways to protect yourself and the children in your care from getting sick. Learn when and how you should wash your hands to stay healthy and prevent the spread of illness. Tipsheet
Preparing for Tornado Season Tornadoes can happen at any time. However, they are most likely to occur in the spring and summer months. Tornadoes may cause extensive damage to structures and disrupt transportation, power, water, gas, and communications in its direct path and in neighboring areas. With spring fast approaching, now is a good time to be sure that your program is prepared. Website
Preparing Young Children for the Inclusion of Children with Disabilities into the Classroom Here are some tips from Marla Lohmann at NAEYC for "making your classroom more inclusive and helping all students be successful!" Website
Preschool Expulsion and Why We Should Care Children of color, particularly boys, have the greatest risk of losing their ECE placement due to expulsions and suspensions. This webinar explores these disparities in access and how programs can address them. Website
Prevención de la propagación de enfermedades contagiosas (Preventing the Spread of Communicable Illness) Las enfermedades transmisibles, también conocidas como enfermedades infecciosas o transmisibles, a menudo se pueden prevenir fácilmente con procedimientos adecuados de lavado de manos y aplicación estricta de protocolos y pautas de salud y exclusión. Esta hoja de consejos cubre cómo se propagan los gérmenes y cuál es la mejor manera de prevenir infecciones en el entorno de cuidado infantil. Tipsheet
Preventing Challenging Behavior Through Your Environment Examine the physical and social environments of your child care program and their effect on children's behavior. Explore ways to prevent and guide children's behavior through hands-on activities and practical strategies. Knowledge and Competency Framework Area - II.C: Promoting Social and Emotional Development    CDA Content Area - III: Positive ways to support children’ social and emotional development  🔊 This course includes Audio and is accessible from a mobile device. For optimal performance, viewing from a computer or tablet is highly recommended.  For ten clock hours on your Learning Record, please register and pay online at Develop. Then, complete a 500-word reflection paper and submit this document with your reflectionPlease note: You have access to this document as view only. To enable editing, download the document. Click "file" then "download as" in the upper left-hand corner of this screen. This will give you the option to open the document as a Word doc on your own computer. Then, you can complete the information and email it to: credit@inclusivechildcare.org. *Disregard any directions regarding a final quiz. The only learning assessment needed is the reflection paper. Course
Preventing Expulsion in Child Care Strategies to prevent suspension and expulsion of children with challenging behaviors. Tipsheet
Preventing the Spread of Communicable Illness Communicable illnesses—also known as an infectious or transmissible diseases—are often easily prevented with proper handwashing procedures and strict enforcement of health and exclusion protocols and guidelines. This tip sheet covers how germs are spread and how best to prevent infections in the child care setting. Tipsheet
Preventing, Monitoring, and Managing Head Lice This tip sheet highlights important steps in preventing, monitoring, and managing head lice in early care and education programs. Tipsheet
Primary Care: Six Essential Program Practices High-quality relationship-based care is central to optimal early brain development, emotional regulation, and learning (Center on the Developing Child, 2012). One of the Program for Infant/Toddler Care (PITC) six essential program practices to promote this type of care is primary care (PITC, n.d.). Consistent, responsive, and meaningful interactions with a primary caregiver build a child’s attachment with a familiar adult (Raikes & Edwards, 2009). Primary caregiving also strengthens relationships with the families of the children in the primary care group, which, in turn, supports the development of trust and security between the infant or toddler and the primary care provider (Lally, Torres, & Phelps, 2010) Document