Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Gcse Home Economics: Child
Development
- Family and Parenthood
- Types of families
- Nuclear family
- Parents and children live together
in the home. Contact with other
family members is limited.
- Extended family
- Parents and children live with, or
near, relatives like grandparents,
aunts uncles and cousins
- Step family
- Parents and children live together in
the home. Contact with other family
members is limited.
- A single-Parent Family
- Can be the result
of: divorce, the
death of a parent,
an absent parent,
a surrogacy
arrange.
- Shared Care family
- Children live in two
households and spend time
with both parents.
- Adoptive family
- Adoptive Parents
provide a permanent
home for babies and
older children. A court
gives them the same legal
rights and responsibilities
as birth parents.
- Reasons for adopting include:
Infertility, Adoption after remarriage,
Adoption of a family member,
Adoption of a disadvantaged child.
- Health and Safety
- Parasites
- Headlice
- Signs and Symptoms
- Itchy red bite mark on
scalp, grey eggs
attacked to hair, white/
shiny empty egg cases
on hair.
- How Spread?
- Head to head contact
- Prevention and Treatment:
- Leave conditioner on
hair and wet-comb with
nit comb, use chemical
shampoo treatment.
- Scabies
- Signs and Symptoms
- Irritating skin rash, mite
'burrow' are seen, if
scratched rash
produced septic spots.
- How Spread?
- Direct skin to skin contact
- Prevention and Treatment
- Treat ALL family with
lotion from GP, thoroughly
wash towels, bed linen
and clothing.
- Fleas
- Signs and symptoms
- Small red bite marks
- How Spread?
- Jump long
distances onto
other people.
- Prevention and Treatment
- Ensure people,
houses and
clothes are clean,
treat pets for
fleas.
- Threadworms
- How Spread?
- Swallowing eggs
- Signs and Symptoms
- Itching around anus,
worms visible in
faeces or around
anus.
- Prevention and Treament
- Strict hygiene eg
thorough hand
washing, bath or
shower each morning,
medicate whole
family.
- Roundworms
- Signs and Symptoms
- Fever, vomiting,
painful muscles
and joints, damage
to eyesight.
- How Spread?
- Swallowing eggs
from animal
faeces.
- Prevention and Treatment
- Strict pet hygiene -
wash hand after
playing with pets, safe
disposal of animal
faeces, medicate
whole family.
- Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome
(SIDS)
- The sudden,
unexpected death of a
baby as it sleeps.
- ALWAYS...
- Put a baby on
their back
- Use a
firm
mattress
- Ensure the room
is 16-18 degrees
- Tuck covers in well
below the baby's
shoulders
- Breastfeed
if possible
- You can reduce the risk by
keeping the baby in the
parents' room at night for
the fist 6 months.
- Nutrition and Health
- Weaning
- Stage 1 (6 months)
- Give pureed veg/fruit,
baby rice, milk=most
important food still.
- When?
- A very tiny
amount during
or after a milk
feed to start
the transition
of milk to solids
- Stage 2 (7-9 months)
- Increase variety, pureed meat,
fish, lentils, beans, wheat based
foods.
- Offer some finger food
and give babies a spoon
so they can try to feed
themselves.
- When?
- At the end of a milk
feed to introduce
other foods when the
child is hungry
- Stage 3 (9-12 months)
- Cow's milk safely drank
(12m), introduce lumpier
foods eg pasta, pieces of
meat, cheese, bread.
Additional fluids eg
unsweetened dilluted fruit
juics & water. 3 regular
meals as well as drinks.
- When?
- At mealtimes
with the rest
of the family
to encourage
independence.
- Birth and Post-natal care
- Stages of Labout
- Stage 1
- Contractions make your cervix gradually
open up (dilate)- longest stage
- Stage 2
- Contractions more frequent & stronger, cervix is
fully open & you begin crowning then full birth. Part
of labour where you help baby move through
vagina by pushing during contractions
- Stage 3
- After birth, womb contracts &
causes placenta to come out
through the vagina
- Pregnancy and Ante-natal care
- Reproductive Organs
- Ovaries
- Control production of oestrogen
& progesterone which control
menstural cycle, contain undreds
of eggs
- Fallopian Tube
- Connect ovaries to womb, lined
with cilla-wafts egg along to
uterus
- Uterus
- (womb) muscular bag w/soft
lining, where baby develops
- Cervix
- Strong ring of muscle between lower end
of uterus & vagina, keeps baby in place
- Vagina
- Muscular tube leads from
cervix to outside
- Penis
- Pass urine & pass semen. Made
of shaft & glans, shaft=main part,
glans=tip at end=small slit to
release urnine/semen
- Urethra
- Tube inside penis that carries
urine & semen, there's a ring of
muscle that ensures the urine &
semen don't mix
- Sperm Duct
- Where sperm passes through to mix
with fluids that are produced by
glands, fluid provides sperm cells
w/nutrients. Mix of sperm &
fluids=semen
- Testes
- Makes male hormone
testosterone and
produces sperm
- Scrotum
- Bag of skin which stores testes
- Stages of Growth for a baby
- 4-5 Weeks
- embryo=5mm,
rudimentary heart
started to beat,
arms & legs=buds
- 6-7 Weeks
- Embryo=8mm,
limb buds=look
real, heart seen
beating on
ultrasound
- 8-9 Weeks
- unborn
baby=foetus=2cm.
Toes, fingers & major
internal organs
starting to form,
- 10-14 Weeks
- foetus=7cm,
organs complete.
By 12 weeks
baby=fully
formed
- 15-22 Weeks
- Mother feels
movement.
22w=greasy,
white
protective film
called VERNIX
CASEOSA has
begun to form.
Foetus
covered in fine,
hair=LANUGO
- 23-30 Weeks
- Covered in vernix,
lanugo=dissapeared.
28w+ foetus=viable
- 31-40 Weeks
- Becomes plumper,
vernix & lanugo
dissapear. Foetus=
settles in head-down
position
- Foods to Avoid
- Raw egg,
unpasteurised
milkl
- Salmonellla could
cause miscarriage or
premature birth
- Some types of fish eg swordfish
- High levels of mercury
cause delayed
development in nervous
system
- Liver and Liver products
- Too much Vitamin
A can cause birth
defects
- Soft blue cheese, pate,
prepared salads or
ready-meals
- Listeria found in prepared foods
which aren't heated enough,
Listeriosis (from listeria) can
cause msscarriage, stillbirth,
meningitis, pneumonia
- Causes of Infertility
- Genetics
- Low Sperm Count
- Your Hormones
- Disease eg Polycystic
Ovary dyndrome
- Mutation or
blockage of
fallopian
tubes
- Areas Of
Development
- Physical
- Gross motor Skills
- The use and control
of large muscles eg
walking.
- 15 months- walks independently;
walks upstairs fordwards and
downstairs backwards
- 2 years- runs, walks on
tiptoe, jumps, kicks ball
(starts potty training)
- Fine Manipulative Skills
- The control
and use of
hands/fingers
eg painting
- 9 months- can use finger
and thumb to grasp an
object (inferior pincer grasp)
- Motor development
relates to the body
- Sensory development
relates to sign, hearing,
touch,taste and smell.
- Intellectual
- The development
of the mind/brain.
- 15
months -
Palmar
grasp;
crayon
help half
way up
- 18 months- Primitive
tripod grasp
- 2-3 years
Tripod grasp;
good pencil
control
- Pre-lingustic
- From birth-12
months
- 6 months-echolalia
(repetitive sounds)
- 1 Year-
Holophrases (one
word)
- Babies communicate
their needs by crying
- Linguistic
- From 18 months onwards.
- Single words
become simple,
then complex
sentences.
- 2 years-
Telegraphic
Speech (uses
crucial words eg
me want cake.
- Emotional
- Newborn-
uses body to
express
emotion
- 6 months- Separation
anxiety begins, baby
distressed if the main
carer isn't there
- 15 months- rapid
mood swings
- 2 years-egocentric,
believes that the
whole world should
revolve around them.
- 3 Years- cares
for others and can
empathise, may
develop fears
- Social
- 12 months-
understands
basic
commands
- 3 years-
willing to
share and
likes to be
with other
children.
- 4-5 years- shares
well and
understands rules,
less demanding of
adult attention
- Types of Play
- Creative; use of
imagination, eg
dancing
- Imaginative; made
up games and
scenarios
- Physcial; the body is used in
an active way, riding a bike
- Manipulative; develops
hand-eye Coordination and fine
motor skills eg jigsaw.
- Social; helps child lean to share.