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    Objectives:
    • Describe how ratios and supervision keep infants and toddlers safe in indoor environments.
    • Identify yourPUBLICProgram’sratio and supervision requirements.
    • Apply the information from this lesson and yourPUBLICProgram’srequirements to promote safety.

    Learn

    Learn

    Know

    Your first priority is to keep the children in your care safe from harm, though it is not as easy as it might sound. Infants and toddlers rely 100 percent on you to keep them safe. The younger the children, the more dependent they are on the adults around them. While they are learning about what is safe and what is not, it will be a while before they are able to stay safe without your constant attention. Therefore, you must provide active indoor supervision all day, every day.

    Utilizing primary care-giving supports active supervision. Assigning a primary group of infants or toddlers to you and your teaching partner creates a smaller group of children, which makes supervision easier. Even though you are assigned specific children for the purposes of continuity of care, all teachers in a classroom provide assistance in supervising all the children in the room.

    Ratios

    Good ratios optimize care and help keep infants and toddlers safe. YourPUBLICprogram'sratios must be maintained at all times. Follow yourPUBLICprogram'sprocedures for contacting your supervisor if you need emergency help in order to maintain ratios.

    What is a Safe Adult-Child Ratio?

    Recommendations for adult-child ratios have two parts: (a) the number of children per staff member and (b) the maximum group size. National associations and the Department of Defense recommend a maximum group size of eight for children ages birth to 15 months and a ratio of at least 1:4. When children are 21 to 36 months, the maximum group size can reach 12 children (ratio 1:6). The group sizes and ratios are guidelines. Your specificPUBLICStatehas established adult-child ratios designed to keep children safe.

    Supervision

    Supervision is more than watching infants and toddlers. It involves actively observing and predicting their behavior, predicting and assessing hazards in the environment, and interacting with infants and toddlers during routines, play, and learning. Supervision must vary according to the needs of each child, each experience, and each activity.

    Act to avoid problems before they occur. During conversations with your co-teachers, discuss safety issues and make necessary adjustments. Be available to step in if necessary. You can supervise while playing with infants and toddlers to support their social development.

    How your environment is arranged can either help or hinder supervision. For example a tall shelf can get in the way of your ability to visually supervise the children on the other side. If there are areas that make being able to see more difficult then it’s important that you position yourself so you can see what’s going on at all times. Hazards in the environment can pop up at any time. For instance, toddlers may drop toys in the fall zone of the indoor climber, or water may be spilled on the floor during water play, putting everyone at risk. Frequently scanning the room for possible hazards and taking the necessary actions will help prevent injury.

    See

    Supervision during Play and Learning

    During play and learning, you should be able to easily see children at a glance in all parts of the room. Noise levels should be maintained that allow you to hear infants' coos, sounds of distress, and the language of toddlers. Being able to hear infants and toddlers means you will be alert to distress, and it is important for development of language skills.

    Stay within easy reach of infants and toddlers at all times—no more than an arm’s length away. Some activities require closer supervision. Tummy time, sand or water play, or use of climbing equipment, for example, present greater risk of serious injury if children are left unattended.

    坐在靠近非移动婴儿保护他们from mobile infants and toddlers. Stay closer to a child whose behavior is more aggressive. Allow all infants and toddlers to interact with their peers to develop social skills. Your presence will not only protect infants, it will facilitate socialization.

    Supervision during Routine Care

    Routine care, which includes meals and snacks, diapering and toileting, arrival and departure, and nap, requires vigilant supervision.

    Arrival and Departure

    The arrival and departure routine is the transferring of care to and from home. Greeting each family member and child upon arrival is a conscious and visible strategy to say “I am aware and happy that you are here.” This says to families that their child is transitioning to your care for the day. Departure is similar. Greeting the family when they arrive and saying goodbye to the child and family completes the transition. To account for each child, immediately record the arrival and departure date and time and the name of the adult dropping off or picking up the child.

    Feeding

    Follow these safety supervision guidelines during feeding:

    • Bottle-fed infants and older infants should be held or, if the child is able to hold the bottle, seated.
    • Infants and toddlers should always be seated while eating and drinking. Choking or injury risk is greater when children are on the move.
    • You need to be within an arm's reach of children who are eating and maintain visual supervision. Choking is a silent accident.

    Diapering and Toileting

    During diapering, keep a hand on the infant at all times. Having materials prepared before diapering allows your hands to stay on task. Toileting routines exposes toddlers to water deep enough for drowning. Hand washing may involve a step stool, which toddlers can fall from. Remember, these types of care-giving routines may be routine for you, but they aren't for the toddlers. Their motor skills are still developing. They are still learning to coordinate and balance, so accidents are more prone to occur. Bathrooms are not easy environments to make safe, so your awareness of hazards is crucial to prevent injury.

    Nap

    Active supervision during nap is critical. Infants should be directly observed by sight and sound at all times. This includes when they are going to sleep or waking up. The lighting in the room must allow you to see each infant's face, to view the color of their skin, and to check on their breathing. While safe sleep practices are addressed in Lesson Five of this course, it’s worth saying here that infants must always be placed on their backs for sleeping. When infants and toddlers are sleeping, mirrors or video equipment may be used to support supervision in sleeping areas, but they don’t replace direct visual or auditory supervision.

    Watch the following video and observe the supervision strategies used by the caregivers and how each of the strategies play a role in keeping children safe.

    Indoor Supervision

    Watch strategies for supervising indoors

    Do

    Supervision is not a solitary task. You supervise best while interacting with infants and toddlers. You and the infants and toddlers will be talking, singing, giggling, making discoveries, having quiet time, sharing a book, exploring toys and materials, sharing one-on-one time, and engaging with peers.

    Because of your supervision, infants and toddlers are free to learn about themselves, their environment, and the people around them, which promotes a holistic approach to development. You should be able to make the following statement:

    When it comes to ratios and indoor supervision, I always utilize the following strategies:

    • I anticipate children's actions.
    • I continuously move through all of the spaces where children are.
    • I frequently scan areas to ensure safety.
    • I limit contact with other adults.
    • I am in an arm’s reach of infants during tummy time.
    • I consistently check equipment for damage.
    • I frequently make eye contact with children.
    • I always keep one hand on the infant while diapering.
    • I immediately act to prevent injury.
    • I provide interaction and support during play and learning.
    • 我迅速和有效地回答孩子dren's distress.
    • I provide closer supervision for high-risk activities.
    • I sit close to infants when mobile infants and toddlers are near.
    • I always place infants on their backs to sleep.
    • I am present and closely watch each child use the toilet.
    • I am present and closely watch each child wash his or her hands.
    • I coordinate with other staff members to ensure we are positioned in the room so all the children are visible to us at all times.
    • I remain in an arm's reach of children who are eating.
    • I maintain visual contact with children who are going to sleep, are asleep, or are in the process of waking.

    Explore

    Explore

    Observing other teachers is a great way to learn new ways of doing things. Watch the videoObserve Supervision: Indoorand identify the supervision strategies utilized by the teachers. Download and print theSupervision in Actionrecording chart to capture your observations. The strategies listed at the end of the Do section may be helpful as you complete this activity. When you have completed this activity share it with your supervisor, trainer, or coach.

    Observe Supervision: Indoor

    Observe how active supervision, and maintaining ratios, keep children safe

    Apply

    Apply

    Download and print theActive Supervisionattachment to reflect on the challenges you experience when supervising infants and toddlers.

    Glossary

    Term Description
    Facilitate To bring about help
    Motor skills Skills involving a child’s increasing ability to use one’s body to interact with the environment; for example, the ability to grasp, sit up, crawl, and walk
    Social development A developmental domain of child development; a child’s emerging development of an understanding of self and others, and the ability to relate to other people and the environment

    Demonstrate

    Demonstrate
    Assessment:

    第一季度

    Based on information from this lesson which strategy is not appropriate for supervising infants and toddlers?

    第二季

    Why do some activities and routines need closer supervision?

    第三季

    Which of the following safety guidelines should be followed when feeding infants and toddlers?

    References & Resources:

    American Academy of Pediatrics,www.aap.org

    Health and Safety in Family Child Care Home-Participant Guide. Ohio Department of Job and Family Services 2010

    Infant/Toddler Caregiving; A Guide to Routines (Second Edition), California Dept. of Education, and WestEd, Sacramento 2002

    Infant/Toddler Environment Rating Scale-Revised Edition, Teacher's College Press, New York, 2006https://fpg.unc.edu/resources/infanttoddler-environment-rating-scale-revised-edition-iters-r

    Ohio's Infant & Toddler Guidelines; OCCRRA Columbus, 2006