"Developmentally appropriate practice requires both meeting children where they are—which means that teachers must get to know them well —and enabling them to reach goals that are both challenging and achievable."
As a practitioner caring for children, it is your responsibility to seek out and intentionally plan the best opportunities for children that support their over-all well being and healthy development. The practices that you use when working with young children need to embrace the most current, effective approaches in learning and development. These can be described as best practices, thoughtful teaching, quality practices, or Developmentally Appropriate Practices (DAP). DAP comes from a deep history in early education, research, and what many describe as "good thinking."
NAEYC (National Association for the Education of Young Children) states, "Developmentally Appropriate Practice is informed by what we know from theory and literature about how children develop and learn." In its Developmentally Appropriate Practice Key Messages of the Position Statement, NAEYC shares the following in defining DAP:
Developmentally appropriate practice is a comprehensive educational perspective that supports optimal healthy development for every child. Developmentally appropriate practice embraces both continuity and change; continuity because it guides a tradition of quality early learning and change as it incorporates new research, knowledge, and science in regard to children's development and learning.
1. All the domains of development are important.
2. Many aspects of children's learning and development follow well documented sequences.
3. Development and learning proceed at varying rates from child to child.
4. Development and learning result from a dynamic and continuous interaction of biological maturation and experience.
5. Early experiences have profound effects on a child's development and learning, and there are optimal times for certain learning and development to occur.
6. Development proceeds toward greater complexity, self-regulation, and representational abilities.
7. Children develop best when they have secure, consistent relationships with responsive caregivers and peers.
8. Development and learning occur within and are influenced by social and cultural contexts.
9. Children learn in a variety of ways and are actively engaged in learning.
10. Play is a main way that children learn and develop self-regulation.
11. Development and learning occur when children are slightly challenged and through practice.
12. Children's dispositions and behavior are shaped by experiences and affect children's learning and development.
As an early childhood professional working with young children, you are a decision-maker, and you will make many decisions about the children in your program on a daily basis. Understanding DAP - its meaning and intentional practices - is essential in guiding the decisions you will make for young children. Developing the skills to make good decisions for children relies on building knowledge about individual children and child development principles combined with knowledge of effective early learning practices. These are the core considerations in developmentally appropriate practice.
DAP is informed by three areas of knowledge that are critical components in making good decisions for children.
1. Child development appropriateness
Child development follows general, sequential patterns and is interrelated across domains (cognitive, physical, social and emotional). Know and understand milestones and sequences of development in all domains and use child development information for planning and identifying activities, environments, experiences, and strategies (for large/small groups or individuals) to best promote growth and learning.
2. Individual appropriateness
Each child is an individual and develops in her own, unique way. Know each child's strengths, abilities, needs, challenges, interests, temperament, and approaches to learning. Know their individual skills, ideas and joys. This can be done through time spent together (conversations, etc.), observation, assessment, work samples, documentation, and information from families and past teachers/programs.
3. Social and cultural appropriateness
All children are of culture. Know each child's cultural and family background - his unique family, values, language, lifestyles, and beliefs. Ensure that the experiences you provide respect these and are meaningful for each child/family. What makes sense to children is their own culture and teachers must consider this, along with overall child development and learning program.
DAP focuses on five key areas of early learning practices:
References:
Copple, Carol and Sue Bredekamp, editors. Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs: Serving Children from Birth through Age 8, 3rd Edition. Washington, DC: National Association for the Education of Young Children, 2009.