Understand the professional responsibilities of working with children and young people
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Drag and drop the words into the correct gaps.
Practitioners have a duty of care to ensure that children’s safety and are not put at risk. However there are times when this duty can be in direct with a child’s right to independence and . An example might be if a partially child were to be excluded from using the climbing frame because of concerns.
Is this statement true or false? A duty of care only exists where there is a written or implied obligation on the part of the setting.
FALSE
TRUE
Drag and drop the words into the correct gaps.
The parenting principles describe the behaviours and attitudes expected of when they are acting as any good parent would do by , encouraging and guiding their children to lead healthy, rounded and fulfilled . The principles intend to ensure that all councils have high for the children in their care.
Match the examples of poor practice on the left with their possible consequences for the child on the right.
Drag and Drop items from one side to pair them with items from the other side
A child cannot go on a school trip because his carer has forgotten to apply for special funding to pay for the cost of the trip .
A professional carer neglects to tell a child’s teacher that the child’s father has just received a lengthy prison sentence.
A child is being bullied by other children at the Children’s Home where they all live The child tells his carer but is told that he just has to ‘toughen up’.
The teacher cannot understand the child’s unusual behaviour and ‘acting out’ and so she puts him in detention
The child’s self-esteem plummets. He thinks there must be something terribly wrong with him to deserve all this negative attention and it makes him want to self harm
The child misses out on an interesting and stimulating learning opportunity
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