Home : BioPhysical Module : Online Reading | |
Online Reading: 'PEPSI' as a Screening Toolby J'Anne EllsworthThe model or lens we choose to look through often determines what we will see, and of those things we see, what we will pay attention to or value. In assessing a child, particularly a special needs child, our lens is a crucial factor. During the 20th century, great progress has been made in determining the normal sequence of growth across many areas of child development. This change in perspective and added understanding of the nature of growth and development has not yet translated into a change of focus in education. This knowledge could make it feasible for us to educate the whole child. What a powerful and essential opportunity for us to incorporate these tools into lives of the children we teach. Education is still the crux; teacher and student still the main players, but cognitive learning assumes its proper perspective. It is a significant part of the learning process. Acquisition of knowledge is easily measured, a crucial part of the developing child -- perhaps a vehicle for moving other developmental tasks forward. The ability to learn, after all, has fueled much of our distinctions of who needs special services. However, in perspectives, it can be recognized as a part of the process of educating humanity, and not pursued as the only primary outcome. Viewing the child To help teachers change to a more whole child approach,especially beyond the primary grades, it is important to have ways to recognize more dimensions in the child, to have more knowledge about the development of the child, and to have ways of showing and discussing the child in a more whole manner. The PEPSI model provides that kind of container for teachers and for parents. The concept of a PEPSI screening devise came about through recognition of the importance which child development has in assisting us to identify patterns in child behavior, and perceived misbehavior. Important as the concepts are, there is little instructional time or educational energy devoted to training teachers in developmental concepts. Further, there is such a mass of information available for study and consideration that it is difficult to manage and utilize it effectively with respect to individual children even when development is studied. The schema of developmental delay also suggests the need for a simple format for screening a child's potential strengths or delays across several dimensions. The PEPSI model has been developed to assist in viewing the child across five areas of development. As shown in the following materials, the five charting areas are: Physical, Emotional, Philosophical, Social, and Intellectual. It works as a teacher's "hands-on" device, showing guidelines for recognizing and confirming a pattern of child behaviors and providing insight into child needs. By using detailed charting which is provided as a reference guide, the teacher effort is enhanced, increasing the ability to pinpoint levels of development in any (each) of the five progressing areas and then discern a child's individual pattern of growth or delay in those established areas. Once the educator ascertains the components in a student's PEPSI it is possible to help the child enhance behaviors in less developed areas. The individual PEPSI may also serve as a visual signal to remind educators and parents that the child is developmentally delayed in some areas but not in others, thus helping to alter inappropriate expectations or mediate unnecessarily high demands which are beyond the child's current repertoire of behavior choices. It will also be possible to highlight student strengths and utilize them for the child's progress. A case study example of using the PEPSI model follows:
Looking at the child's work habits and report card history were good clues to the real issue or cognitive capability. That is frequently the case when a child is viewed as being at risk. In summary, the PEPSI screening process can be learned in a brief period of time. The information base is well established and objective. The use of the information is more subjective. As the educator practices the model, reliability will increase. The ability to recognize behavior patterns will become sharper with increased familiarity in using the factors and dimensions of development. The PEPSI screening tool can be useful, even during the learning process. Appropriate use comes in recognizing the basic assumptions inherent in the tool. Philosophical Understandings These are included once again, to underscore the importance of seeing this process from a positive, "understanding students" mode and not as a labeling process:
It is essential, in reading developmental charts to remember that development is nearly always sequential but it is not necessarily age-specific to each individual. Thus the "norm" or general guidelines for sixes will actually be accurate for approximately 68% of children who are six. The other 32% of the class will be beyond those guidelines or will not have reached them. Theoretically, with a class of 30 students and five differing areas of development, one or two students would be developmentally appropriate in all levels and the other 28 students would probably fall above or below the guidelines in at least one area. Given this understanding of children and their growth, the teacher, rather than label the child as abnormal, might see the goal for progress in the slower area and guide the child to enjoy and more fully utilize personal strengths. The following charts provide an age specific overview of common patterns of behavior for children in the age group specified. Remember! Few children will be right at the behaviors given in all areas. Most of us are working at our own level, based on our hereditary endowments and the environmental opportunities we encounter. Remember! Almost all children develop physically at a pretty normal pace, but in every other area, the development is much less rigidly fixed. Nearly everyone matures physically, but many of us do not seem to mature as naturally or in as orderly a fashion in other areas of development. Remember to take social and cultural expectations into account. Gender, place in the family, family expectations and social and cultural scripts contribute strongly to social, philosophical and emotional development. Remember that schools may use a narrow definition of intelligence when looking at cognitive development of children and when testing for competencies. A student with highly developed nonverbal intelligence may actually look learning disabled, based on school expectation; a student with strong kinesthetic intelligence may not be able to learn to read in the same way as other students and may appear to have dyslexia until someone combines the student's learning strengths with a specific teaching technique. These examples suggest that we look carefully at many factors before determining that a student is intellectually developmentally delayed. PEPSI Screening summary
a) Gather information about the child. . . . And now, to view specific age and stage charts, click on the links to view the desired ages. Remember to look at charts that are representative of one age above and one age below the student you are observing. If you believe a child has serious developmental delays, try matching reading age with the charts you are looking at if the age charts near the student's age do not match. If you find one area, for instance emotional, and cannot locate a match, go backward, one year at a time until you begin to feel there is a fit. (Printing out the charts may facilitate the task). Age Charts
Optimizing growth Once the teacher recognizes a delay, an IEP goal can be generated to address growth. The teacher will be able to facilitate the most progress through increased safety and structure in the educational environment. Student energy can be enhanced by showing pleasures in the student strengths as well as focusing on concerns. Provide practice in missing skills which would be likely to next, according to the indications from the charting. Remember to reward close approximations rather than focusing on errors for development at an optimal level. In Summary IF development of the physical body is our only societal imperative then current schooling is pointless. If the intellectual development is the only sphere of concern, then teaching the basic "3-R's" is justifiable. If, however we are preparing the person for life, for entrance into society, and for acceptance of self as a unique and special person, then we must teach the WHOLE PERSON. If we are in the midst of building a world community and hope to foster peace and understanding, then we must teach the WHOLE PERSON. We do that by first recognizing the component parts of each student, then learning the developmentally appropriate sequencing of the human growth and then we assist in optimizing the environment and energizing the child to take on the process for enhancing individual development and acceptance of special gifts and strengths as well as weaknesses. PEPSI Developed by Glenna May Steiner PEPSI Sample Lesson Plan Goals: 1) Describe the importance of teaching the whole child. 2) Increase awareness of typical developmental behavior. Procedures: Anticipatory Set: Upon arrival to my classroom, parents will receive a Pepsi to drink. I will have up on the overhead projector, or as a power point presentation, a picture of a Pepsi can with the letters P E P S I appearing vertically on one side of the can. After introductions and parents are attending to the meeting, I will discuss how this P E P S I is different from the Pepsi I just gave them. Steps to Lesson: 1) Define P E P S I and write what each letter stands for next to the letter on the screen. P hysical E motional P hilosophical S ocial I intellectual P E P S I refers to five areas of progressive and continuous changes in the human essence that make up a developmental perspective of growth. 2) Discuss philosophy of teaching the whole child. Have displayed on the screen the following information: Teachers Who are Loved attend to the whole child. understand interplay of areas of development. understand student needs. understand effect of all areas of growth on child's ability to become an educated, self controlled, contributing member of society. 3) Discuss PEPSI as a didactic tool for helping teachers accumulate and utilize developmental knowledge in learning about students. Have displayed the following information: PEPSI works as hands-on device shows guidelines for recognizing and confirming a pattern of child behaviors provides insights into child's needs the teachers efforts are enhanced by being able to pinpoint levels of development in any 5 progressing areas a pattern can be discerned which helps explain student actions can recognize a child's strengths and weaknesses Show steps in a PEPSI screening. a) Gather information about the child. Interview child, family, friends, previous teachers, and school nurse. Look at previous school records b) Compare youth's behavior with the age charts supplied. I will display 8 year old chart, assuming I'm teaching 3rd graders. c) Draw out a PEPSI chart for a typical age mate as an example. I will do this as part of power point presentation. d) Hatch in each area to illustrate the individual student's current profile. I'll use an imaginary student so comparisons can be made. e) List strengths and weaknesses that are apparent from profile. I will enlist comments and involve parents in the discussion so I know they can see the information from the charts. f) Review suggestion list for enhancing safety and increasing individual student growth options. Together we will discuss what plan would be best for this child. Discuss connection between effective teaching and knowing ages and stages of child's development. Display: If we are truly preparing youth for life, for entrance into society, and for acceptance of self as a unique and special person, then teaching the whole child will reap benefits. Conclusion: Have displayed and go over the knowledge a teacher gains about children if teaching the whole child and also the benefits to the child, teacher, classroom when the teacher does in fact teach the whole child. . Knowledge of Child recognition of component parts of each child. learn developmentally appropriate sequencing of human growth assist in optimizing the environment use time valued roles to energize student to take on the processes for enhancing individual development acceptance of special gifts and strengths as well as weaknesses build enough relationship with the student so that he/she captures the magic in vision and truly celebrates self. Benefits of teaching the whole child: free flowing, stimulating and friendly classroom master teacher matches the nature and development of the students with the content and expectations valuing individuality of each person establishing and teaching healthy community and group process process and relationship being revisited and valued intensify quality of time spent on interactional critical thinking clearly develop student perception that learning is a life long joyous pursuit self control child taught responsibility for self as well as personal freedom. A great metaphor about PEPSI - provided by Laura Newsome GOAL: Parents and teachers will understand that teaching the whole child is important to the unique development of each child. OUTCOMES: 1. To introduce parents to the PEPSI model; 2. To allow parents to appreciate how PEPSI helps teachers view the child as a whole person; 3. To help parents understand the typical development of an average 8-10 year old child; 4. To compare a child's development to the making of a chocolate chip cookie-show how each child is made up of the same developmental steps and still turns out as a unique individual INTRODUCTION: Serve chocolate chip cookies and Pepsi Cola as refreshments. Encourage parents to look carefully at the cookies before they eat them, and notice the individual differences of each cookie. Have parents pretend that the cookie is their child in a group of peers. Explain to parents that each child has unique and individual characteristics: talents, abilities. Similarly, each child, like each cookie, is different from his/her peers. Have parents list the basic ingredients of making a chocolate chip cookie (flour, sugar, butter, chocolate chips, and eggs). Teachers use a model called PEPSI to look at the development of the whole child. Using the ingredients listed by parents introduce the PEPSI model. Have each ingredient represent one part of the model. Use visual aids to help parents see that each ingredient, or each developmental area is important to the whole. Stress to the parents that to have good cookies, each ingredient must be added in the appropriate amounts; likewise, a well-rounded child must be educated in each developmental area with the correct proportion LESSON: Let's take a look at the development of a child who is about 9 years old. (Give parents copies of the developmental charts for ages 8-10 and blank paper to write on. Remind parents that some children may develop more quickly or slowly in some areas, and for that reason we should discuss the development of a child from ages 8-10. Explain to parents that creating a PEPSI chart on a child allows a teacher and a parent to provide a safe, comfortable, developmentally appropriate environment that encourages normal development; however this environment also allows for growth in areas where student deficiencies might lie. Ingredients - and components of the PEPSI A. EGGS - PHYSICAL - Between the ages of 8-10 gross and fine motor control becomes consolidated. Children have fewer illnesses, but minor ills become more frequent. Children of this age have an increased awareness in the workings of the body. Around age 8, children's large muscle coordination allows for bike riding, flips, and doing tricks to be a real joy. By age 10 competitive use of physical skills is typical, and team sports may become a favorite pass time. Between the ages of 8-10, some interest in sex may increase, but this awareness is seldom shared with adults. B. BUTTER - EMOTIONAL Emotional development, between the ages of 8-10, is characterized as industry vs. inferiority. At age 8 the child has a tendency to have great beginnings toward a project then lose steam at the end. Parents must step in and provide extra help and encouragement since children at this age have a tendency to exaggerate and dramatize their failures. Children at this age have also reached an emotional plateau; they have fewer fears and appear ready for anything. Still, vulnerability exists on the surface of their personal dynamics. By age 9 worrying begins to occur, and children feel a sense of self-responsibility. Tensional outlets begin again, and a real awareness develops that others have the same set of emotions and fears. Adults are seen as people at this age, but parents are not included in this group of adults. The tenth year is considered the last age of equilibrium until around the age of 16; children at this age express a sense of wholeness and are generally pleased with themselves. Age 10 is also considered the age of the dreamer, an age in which dreams of the future begin to take a priority. The age of 10 is a crucial time for parents to look at their child for signs of delinquency and/or neurotic behavior. If a child is displaying signs that are inappropriate at this age, parents should seek help through referrals. C. SUGAR-PHILOSOPHICAL At age 8, the child will begin to show a real understanding of right and wrong. Moral reasoning at this age is very black and white; with the primary focus on one's self. Moral reasoning continues to develop with a sense of "fairness." Children by age 10 view this "fairness" as "am I getting the best deal." At age 8 children tattle, but by age 10, they do so less frequently. By age 9 group loyalty begins to form; they can now support meetings in the family or classroom using democratic process with good results. Jobs and responsibilities during this age are accepted, but the child tends to procrastinate or forget to perform the necessary tasks. By age 10, deal making and payback are highly valued. Children are generally willing to conform to adult expectations by age 10; this age is also an excellent time to use logic in discussions and to support student learning.. D. FLOUR-SOCIAL Between the ages of 8 and 10, children are busy, dynamic, and active. The child is less self- centered and more interested in forming a non- family relationship. Sibling relationships show little change until around age 10, when older siblings may begin to resent feeling responsible for younger siblings. Second person perspective develops rapidly around age 9. Children at ages 9 and 10 begin looking for clubs or groups to join. These clubs are especially fun to belong to when secret codes, hand signals, and disappearing ink are involved. Age 10 is usually the last age that children express total confidence in adults and parents. Children at this age are often called pleasant, docile, obedient, and happy. E. CHOCOLATE CHIPS-INTELLECTUAL Intellectually, an 8 year old child is firmly using concrete operations; children at this age are willing to complete materials missed. By age 8, thinking may be becoming less egocentric. At age 9 the concrete stage is still most common and appropriate; conservation of matter should also be occurring. Children at this age can now use symbols such as rulers and maps without losing sight of the reality. At age 10, children are beginning to enter the formal operations stage, or begin "thinking" about thinking. Children's conversations consist more of a flow of information; a definite learning style may also become evident. CONCLUSION Review the concept of PEPSI, and how important teaching the whole child is developmentally. Allow for parents to discuss where their children are in each developmental area, then discuss ways to further encourage development in areas that are delayed. Refer back to the idea of chocolate chip cookies being unique to each other just as each child is unique to his/her peers; however, each cookie and each child is formed from the same basic "ingredients." Once you have completed this topic you should: Go on to
Lesson 1 |
|
E-mail J'Anne Ellsworth at Janne.Ellsworth@nau.edu | |
Course Created by J'Anne Ellsworth & Center for Technology Enhanced Learning Copyright
© 2001 Northern Arizona University |