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Ruth Lue-Quee is joined for a final episode in this series by Professor David Daley, to discuss reinforcing positive behaviour in Early Years Settings. David talks about the importance of labelled praise and letting the child know exactly what they have done well, so this reenforces their behaviours in the future.
Ruth and David discuss “earshotting” - giving more praise to a child by communicating good behaviours to peers and other educators in front of the child. Reward charts and how best to implement them are discussed, as well as the evolution of this tool into everyday adult life.
Practitioners will learn that reinforcement techniques and rewards shouldn’t be feared, and how neuroscience has shown that young people can become self-motivated to do more by themselves with the support of praise and reward.
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(The views expressed throughout this podcast are the speakers' own, and TTS does not take responsibility for the views and guidance highlighted as part of this recording.)
Please note: When referencing the speakers views, theory and work for development of your own materials, please ensure academic reference of the speaker is cited.
Ruth Lue-Quee is joined for a final episode in this series by Professor David Daley, to discuss reinforcing positive behaviour in Early Years Settings. David talks about the importance of labelled praise and letting the child know exactly what they have done well, so this reenforces their behaviours in the future.
Ruth and David discuss “earshotting” - giving more praise to a child by communicating good behaviours to peers and other educators in front of the child. Reward charts and how best to implement them are discussed, as well as the evolution of this tool into everyday adult life.
Practitioners will learn that reinforcement techniques and rewards shouldn’t be feared, and how neuroscience has shown that young people can become self-motivated to do more by themselves with the support of praise and reward.
📌 To shop for resources relevant to this podcast conversation, click here.
Listened and loved it? Sign-up here for exclusive follow-up content and be the first to hear about new episodes.
(The views expressed throughout this podcast are the speakers' own, and TTS does not take responsibility for the views and guidance highlighted as part of this recording.)
Please note: When referencing the speakers views, theory and work for development of your own materials, please ensure academic reference of the speaker is cited.
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