Alistair Bryce-Clegg’s 5 Ideas for Promoting Child Independence

One of the key roles of any setting is to build a child’s confidence in their own abilities, to empower them with the independence they’ll need in the years ahead. So to help you do just that, we’ve teamed up with educational consultant Alistair Bryce-Clegg to bring you five of the best ideas from his book “50 Fantastic Ideas For Promoting Independence“.

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But that’s not all – we’re giving away a bumper selection of the equipment featured in this article! Enter our competition below for a chance to win a fantastic promoting independence package, including a doctors role-play kit, magnifying glasses, fabric, play mirrors, paint, paintbrushes, and laminating pouches.

Enter our competition

5 Ideas to Promote Child Independence

 

1. Self-Service Paint Area

What you need

What to do

  1. Decant the ready-mixed paint into the pump dispensers.
  2. Show the children how to squirt the paint into the pots or mixing palettes.
  3. Let them use the paint independently for creative designs.

Taking It Forward

What’s in it for the children?

The children are not only learning about paint, texture and colour but this provision also supports them in being very self sufficient.

2.Message Board

What you need

What to do

  1. Cut the coloured paper into rectangles, one for each child.
  2. Add each child’s name to one rectangle.
  3. Laminate the rectangles.
  4. Mount your rectangles together on your display space message board.
  5. Encourage the children to send each other messages throughout the day by putting a sticky note on their friend’s message board.
  6. Adults can also use the board to send messages to children.

Taking It Forward

What’s in it for the children?

This is a great activity to promote communications as well as reading and mark making. Children who are non-writers can leave a smiley face (or similar) for their friends.

3. Deconstructed Role-play

What you need

What to do

  1. Make a collection of open-ended resources like boxes and tubes.
  2. Place them in a large open space.
  3. Encourage the children to use their imagination to turn these open-ended resources into specific play experiences that are meaningful to them.

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Taking It Forward

What’s in it for the children?

If children do not have a great deal of personal experience of a role-play space that they have set up, then they are going to struggle to play in it without adult support, often reverting to playing ‘house’ or ‘super heroes’. A deconstructed role-play area supports any play theme because of its open-ended potential.

4. Role-play Enhancement Baskets

What you need

What to do

  1. Identify themes that you wish to cover in your role-play.
  2. Identify key areas of interest for children that they have expressed through their play.
  3. Create an enhancement basket of resources to support these themes.
  4. Take the enhancement baskets into your deconstructed role-play area to support children’s learning.

Taking It Forward

What’s in it for the children?

Enhancement baskets support the development and consolidation of children’s play in an area that they are familiar with or interested in. If an adult has created an enhancement basket to support a taught theme that the children are not familiar with such as ‘the vet’s’ then the adult can use these resources in the deconstructed role-play area to introduce appropriate language without over-theming.

5. Outdoor Investigation Station

What you need

What to do

  1. Set up your investigation area in an open space outside where the children can have clear access to all the resources.
  2. Fill your bags and pouches with tools to help the children investigate and explore this outdoor space.
  3. Encourage them to record their findings and experiments.

Taking It Forward

What’s in it for the children?

Children will have the opportunity to work on their own or in a group to investigate their outdoor surroundings. They will be able to collect, examine and create the things that they find.

Enter our competition

Alistair enjoyed a successful 10 year career as the Head teacher of three-form entry Infant school and Early Years Unit in Cheshire. Alongside his headship, he established a consultancy career specialising in the education of children in the Early Years.

Demand for his consultancy became so great that Alistair left headship and established ABC Does… (abcdoes.com).

Most of his time is spent supporting practitioners in their settings or delivering key notes and training, specialising all aspects of Early Years practice and management for both the maintained and non-maintained sectors nationally and internationally.

Alistair is also an award-winning author and product designer, whose work has been published in a number of books and magazines. Alongside support and training for a range of settings and schools, Alistair also works Internationally and with Local Authorities across the UK.

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