Welcome to Silkysteps forums - early years resources and online community. Please find help and support for preschool planning, ideas and activities for children's play Get in touch for help, resource suggestions and to support the site with a donation
Silkysteps - click to visit the home page Buy & download printable activity ideas for children, young people and adults What's new - find all the latest updates and activity adds Plan ahead with links to England's early years foundation stage framework Shop with amazon.co.uk and meet all your setting's needs

Go Back   Silkysteps early years forum - planning ideas for play > Welcome to silkysteps' Early Years Forum > Early Years Discussion Forums > Training, Qualifications & CPD > Level 3 Diploma EYE NVQ

Level 3 Diploma EYE NVQ Level 3 support for: NVQ Children's Care, Learning and Development, Diploma for the Children and Young People's Workforce, England's Early years Educator qualification Please DO NOT COPY and PASTE information from this forum and then submit the work as your own. Plagiarism risks you failing the course and the development of your professional knowledge.

Bulb Energy - green renewable supporting UK generators

Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Unread 06-04-2011, 12:21 AM
PeePe PeePe is offline
Duckling ~~always taking the plunge ...~~
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 30
PeePe is on a distinguished road
Default CYPOP 30 outcome 1.2 .... GRRRRR

OK, I've completed everything else ... but I am stuck on what they mean by the different types of creative activities.

Solitary ... seems quite straight forward independent activities
Shared ????? <---- please help
Group ????? <---- please help
Sedentary - writing.
Active - physical and movement
Cerebral - mental, logic and problem solving

Any help on the shared and group definitions would be great and also my brain has appeared to have gone to sleep... so if you see I have missed something that defines what they actually are... please let me know. Actually writing the benefits won't be a problem once I know exactly what each means in practice.

Thanks
Reply With Quote

-----------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------

-----------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------
  #2  
Unread 06-04-2011, 09:27 AM
Heidi Heidi is offline
Squirrel ~~hoards of knowledge...~~
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 548
Heidi is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by PeePe View Post
OK, I've completed everything else ... but I am stuck on what they mean by the different types of creative activities.

Solitary ... seems quite straight forward independent activities
Shared ????? <---- please help
Group ????? <---- please help
Sedentary - writing.
Active - physical and movement
Cerebral - mental, logic and problem solving

Any help on the shared and group definitions would be great and also my brain has appeared to have gone to sleep... so if you see I have missed something that defines what they actually are... please let me know. Actually writing the benefits won't be a problem once I know exactly what each means in practice.

Thanks
A shared activity can be anything that 2 or more are taking part in, so you may see two children sharing an activity such as bricks and building/being creative in their design (and helping/role modelling etc) or two children playing with props such as material - different lengths and widths and perhaps some boxes and jointly creating their imaginative play/story (rather than along aside) - the difference being that you can see they are interacting, communicating and playing in 'their' way which shows they are sharing the experience.

A group activity can be something such as doing a group activity such as making a large art piece. The class could all be asked to dance to a piece of music and asked to interpret it how they wish; they may be provided with long pieces of material/scarves so they can dance as 'the wind' , 'a rainbow' etc. a group of children may be designing and planting up a flower bed using their own creative ideas.The group activity usually (because of the numbers) may need adult direction depending on what the activity is and the age and stage of the children.

You'll probably find that activities for your answers cross from one another- after all the activites above can all be solitary, shared or done as a group, so you may be able to cross reference as long as you define how the activity differs from each other.

Remember to give your assessor an example of each type, so she can see you know what it is and then how this is provided for in practice.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Unread 06-04-2011, 11:53 AM
PeePe PeePe is offline
Duckling ~~always taking the plunge ...~~
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 30
PeePe is on a distinguished road
Thank you so much Heidi, you are a star!

I can now get on and complete this optional now and move onto the next!!
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Unread 01-09-2014, 03:34 PM
Eblaylock96 Eblaylock96 is offline
Bean shoot ~~Just sprouting...~~
 
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 3
Eblaylock96 is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Heidi View Post
A shared activity can be anything that 2 or more are taking part in, so you may see two children sharing an activity such as bricks and building/being creative in their design (and helping/role modelling etc) or two children playing with props such as material - different lengths and widths and perhaps some boxes and jointly creating their imaginative play/story (rather than along aside) - the difference being that you can see they are interacting, communicating and playing in 'their' way which shows they are sharing the experience.

A group activity can be something such as doing a group activity such as making a large art piece. The class could all be asked to dance to a piece of music and asked to interpret it how they wish; they may be provided with long pieces of material/scarves so they can dance as 'the wind' , 'a rainbow' etc. a group of children may be designing and planting up a flower bed using their own creative ideas.The group activity usually (because of the numbers) may need adult direction depending on what the activity is and the age and stage of the children.

You'll probably find that activities for your answers cross from one another- after all the activites above can all be solitary, shared or done as a group, so you may be able to cross reference as long as you define how the activity differs from each other.

Remember to give your assessor an example of each type, so she can see you know what it is and then how this is provided for in practice.
Hello, I'm not sure what to write for Solitary, Sedentary, Active and Cerebral . Can you help me?
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Unread 01-09-2014, 03:52 PM
Eblaylock96 Eblaylock96 is offline
Bean shoot ~~Just sprouting...~~
 
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 3
Eblaylock96 is on a distinguished road
Default

Can anyone help me with this task? (CYPOP 30 - 1.3) To Explain the difference between formal and informal creative activity.

It will useful if you reply in the next few days cause its due in 17th Jan 2014. Thanks
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:46 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.