Creating an inclusive learning environment.

 

An educational philosophy is often part of a teaching application, which lets your future employers see your classroom management style without seeing you teach. Although your philosophy will be adjusted throughout your program as you learn more about young children, how children learn, and developmentally appropriate practice, your educational philosophy will serve as a foundation.

In 500-750 words, describe your current philosophy of education. Include the following concepts:

1. Your belief about how learning occurs grounded in preferred theories and perspectives.

2. An explanation of how your teaching style will facilitate students’ learning and develop the whole child. Include your philosophy on the integration of technology with instruction in the early childhood environment.

3. Your beliefs about guiding children’s behavior and creating a welcoming learning environment.

4. Steps you will take to collaborate with families and the community in the growth and development of young children.

5. Ways in which you will create an inclusive learning environment.

 

 

 

 

Sample Solution

patiche, rife with references to French films. Controlling every aesthetic element, Jeunet’s shots are filled with intent. Beginning with the anamorphic format (2.35:1), Truffat’s Jules et Jim is conjured. Jeunet further references Truffat through the prologue of Amélie before showing Amélie watching a clip of Juels et Jim in a theatre. Jeunet’s shots at the Canal St Martin recall Carne’s Hôtel du Nord (1938) while the whimsy and colour red, prevalent throughout the film, are reminiscent of Lamorisse’s Le Balloon Rouge (1956). Jeunet even admittedly borrowed the title for his film from Guitry’s Destin Fabulux de Desiree Clary (1942), with the use of voiceover also recalling the same film. Montmartre as a setting is connected to Truffat’s 400 Coups (1959), and Claire Mauier-Madame Suzanne-having a role in both films, further establishes a bond. In addition to Claire Maurier, Mathieu Kassovitz-Nino Quicompoix-also has significant ties to French cinema. Jeunet employs the compressed zoom to focus on Amélie multiple times through the film. With using the compressed zoom, alongside the casting of Kassovitch, Kassovitch’s film, La Haine (1995),which made famous use of the zoom, is nodded to.

Referencing the films of Marcel Carne, Jeunet highlights the artificial reality of Amélie. Carne’s films were not filmed on location, but on constructed sound stages, thus Carne’s City of Paris was entirely an artifice. Jeunet drew inspiration from the sets of Carne. In aiming to recreate Carne’s fiction on location, the unreality of Amélie’s Paris is heightened by the irony of filming on location, but physically and digitally modifying the shots, to recreate Carne’s artifice.

Jeunet’s emphasis on the unreality of Amélie is furthered by his contrasting of Amélie’s stylised world and the spectator’s reality: “Because an excess of originality affects reception ad

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