child development

Directions: Be sure to make an electronic copy of your answer before   submitting it to Ashworth College for grading. Unless otherwise stated,   answer in complete sentences, and be sure to use correct English spelling and   grammar. Sources must be cited in APA format. Your response should be four   (4) pages in length; refer to the “Assignment Format” page for   specific format requirements.Many children with special needs   spend at least part of the school day in special education classrooms, where   they receive special instruction, sometimes quite didactic, adapted to their   unique needs (Hendrick & and Weissman, 2007). The open-endedness and   process orientation of art can serve as a reprieve from the highly focused   tasks often used in special education. Imagine that you are in an early   childhood education setting, and you are the lead art teacher. Using this   information and support and guidance from Lesson 3, determine how you would   create a curriculum in art that accommodates diverse learners.Part 1: Explain why it is important   to have a curriculum in art that accommodates diverse learners.Part 2: Provide an example of an   activity for children with each of the following:Emotional and intellectual challengesVisual impairmentsHearing impairmentsOrthopedic impairmentsYou may use the ideas in the   textbook as springboards, but do not copy them. Come up with ideas of your   own that show you understand the needs of the child with that particular   challenge or impairment.Hide RubricsRubric Name: Assignment 4 RubricThis table lists criteria and criteria group name in the first column. The first row lists level names and includes scores if the rubric uses a numeric scoring method. CriteriaExemplarySatisfactoryUnsatisfactoryUnacceptableAccomodating Diverse Learners in ArtAdd Feedback20 pointsThe student provides a clear explanation of the importance to accommodate diverse learners through the art curriculum.15 pointsThe student provides a mostly clear explanation of the importance to accommodate diverse learners through the art curriculum.10 pointsThe student provides a weak or unclear explanation of the importance to accommodate diverse learners through the art curriculum.0 pointsThe student does not provide an explanation of the importance to accommodate diverse learners through the art curriculum./ 20/ 20*Criterion score has been overriddenActivity for Emotional and Intellectual ChallengesAdd Feedback15 pointsThe student provides a clear example of an activity for children with emotional and intellectual challenges.10 pointsThe student provides a mostly clear example of an activity for children with emotional and intellectual challenges.5 pointsThe student provides a weak or unclear example of an activity for children with emotional and intellectual challenges.0 pointsThe student does not provide an example of an activity for children with emotional and intellectual challenges./ 15/ 15*Criterion score has been overriddenActivity for Visual ImpairmentsAdd Feedback15 pointsThe student provides a clear example of an activity for children with visual impairments.10 pointsThe student provides a mostly clear example of an activity for children with visual impairments.5 pointsThe student provides a weak or unclear example of an activity for children with visual impairments.0 pointsThe student does not provide an example of an activity for children with visual impairments./ 15/ 15*Criterion score has been overriddenActivity for Hearing ImpairmentsAdd Feedback15 pointsThe student provides a clear example of an activity for children with hearing impairments.10 pointsThe student provides a mostly clear example of an activity for children with hearing impairments.5 pointsThe student provides a weak or unclear example of an activity for children with hearing impairments.0 pointsThe student does not provide an example of an activity for children with hearing impairments./ 15/ 15*Criterion score has been overriddenActivity for Orthopedic ImpairmentsAdd Feedback15 pointsThe student provides a clear example of an activity for children with orthopedic impairments.10 pointsThe student provides a mostly clear example of an activity for children with orthopedic impairments.5 pointsThe student provides a weak or unclear example of an activity for children with orthopedic impairments.0 pointsThe student does not provide an example of an activity for children with orthopedic impairments./ 15/ 15*Criterion score has been overriddenMechanics – Grammar, Punctuation, SpellingAdd Feedback5 pointsStudent makes no errors in grammar, punctuation, or spelling that distract the reader from the content.4 pointsStudent makes 1-2 errors in grammar, punctuation, or spelling that distract the reader from the content.2 pointsStudent makes 3-4 errors in grammar, punctuation, or spelling that distract the reader from the content.0 pointsStudent makes more than 4 errors in grammar, punctuation, or spelling that distract the reader from the content./ 5/ 5*Criterion score has been overriddenWriting Style – Organization, Transitions, ToneAdd Feedback5 pointsThe assignment is written with excellent organization, thoughtful transitions, and the appropriate tone.4 pointsThis writing assignment is adequately organized, but has some errors in the transitions or the tone.2 pointsThis writing assignment is poorly organized, or it contains ineffective transitions and/or inappropriate tone.0 pointsThis writing assignment displays little to no organization or transitions, and/or does not use the appropriate tone./ 5/ 5*Criterion score has been overriddenAPA Format – Margins, Font, Spacing, Headings and cover page.Add Feedback5 pointsThe margins, font, spacing, headings, and cover page are all formatted properly.4 pointsThere are 1-2 errors in the formatting of the margins, font, spacing, headings, or cover page.2 pointsThere are 3-4 errors in the formatting of the margins, font, spacing, headings, or cover page.0 pointsThere are more than 4 errors in the formatting of the margins, font, spacing, headings, or cover page./ 5/ 5*Criterion score has been overriddenAPA Format – Citations and ReferencesAdd Feedback5 pointsAll sources used for quotes and facts are credible and cited, and the references and in-text citations are all properly formatted. Each reference has an in-text citation and in-text citation has a reference.4 pointsAll sources used for quotes and facts are credible and cited, but slight errors are present in the format of the in-text citations or references. Or there may be one in-text citation or reference missing.2 pointsSome sources used for quotes and facts are either not credible or there are significant errors in the in-text citations and/or references. Or there are multiple missing in-text citations or references.0 pointsThe sources used for quotes and facts are not credible and/or not cited. The in-text citations and/or references are not present.