Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Can anyone help on this Child Protection case scenario Q?
1 Answers
Y is nearly five years old and soon be leaving your setting in order to go to school. She's attended nursery for three years. When she started, Y's mother told you that she had successfully completed a drug rehab programme.
Y had been a quiet, reserved that preferred to observe than play. Y has developed into an articulate child who enjoys taking the lead and in initiating group play. Your observations are that Y often takes on a responsible supervisory role but becomes very distressed when she feels children aren't listening to her. Y loves stories being read to her and creates tales involving herself & her one year old brother.
In the last three months you have noted Y retreating from play and spending great amounts of time watching. Recently she has begun to burst into tears if any child approaches her to play & noticed that she appears anxious about time and constantly asks 'what time is it now?'
You have noticed that some of the girls refuse to sit next to her at circle time saying to her 'you smell of wee'. Yasmin's mum has said that Y has begun to wet herself on the way to nursery and that she can't afford to wash so many clothes.
You've noticed that Y is not eating her lunch and other children have complained that she puts some of her dinner in her pockets and that they are not allowed to do so. Yesterday you witnessed this and gently asked about it & she got upset.
What are your initial concerns about this child?
What are your first actions as a practitioner?
What are your first actions as a manager?
The next morning another child's mother tells you that Y's mother is 'back on the game'.
During circle time Y tells everyone her mummy is 'kind of a doctor', she adds 'my brother isn't really sick & my mummy says I'm a nurse'. I have to lick my finger & put brown on his tongue. It really works. He's goes quiet for ages'. But it makes mum very lazy.
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Y had been a quiet, reserved that preferred to observe than play. Y has developed into an articulate child who enjoys taking the lead and in initiating group play. Your observations are that Y often takes on a responsible supervisory role but becomes very distressed when she feels children aren't listening to her. Y loves stories being read to her and creates tales involving herself & her one year old brother.
In the last three months you have noted Y retreating from play and spending great amounts of time watching. Recently she has begun to burst into tears if any child approaches her to play & noticed that she appears anxious about time and constantly asks 'what time is it now?'
You have noticed that some of the girls refuse to sit next to her at circle time saying to her 'you smell of wee'. Yasmin's mum has said that Y has begun to wet herself on the way to nursery and that she can't afford to wash so many clothes.
You've noticed that Y is not eating her lunch and other children have complained that she puts some of her dinner in her pockets and that they are not allowed to do so. Yesterday you witnessed this and gently asked about it & she got upset.
What are your initial concerns about this child?
What are your first actions as a practitioner?
What are your first actions as a manager?
The next morning another child's mother tells you that Y's mother is 'back on the game'.
During circle time Y tells everyone her mummy is 'kind of a doctor', she adds 'my brother isn't really sick & my mummy says I'm a nurse'. I have to lick my finger & put brown on his tongue. It really works. He's goes quiet for ages'. But it makes mum very lazy.
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Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Sonak. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.its the nursery staff who have a duty of care towards their charges.
nursery staff like schools, like medical staff, like health visitors
are supposed to be part of inter-agency networking together looking for signs of neglect,abuse, failure to thrive..if this is the case then they are only fufiling their duty of care towards the little one.
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