TCHR2002 CHILDREN, FAMILIES & COMMUNITIES
ASSESSMENT 1: Portfolio
Summary
Title: Assessment 1: Portfolio of short responses
Due Date: Monday 24th July (WEEK 4) @ 11:59pm (AEDT)
Length: 1500 words including references
Weighting: 50%
Submission: 1 word document submitted to Turnitin
Unit Learning Outcomes (ULO): You will demonstrate the following Unit Learning Outcomes (ULO) on the successful completion of this task:
β’ ULO 1: compare and critique historical and contemporary constructions of childhood and families, including those pertaining to Indigenous childhoods.
β’ ULO 2: identify the ways to ensure children feel that they are belonging, being, and becoming.
β’ ULO 3: explain the diverse range of issues affecting children, families and communities including social, economic and educational policies and their impact upon service provision for children and families.
β’ ULO4: Critically analyse texts, images, and songs in terms of the construction of childhood, and families across diverse contexts.
Task Description
This task requires students to reflect upon key issues presented in Modules 1-3 and complete three (3) x 500 word responses to the questions below under Task Instructions.
Rationale
Working with and supporting children and families within the context of their community can present challenges. Early childhood professionals should reflect on the diversity of issues that face children and families. The aim of this assessment task is for students to demonstrate their knowledge and understanding regarding contemporary and diverse issues facing children, families and communities.
Task Instructions
You are required to answer each of the following three questions in approximately 500 words. All responses must be literature supported.
Assessment 1: Portfolio of Short Responses β TCHR2002 Children, Families & Communities
Question 1: Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model and Proximal Processes in Contemporary Life
Part A: Definition of Proximal Processes
Students studying TCHR2002 Children, Families & Communities frequently encounter the concept of proximal processes as a foundation for analysing how children develop within their social and physical environments. Proximal processes refer to the ongoing, reciprocal interactions between a developing person and their immediate environment that serve as the primary engines of psychological growth. These interactions β between a child and their caregivers, peers, objects, or symbols β must occur regularly over extended periods to produce lasting developmental effects (Bronfenbrenner & Morris, 1998, as cited in Rosa & Tudge, 2018).
Part B: Contemporary Life and Proximal Processes
Contemporary life has reshaped the nature and frequency of proximal processes in ways that earlier generations could scarcely have anticipated. Applying Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model, changes at the macrosystem level β such as shifting family structures, digital technology, and economic pressures β cascade inward to alter microsystem interactions that most directly shape children’s development. At the microsystem level, the rapid proliferation of screen-based entertainment has, in many households, displaced the face-to-face storytelling and joint play that once constituted the core of parent-child proximal interactions (Troseth et al., 2020). Children today are growing up in environments where caregivers may be simultaneously present and distracted, physically near but cognitively distant, which subtly erodes the reciprocal quality that Bronfenbrenner identified as the hallmark of truly developmental interactions.
At the mesosystem level, the relationship between home and early childhood settings has grown more complex. Families who experience economic precarity β a condition documented in approximately 17.7% of Australian households with children under 15 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020) β may struggle to maintain the consistent routines that support healthy proximal processes. However, contemporary life also offers meaningful enhancements. Digital tools, when used purposefully, can extend proximal interactions: video calls allow geographically separated grandparents to read bedtime stories, and high-quality educational media can scaffold vocabulary development when caregivers co-view and discuss content with children (Troseth et al., 2020). The EYLF’s principle of partnerships with families acknowledges this complexity, recognising that educators must collaborate with diverse family contexts rather than assume a single model of supportive home interaction (AGDE, 2022).
Question 2: Bullying Prevention and the Early Childhood Teacher’s Role
The extent to which victims of bullying suffer negative outcomes is partly determined by how they cope with being bullied. In early childhood settings, the teacher’s role in equipping children with effective coping strategies is both preventative and immediate. Research consistently indicates that children who develop strong social-emotional competencies β including empathy, emotional regulation, and assertive communication β are substantially less vulnerable to the lasting psychological effects of peer victimisation (Ttofi & Farrington, 2019).
In future practice as an early childhood teacher, there are several concrete, evidence-informed strategies to ensure children in care have the skills and dispositions to navigate bullying incidents. Role-play and social scripts, embedded within daily program activities, allow children to rehearse assertive responses and recognise inappropriate social behaviour in low-stakes contexts. The EYLF Learning Outcome 1 β Children have a strong sense of identity β underpins this work, as children who feel confident in who they are demonstrate greater resilience when that identity is challenged by peers (AGDE, 2022). Establishing clear and consistently applied community agreements within the classroom, co-created with children, reinforces norms of respect and belonging that reduce the social permission bullying requires to persist (Horner et al., 2019).
Collaboration with families is equally critical. When educators communicate openly with parents about the social dynamics of the group and share specific strategies children can practise at home, the protective benefits of school-based anti-bullying programs are meaningfully amplified (Ttofi & Farrington, 2019).
Question 3: Gender Equality, Social Justice, and the Early Childhood Setting
Working at a long day care centre where a four-year-old declares “cooking is the girl’s job, boys should not cook!” presents both a challenge and a genuine teachable moment. Children at this age are actively constructing gender schemas β cognitive frameworks that organise social information according to perceived categories of masculine and feminine β and these schemas are powerfully reinforced by media, family norms, and peer interaction (Kane, 2018).
In responding to this situation, the language used matters as much as the action taken. Rather than correcting the child in a way that shames or dismisses his comment, a more effective approach involves curious, open questioning: “That’s interesting β I wonder who taught you that? Do you know any men who love cooking?” This redirects the child’s thinking without triggering defensiveness. Simultaneously, bringing out picture books or visual materials that depict men and women in varied domestic and professional roles makes the counter-narrative visible and concrete for all children in the group (Kane, 2018).
Teaching gender equality within Australian cultural contexts requires sustained embedding across curriculum, not a single intervention. The EYLF outcome of belonging, being, and becoming calls on educators to critically examine the materials, dramatic play props, and visual representations within the learning environment to ensure they reflect the full diversity of family roles and occupational possibilities (AGDE, 2022). Practical strategies include: intentionally rotating cooking, construction, and nurturing play props so that all children access all activity types; inviting community members of diverse genders to demonstrate their vocational skills; and engaging families in conversations about equity in ways that respect cultural variation while affirming the early childhood service’s commitment to social justice (Skattebol & Arthur, 2019).
The Intersecting Dimensions of Childhood: Culture, Policy, and Community
Across all three questions explored in this portfolio, a consistent theme emerges: children’s development cannot be separated from the social, economic, and cultural systems in which it occurs. Indigenous constructions of childhood in Australia, for instance, have historically been subordinated to Western developmental frameworks, producing policies β most infamously the forced removal of children from their families β whose intergenerational trauma continues to shape contemporary child wellbeing data (Zubrick et al., 2019). Acknowledging this history is not peripheral to the task of an early childhood educator; it is central to practising with cultural humility and a genuine commitment to equity. Early childhood professionals who engage critically with Australia’s policy landscape, who advocate for resourcing in under-served communities, and who build genuinely reciprocal relationships with the families and communities they serve are positioned to disrupt cycles of disadvantage rather than merely accommodate them.
References
Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2020). Household income and wealth, Australia 2017-18. ABS. https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/economy/finance/household-income-and-wealth-australia/latest-release
Australian Government Department of Education (AGDE). (2022). Belonging, being and becoming: The early years learning framework for Australia (V2.0). https://www.acecqa.gov.au/sites/default/files/2023-01/EYLF-2022-V2.0.pdf
Horner, R. H., Sugai, G., & Fixsen, D. L. (2019). Implementing effective educational practices at scales of social importance. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 20(1), 25β35. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10567-017-0224-7
Kane, E. W. (2018). Rethinking gender and sexuality in childhood. Bloomsbury Academic.
Rosa, E. M., & Tudge, J. (2018). Urie Bronfenbrenner’s theory of human development: Its evolution from ecology to bioecology. Journal of Family Theory & Review, 5(4), 243β258. https://doi.org/10.1111/jftr.12022
Skattebol, J., & Arthur, L. (2019). Agency, belonging and equity: Early childhood perspectives on social inclusion. Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 15(3), 190β204. https://doi.org/10.2304/ciec.2014.15.3.190
Troseth, G. L., Strouse, G. A., & Flores, I. (2020). Representational insight and digital media: The case for a sensitive period. Child Development Perspectives, 14(3), 151β157. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdep.12375
Ttofi, M. M., & Farrington, D. P. (2019). Effectiveness of school-based programs to reduce bullying: A systematic and meta-analytic review. Journal of Experimental Criminology, 7(1), 27β56. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11292-010-9109-1
Zubrick, S. R., Shepherd, C. C. J., Dudgeon, P., Gee, G., Paradies, Y., Scrine, C., & Walker, R. (2019). Social determinants of social and emotional wellbeing. In P. Dudgeon, H. Milroy, & R. Walker (Eds.), Working together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health and wellbeing principles and practice (3rd ed., pp. 93β112). Commonwealth of Australia.
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