- (1) ONB providers must work to maintain positive relationships with children by using consistent guidance techniques to help children learn. Guidance techniques must adapt ONB programs' environment, routines, and activities to a child's strengths, age and developmental level, abilities, culture, community, and relate to the child's behavior.
(2) Guidance techniques may include:
- (a) Coaching behavior;
- (b) Modeling and teaching social skills such as taking turns, cooperation, waiting, self-control, respect for the rights of others, treating others kindly, and conflict resolution;
- (c) Offering choices;
- (d) Distracting;
- (e) Redirecting or helping a child change their focus to something appropriate to achieve their goal;
- (f) Planning ahead to prevent problems and letting children know what events will happen next;
- (g) Explaining consistent, clear rules and involving children in defining simple, clear classroom limits;
- (h) Involving children in solving problems; and
- (i) Explaining to children, the natural and logical consequence related to the child's behavior in a reasonable and developmentally appropriate manner.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 43.216.742. WSR 23-10-059, § 110-302-0330, filed 5/1/23, effective 6/1/23.]