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Jamie Amemiya; Gail D. Heyman; Caren M. Walker – Developmental Science, 2024
When making inferences about the mental lives of others (e.g., others' preferences), it is critical to consider the extent to which the choices we observe are constrained. Prior research on the development of this tendency indicates a contradictory pattern: Children show remarkable sensitivity to constraints in traditional experimental paradigms,…
Descriptors: Children, Barriers, Power Structure, Childrens Attitudes
Maria Karmiris – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This paper aims to foreground the persistent ethical conundrums within the process of engaging children labeled with intellectual disabilities in the research process. I consider what happens when researchers are embedded within and committed to sustaining relationships with disabled children? I explore the possibilities of the enactment of…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Children, Ethics, Researchers
Nora Peterman; Ekaterina Strekalova-Hughes; Jennifer Waddell; Kathleen O’Shea – Journal of Multilingual Theories and Practices, 2024
English-language teachers are increasingly recognizing the pedagogical value of using children's literature that authentically represents diverse multilingual learners, including children who have sought refuge. This study analyses representations of children who have experienced displacement and sought refuge in picture books. Framed by a…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Refugees, Personal Autonomy, Children
Ecem Karlidag-Dennis; Michael Maher; Claire Paterson-Young; Melis Cin; Toa Giroletti – Global Studies of Childhood, 2025
This paper critically examines the use of the photostories method adapted from Photovoice in research with children, exploring its effectiveness in enabling decision-making and influencing change while addressing potential challenges. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the photostories method enables children to make decisions and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Participatory Research, Research Methodology, Children
Heck, Isobel A.; Kushnir, Tamar; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Developmental Science, 2023
How do children learn about the structure of the social world? We tested whether children would extract patterns from an agent's social choices to make inferences about multiple groups' relative social standing. In Experiment 1, 4- to 6-year-old children (N = 36; tested in Central New York) saw an agent and three groups ("Group-A,"…
Descriptors: Children, Social Cognition, Social Development, Inferences
Shauna Pomerantz – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Post qualitative inquiry is an immanent approach to research that I engaged during a study on TikTok with my 11-year-old daughter. In this article, I reflect on how its experimental style enabled a provisional escape from the hierarchy of adult/child through lines of flight. I also reflect on how binary thinking that disparages children's…
Descriptors: Social Media, Power Structure, Parent Child Relationship, Parents
Sezer Demir – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2024
Cinema has become indispensable to the world since the Lumiere Brothers shot the first film in the history of cinema, "Arrival of a Train." While it promised a captivating experience for audiences, those in power sought ways to exploit cinema and found it relatively easy to do so. Even Hitler sought refuge in cinema during the 1936…
Descriptors: Films, Film Study, Power Structure, Self Expression
Yonat Rum; Ditza A. Zachor; Yael Armony; Ella Daniel; Esther Dromi – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
This study investigates mothers' and siblings' perspectives regarding similarities and differences in siblingships with and without autism. Twenty-nine typical children (M[subscript age] = 8.78 years, SD = 2.05) whose younger siblings have a diagnosis of autism and their mothers constituted the 'autism group.' Forty-six typical children…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parent Attitudes, Siblings, Attitudes
Hannah Fechtel; Sienna Ruiz; Julie Spray; Erika A. Waters; James Shepperd; Jean Hunleth – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Virtual technologies gained popularity during the COVID-19 pandemic for use in research, including research with children. As scholarship from the field of science, technology and society (STS) suggests, technologies are never neutral, but embedded with social values and, as such, used by people to navigate identities and relationships. Building…
Descriptors: Children, Power Structure, Interpersonal Relationship, Privacy
Cuevas-Parra, Patricio – Global Studies of Childhood, 2023
This article explores how privileges, identities and worldviews influence every stage of childhood research processes. By using the 'windows and mirrors' and 'the danger of the single story' metaphors, I seek to deconstruct reflexivity and positionality in order to include different lenses of analysis for exploring how power and privileges inform…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Self Concept, Children, Research
Shaddai Tembo; Simon Bateson – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Collaborative writing is well established in the humanities, but with little focus on how the writing relationship comes into being, including the power and relational dynamics at play. This is especially pertinent both when Black and "white" (sic) authors collaborate in writing about race, and in the process of writing collaborative…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Power Structure, Race, Early Childhood Education
Nuttall, Michelle; Pelletier, Lise – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2021
Repetition compulsion is a psychodynamic concept that explains an attempt to master trauma. This case study attempts to understand the possible meanings of symbol repetition that occurred in the art therapy process of a twelve-year-old boy with acute methylmalonic acidemia. Over 29 sessions of art therapy, the client demonstrated repetition…
Descriptors: Repetition, Art Therapy, Trauma, Power Structure
Manley, Stewart – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2022
This triptych uses academic literature, poetry, and personal reflection to illustrate the impact of the invisible currents of power that run through society and history on three fictional individuals--a Native Hawaiian woman on the Hamakua coast of the Island of Hawai'i, a girl in a refugee camp on the Thailand-Myanmar border, and a military…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Foreign Countries, History, Poetry
Crawford, Rachel; Kyakuwa, Fred; Walker, Katharine – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2023
A 10 week supportive arts program was conducted in Jinja, Uganda via the collaboration between a local nongovernmental organization, a Ugandan artist, and two art therapists from the United States. The artist facilitated weekly artmaking sessions for former unhoused youth being served by the organization, as well as engaged in weekly virtual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Artists, Art Therapy, Allied Health Personnel
Szech, Laura – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
The purpose of this study was to understand what teachers and families learn from participating in strength-based family visits. This study occurred in a home visit project with one White teacher and one Latinx family in the home of the family. The study employed a basic qualitative design with data sources such as field notes, interviews, and a…
Descriptors: Children, Elementary School Teachers, Parents, Home Visits