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Showing 1 to 15 of 101 results Save | Export
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Tim Joris Laméris; Maki Kubota; Tanja Kupisch; Jennifer Cabrelli; Neal Snape; Jason Rothman – Second Language Research, 2025
Few studies have examined global foreign accent (GFA) in bilingual children, and little is known about how GFA changes over time and what factors determine change. Here, we examine GFA trajectories in Japanese-English bilingual returnees (Japanese children who returned to Japan after having lived in a majority English environment for several…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Bilingualism, Children, Pronunciation
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Line Walquist-Sørli; Ømur Caglar-Ryeng; Bjarte Furnes; Trude Nergård-Nilssen; Enrica Donolato; Monica Melby-Lervåg – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Background: Children with speech sound difficulties often require educational psychology services, yet systematic reviews examining the association between these difficulties and language or reading problems are lacking. This meta-analysis examines whether these children are at higher risk of language and reading difficulties compared to their…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Language Skills, Reading Difficulties, Language Impairments
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Alison E. Calentino; Nathan M. Hager; Elise M. Adams; Aline K. Szenczy; Lindsay Dickey; Autumn Kujawa; Greg Hajcak; Brady D. Nelson; Daniel N. Klein – Child Development, 2025
The late positive potential (LPP), an event-related potential reflecting affective processing, may exhibit developmental shifts in magnitude and scalp location. In the present longitudinal study, 501 youth (47.3% female; 89.4% White; 12.0% Hispanic) completed the emotion interrupt task to elicit the LPP to neutral, positive, and negative images at…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Children, Adolescents
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Stanford Chihuri; Ashley Blanchard; Carolyn G. DiGuiseppi; Guohua Li – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
The reported prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has more than tripled in the past two decades in the United States, due in part to improved screening and diagnostic techniques. Epidemiologic data on ASD, however, are largely limited to population-based surveillance systems. We examined epidemiologic patterns in ASD diagnoses among…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Students with Disabilities, Children, Epidemiology
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Kelly C. Johnston; Camille S. Talbert; Nicole B. Sussman – Language Arts, 2024
Conceptualizing literacy as multidimensional, this study explores the intersection between literacy integration and children's literacy engagement by investigating how a researcher's workshop guided practice in integrating literacy with social studies. A year-long qualitative case study approach was used to examine how children actively engaged…
Descriptors: Literacy, Social Studies, Children, Active Learning
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Serena Lecce; Luca Ronchi; Rory T. Devine – Developmental Psychology, 2024
While there is considerable evidence that children's early ability to understand others' mental states, called "theory of mind," is shaped by family experiences, it remains unclear whether children's social interactions at school influence theory of mind (ToM) beyond early childhood. We tested whether the mean level…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Preadolescents, Theory of Mind
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Jasmeen Kaur; Michael P. Kranak; Daniel R. Mitteer; Isaac J. Melanson; Tara A. Fahmie – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2025
We conducted a scoping review on the consecutive controlled case series (CCCS) methodology (Hagopian, 2020). The CCCS is an approach to studying functional relations across a series of consecutive cases that share common features. We identified and reviewed 76 studies that used CCCS methodology. Most of these (a) were retrospective CCCS studies…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Case Studies, Research Design, Children
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Amanallah Soltani; Deborah J. Fidler; Lina Patel; Kellie Voth; Anna J. Esbensen – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2025
This study explored how caregiver-reported executive functioning domains, assessed by the BRIEF2 at baseline, predicted behavioral challenges reported by caregivers using the CBCL six months later. The sample included 94 youth with Down syndrome, aged 6 to 18 years. Results of hierarchical regression analyses revealed that, after controlling for…
Descriptors: Youth, Children, Adolescents, Down Syndrome
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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
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D. M. Green; D. A. Price; B. A. Spears – Pastoral Care in Education, 2024
Persistent bullying behavior is that which starts high and remains either moderately high or persistently high, seemingly in spite of intervention/prevention approaches employed: yet little is known about how/why persistent bullying emerges or is sustained. Those who do not respond to interventions and persist with their bullying behavior, require…
Descriptors: Bullying, Case Studies, Foreign Countries, Antisocial Behavior
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Trevor K. M. Day; Arielle Borovsky; Donna Thal; Jed T. Elison – Developmental Science, 2025
The MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (CDI) are widely used, parent-report instruments of language acquisition. Here, we focus on the word-inventory sections of the instruments, and show two different approaches to modeling CDI data, based on real-world needs. First, we show that Words & Gestures data collected…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Measures (Individuals), Children, Models
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Arya Ansari; M. Nicole Buckley; S. Colby Woods; Michael Gottfried – Child Development, 2025
Using data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study--Kindergarten Class of 2011 (n = 14,370; 51% Male; 51% White; 14% Black; 25% Hispanic; 4% Asian; and 6% Other), this study examined the cumulative, timing-specific, and enduring associations between student-teacher relationships in the United States and a broad range of student outcomes.…
Descriptors: Surveys, Children, Longitudinal Studies, Teacher Student Relationship
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Wenxiao Fu; Fei Deng; Wenlong Zhao – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Educational aspiration is an essential motivational psychological force that can encourage vulnerable children to strive for academic success and overcome their vulnerable circumstances. Based on the developmental contextualism theory, this study utilized two waves of data from the China Education Panel Survey to construct a cross-lagged model and…
Descriptors: Risk, Academic Aspiration, Foreign Countries, Disadvantaged
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Linda Larsen; Hanne Naess Hjetland; Stefan Kilian Schauber – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2024
Children's ability to correctly name letters is a key predictor of later reading abilities and skills, but research on letter naming from Scandinavian orthographies is scarce. The aim of this study is to explore how child- and letter-related factors (i.e., gender, child name, phonemic awareness, letter position in the alphabet and frequency, and…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Alphabets, Naming, Orthographic Symbols
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Ivana Noguera; Analía Salsa – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024
The home learning environment that parents provide for their children is an important context for mathematical development. This study describes the home numeracy environment of Argentinean 5-year-old children of low and high socioeconomic status (SES), specifically in the context of mother-child shared reading of a commercial counting book (Book…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Numeracy, Home Study, Parent Child Relationship
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