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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Quiroz, Matthew J.; Schnell-Peskin, Lauren K.; Kisamore, April N.; Watkins, Jessica Day; Vladescu, Jason C. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2023
Allergic reactions to allergenic foods can pose a lethal threat to children with food allergies. Previous research has demonstrated the effectiveness of using behavioral skills training (BST) plus in situ training (IST) to teach safety responses to children. However, there has not been an evaluation of using BST to teach food safety to children…
Descriptors: Allergy, Food, Identification, Behavior Standards
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Profillet, Lucas; Laffage-Cosnier, Sébastien; Vivier, Christian – History of Education, 2022
Reading methods are valuable cultural and educational objects. They guide students into the world of the written word and, since the end of the nineteenth century, they have associated letters, sounds and words with illustrations. In French schools, in the reading methods published between 1880 and 1960, the word 'boxing' was often associated with…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Educational Philosophy, Alphabets, Textbooks
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Haeny S. Yoon – Educational Forum, 2024
Young children bring rich social, cultural, and political knowledge to school, cultivated in their homes and communities. This knowledge, ranging from household skills to multilingual practices, is often marginalized in schools that value different norms. Drawing from ethnographic studies in Illinois and New York kindergarten classrooms, this…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Kindergarten, Young Children, Knowledge Level
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Dobson, Tom; Stephenson, Lisa; De Arede, Ana – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
Story Makers Press (SMP) is a University-based publisher which co-constructs stories with under-represented groups of children in order to diversify representation in children's literature and disrupt the way adult perceptions of normality pattern children's literature (aetonormativity). In this paper we analyse six drama and creative writing…
Descriptors: Novels, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Minority Group Students
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Vanner, Catherine; Kovinthan Levi, Thursica; Akseer, Spogmai – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2020
Primary school textbooks can provide space for learning about peace and inclusion but can also reinforce messages of inequality and division. This article describes a thematic analysis of South Sudan's textbooks for pupils in Grade 4 Social Studies, English, and Christian Religious Education. The analysis uses a conceptual framework that positions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Grade 4, Textbook Content
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Maslinsky, K. A. – Russian Education & Society, 2016
The purpose of this article is to analyze Soviet school codes as part of a continuous tradition in Russian education and as a way of arriving at a portrait of Soviet schoolchildren. The article is divided into two parts. The first part provides a brief historical overview of the codes of conduct in prerevolutionary and Soviet school policy and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, School Policy, Behavior Standards
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DePalma, Renée; López, Laura Cruz – Policy Futures in Education, 2014
The social integration of migrant populations has been defined as an intercultural, mutually enriching process, and can be distinguished from processes of assimilation that involve a more unilateral adaptation on the part of immigrants to the norms of the host country. In Spain, this distinction has become blurred in both political and educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Muslims, Social Integration, Acculturation
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Ryan, Caitlin L.; Hermann-Wilmarth, Jill M. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2013
This essay explores what it might mean to read children's literature in elementary school classrooms through a queer lens. The authors argue that because queer theory has a history as a literary theory that destabilizes normative associations among gender, sexuality, bodies, and desire, it provides a set of analytical tools classroom communities…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Childrens Literature, Classrooms, School Libraries
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Crossouard, Barbara – Education Inquiry, 2012
The opportunity offered by the Umea Symposium to probe the intersection of quality and assessment immediately brings into focus a wider issue -- that of the quality of education which assessment aspires to support. Prompted by recent research into formative assessment in Scottish primary school contexts, the paper explores how formative assessment…
Descriptors: Socialization, Social Behavior, Behavior Standards, Educational Quality
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Low, Sabina; Frey, Karin S.; Brockman, Callie J. – School Psychology Review, 2010
Relational forms of aggression are known to increase during the middle school years. To date, the majority of efficacy studies of elementary school-based programs have focused on the reduction of physical and direct verbal aggression, to the exclusion of effects on relational aggression. "Steps to Respect: A Bullying Prevention Program" is one…
Descriptors: Bullying, Aggression, Prevention, Playgrounds
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Bressoux, Pascal; Pansu, Pascal – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2007
This shortnote deals with measuring normative clearsightedness about internality and assessing its effects. After raising the issue of how to measure normative clearsightedness, another operationalization of this concept is proposed based on a multilevel model. In an attempt to understand the relationship between pupils' clearsightedness about…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Students, Grade 3, Elementary School Teachers
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Stearns, Elizabeth; Dodge, Kenneth A.; Nicholson, Melba – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2008
This study investigated the effects of the peer social context and child characteristics on the growth of authority-acceptance behavior problems across first, second, and third grades, using data from the normative sample of the Fast Track Project. Three hundred sixty-eight European American and African American boys and girls (51% male; 46%…
Descriptors: African American Students, Behavior Problems, Student Behavior, Observation
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Werner, Nicole E.; Grant, Samantha – Social Development, 2009
Prior research has shown that parental social cognitions are associated with child outcomes such as aggression. The goal of this study was to examine mothers' cognitions about relational aggression, and to explore linkages between mothers' attributions and normative beliefs about aggression and children's competence with peers. Participants…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Predictor Variables, Gender Differences, Behavior Standards
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Kochenderfer-Ladd, B.; Pelletier, M. E. – Journal of School Psychology, 2008
A multilevel design was used to test a model in which teachers' attitudes (beliefs) about bullying (e.g., it is normative; assertive children do not get bullied; children wouldn't be bullied if they avoided mean kids) were hypothesized to influence if and how they intervene in bullying interactions. In turn, it was hypothesized that teachers'…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Bullying, Behavior Standards, Grade 4
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Nesdale, Drew; Maass, Anne; Durkin, Kevin; Griffiths, Judith – Child Development, 2005
To assess predictions from social identity development theory (SIDT; Nesdale, 2004) concerning children's ethnic/racial prejudice, 197 Anglo-Australian children ages 7 or 9 years participated in a minimal group study as a member of a team that had a norm of inclusion or exclusion. The team was threatened or not threatened by an out-group that was…
Descriptors: Children, Racial Bias, Social Bias, Norms
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