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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Albert, Lumina S. – Education and Urban Society, 2022
It is being increasingly recognized that providing human trafficking education (HTE) in schools is an effective prevention tool. Yet, the strategies that may be utilized in delivering these programs have not been fully established. The purpose of this paper is two fold. First, the paper discusses the importance of providing human trafficking…
Descriptors: Crime, Urban Schools, Trauma, Crime Prevention
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Paiva, Alexandra – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2019
Exposure to childhood maltreatment is detrimental to the academic success and educational outcomes of students. It leads to a myriad of deficits related to neurodevelopment and neuroprocessing, which causes disruptions in academic performance, emotional and behavioural regulation, and school attendance. By becoming trauma-informed, schools can…
Descriptors: Trauma, Child Abuse, Child Development, Student Needs
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Columbia Embury, Dusty; Clarke, Laura S.; Leaver, Christy – Preventing School Failure, 2020
Students with Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) often display significant intrusive behaviors and need specific behavioral, social-emotional, and academic supports. Given the background of trauma consistent with a RAD diagnosis, it is imperative that school personnel understand the social-emotional behavioral supports needed to help children with…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Behavior Disorders, Trauma, Social Support Groups
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Allison, Judy; Craig, Shirley – Kairaranga, 2014
This paper discusses the Boxall Profile as an assessment and intervention framework designed to support disadvantaged children in mainstream schools. The Boxall Profile was developed in the 1970s in the United Kingdom by Marjorie Boxall to identify children who had come into school unprepared to meet the demands of classroom life and needed…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Elementary School Students, Social Support Groups, Profiles
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Smart, Max – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2012
The concept of "space" has been used in youth care parlance to describe how and where relational care with youth takes place. Interpersonal space is central to child and youth care practice. It is the realm in which helping adults work to engage and connect with a youth. Unconditional space is designed around the "needs" of the…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Caring, Altruism, Biographies
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Collins, Kathryn S.; Strieder, Frederick H.; DePanfilis, Diane; Tabor, Maureen; Clarkson Freeman, Pamela A.; Linde, Linnea; Greenberg, Patty – Child Welfare, 2011
Families living in urban poverty, enduring chronic and complex traumatic stress, and having difficulty meeting their children's basic needs have significant child maltreatment risk factors. There is a paucity of family focused, trauma-informed evidence-based interventions aimed to alleviate trauma symptomatology, strengthen family functioning, and…
Descriptors: Evidence, Intervention, Child Abuse, Risk
Kaplan, Betty Ann; Venza, James – Zero to Three (J), 2011
The Parent-Child Psychotherapy Program (PPP) is a multifamily group therapy intervention for parents and young children at high risk for intergenerational patterns of neglect, abuse, and disorganized attachment. A "developmental and experiential model" that incorporates principles of attachment theory, the PPP addresses parent and child needs…
Descriptors: Play, Attachment Behavior, Parents, Psychotherapy
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Osofsky, Joy D.; Chartrand, Molinda M. – Future of Children, 2013
Because most research on military families has focused on children who are old enough to go to school, we know the least about the youngest and perhaps most vulnerable children in these families. Some of what we do know, however, is worrisome--for example, multiple deployments, which many families have experienced during the wars in Iraq and…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Military Service, Young Children, At Risk Persons
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Music, Graham – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2009
This paper looks at emotional neglect in the early years of life, and postulates some probable long-term sequelae of such neglect. It argues that there is a continuum of neglect; ranging from the severest form, as seen in institutional orphanages, to milder variations. A range of theoretical and research traditions, including developmental…
Descriptors: Child Neglect, Developmental Psychology, Residential Care, Attachment Behavior
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Pickover, Sheri – Journal of Addictions & Offender Counseling, 2010
Current anger management programs use a cognitive behavior perspective; however, research also links anger control to developmental deficits such as attachment insecurity and emotional regulation. This article previews the Emotional Skills-Building Curriculum (ESBC), a 13-week treatment program designed to treat individuals who are referred for…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Child Abuse, Court Litigation, Psychological Patterns
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Simon-Roper, Liza – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 1996
The victim-response cycle model focuses on specific aspects of the relationship that victims have with their offenders which contribute to the degree of trauma that victims experience. This model addresses attachment and learned coping responses to assist clinicians in treating symptomatic behavior. A case example demonstrating the model is…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Abuse, Coping, Emotional Adjustment
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McCarty, Carolyn; Waterman, Jill; Burge, Dorli; Edelstein, Susan B. – Child Welfare, 1999
The TIES [Training, Intervention, Education, and Services] for Adoption program in Los Angeles, attempts to reduce obstacles to adoption of children in out-of-home care who experienced prenatal substance exposure. Interviews with parents conducted at intervals following home placement reveal experiences and concerns, parenting aspects and adoption…
Descriptors: Adopted Children, Adoption, Adoptive Parents, Attachment Behavior
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Honig, Alice Sterling – Early Child Development and Care, 2009
Interpersonal, familial, and situational risk factors that predict young children's aggression and non-compliance are explored. Here examples of specific techniques and provided to help teachers and parents effectively support children's early development of cooperative and prosocial behaviours as well as problem-solving skills in family and…
Descriptors: Aggression, Young Children, Compliance (Psychology), At Risk Students
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Hobday, Angela; Lee, Karen – Adoption & Fostering, 1994
Suggests that medical advisors may be an important resource for adoptive parents seeking to understand their child's behavior. Examines the effects of the child's past--problems such as loss, poor attachment, or abuse--and how the child and new family adjust. (TJQ)
Descriptors: Adopted Children, Adoption, Adoptive Parents, Attachment Behavior
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Mullin, Ellen Steele; Johnson, LeAnne – Child Welfare, 1999
Notes that successful child placement depends on engaging birth or previously adopted children during the adoption process, yet other children are often overlooked when parents are adopting a special-needs child. Presents a model which recognizes dynamics of strength and vulnerability and applies that model to preparing and supporting the adoptive…
Descriptors: Adopted Children, Adoption, Adoptive Parents, Attachment Behavior
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