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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Azadmanesh, Saeed; Bagheri Noaparast, Khosrow – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
This study aims to critique the concept of active learning in childhood education based on Hegelian Bildung. We have defined childhood education from the perspective of Hegel's Bildung in The Phenomenology of Spirit. We describe childhood education as a 'primary Bildung' having the aim of 'entering into the conceptual world'. This aim indicates…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Educational Philosophy, Phenomenology, Language Usage
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Jisun R. Oh; Gregory A. Cheatham; Teran A. Frick – Young Exceptional Children, 2024
Children with disabilities and developmental delays (DD) often face challenges within education systems, which are typically unprepared to meet their language needs nor equipped to support bilingualism because of the current early intervention (EI) workforce. Given this, the five-language domains framework can help bilingual EI educators to…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Infants, Toddlers, Culturally Relevant Education
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Warren, Alison – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2019
Caring occupies a contested space in early childhood teaching. Caring is valued as crucial to children's physical and emotional wellbeing but, at the same time, it is undervalued as separate from education and more difficult to measure. This article argues for reconceptualising care as complex, dynamic, problematic, political, and assembled in…
Descriptors: Caring, Early Childhood Education, Child Development, Teaching Methods
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Tîrnovan, Daniela – International Journal for Mathematics Teaching and Learning, 2023
This investigation of translanguaging is grounded upon the ubiquitous theme of "structures" explicitly and implicitly found in the translanguaging literature. Through this theme, this paper begins by providing a novel theoretical framework followed by considering the need for translanguaging (e.g., education's growth of multilingualism;…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Code Switching (Language), Second Language Learning, Native Language
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Wallace, Kathleen – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2018
This essay aims to map uses and attributions of the word "appropriate" as they occur in various disciplines related to children's literature. Three competing interest areas--publishing, education, and societal ideologies--provide insight as to how "appropriate" developed into an abstract cover-word for a variety of outside…
Descriptors: Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Child Development, Language Usage, Definitions
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McMahon, Molly; Pileggi-Proud, Theresa – Journal of Catholic Education, 2022
As schools endeavor to implement the recommendations of "Cultivating Talent: A National Study Examining Pathways to Increase the Presence of Hispanic Teachers and Leaders in Catholic Schools" ("Cultivating Talent"), this education in practice article presents research-informed recommendations that can be implemented immediately…
Descriptors: Talent Development, Hispanic Americans, Minority Group Teachers, Catholic Schools
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Claire E. Baker – Advances in Race and Ethnicity in Education, 2017
Father involvement is a salient predictor of children's development and recent studies suggest that African American fathers who are highly involved across infancy and toddlerhood have children who enter school better prepared to succeed. Little is known, however, about the specific dimensions of fathering (e.g., language stimulation) that…
Descriptors: African American Family, Fathers, Parent Participation, Young Children
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Fellus, Osnat; Biton, Yaniv – International Journal for Mathematics Teaching and Learning, 2017
That mathematics education has been one of the central concerns of educational systems worldwide is no secret. It is also an established consensus that as far back as eighty years ago, Russian psychologists such as Vygotsky, Luria, Meshcheryakov, and Davydov have pioneered work that contributed to the understanding of teaching and learning and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Professional Personnel, Teaching Methods, Philosophy
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Leslie, Esther – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2016
Walter Benjamin wrote about pedagogy from the start of his writing life to its close. He was also an activist in the youth movement in Germany. This essay explores the importance of childhood, play, toys and education to his wider body of work--including his interests in photography, literary form, language acquisition and use, modern art. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Social Systems, Foreign Countries, Activism
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Souto-Manning, Mariana; Falk, Beverly; López, Dina; Barros Cruz, Lívia; Bradt, Nancy; Cardwell, Nancy; McGowan, Nicole; Perez, Aura; Rabadi-Raol, Ayesha; Rollins, Elizabeth – Review of Research in Education, 2019
In this review of research, we offer a meta-analysis of young children's learning and development within and across psychology, education, and linguistics. Engaging with Soja's concept of "Thirdspace," we mapped young children's learning and development transdisciplinarily, seeking to (re)conceptualize early childhood teaching in ways…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Equal Education, Early Childhood Education, Young Children
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Kapengut, Dina; Noble, Kimberly G. – Future of Children, 2020
The early home language environment, and parents in particular, form the foundation of children's language development. In this article, Dina Kapengut and Kimberly Noble explore the intersection of neuroscience and developmental psychology to explain how language experiences in the home, and the "home learning environment" more broadly,…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Language Acquisition, Young Children, Child Development
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Blum, Susan D. – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2017
Claiming to rely on "science," many well-intentioned "experts" offer advice on how to "close the gap"--word gap, language gap, achievement gap--between disadvantaged and advantaged children. Based on both research and personal experience, this advice promises magic solutions to apparently complex and intractable…
Descriptors: Language Attitudes, Language Acquisition, Academic Achievement, Achievement Gap
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Corrado, Evelyn Wandia – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2019
Dialogue can be an excellent weapon for justice and liberation, which 'silenced' groups could use to challenge the status quo and authenticate their efficacy. Over the years, there has been a preconceived negative focus on Africans which has suppressed African children's autonomy. Consequently, there is a need to liberate the position of children…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Dialogs (Language), Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
Gözpinar, Halis – Online Submission, 2016
Proverbs, which have been evaluated as a very rich heritage of collective wisdom and experience in society, are loved by people who prefer spicing up a conversation with the tips of wisdom to 'convince' others to 'prove' their point of view and actions. The paper explores semantic models of proverbs which denote the status of children in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Proverbs, Folk Culture, Cultural Influences
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Melogno, Sergio; Pinto, Maria Antonietta; Levi, Gabriel – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2012
The aim of the present article is to critically review the experimental research in the domain of metaphor and metonymy competencies in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) children. After providing some basic definitions of metaphor and metonymy, we consider some major points emerging from studies on metaphorical and metonymical competencies in…
Descriptors: Autism, Figurative Language, Child Development, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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