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Gabrielle Ivinson – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
This paper diffracts Deleuze and quantum physics through Winnicott's work to argue for an enrichment to playing. The roots of the play-cognitive hierarchy in Freudian psychoanalysis makes visible that progression and the stages that a child must pass en route to rationality continue to feed educational assumptions that a child must leave playing…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Play, Child Development, Psychiatry
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2023
This article reviews the implications of many of the major schools in the history of psychology for understanding giftedness and its inner workings: operationist, psychometric, psychoanalytic, associationist, behaviorist, Gestalt, cognitive, humanistic/positive psychology, functionalist/pragmatic/constructivist, cultural, and biological. Each…
Descriptors: Psychology, Models, Individual Characteristics, Gifted
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Davies, Adam – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
This article engages in an autoethnographic analysis to offer an argument for the importance of bringing mad studies to pre-service early childhood education and care (ECEC) programs. Through both analysing reflections on two "maddening moments" during pre-service teaching as a mad-identified pre-service ECEC educator and discussing…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Early Childhood Education, Mental Health, Mental Disorders
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Bynum, Gregory – Ethics and Education, 2021
This article proposes that Dorothy Dinnerstein's philosophy can help us understand the problem of miseducation that places male-dominated and 'masculine' rapacity at the center of so many human endeavors, including capitalist economic exploitation and environmental exploitation. Dinnerstein argues that early childhood experiences of female…
Descriptors: Ethics, Psychiatry, Educational Philosophy, Feminism
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Maree, Jacobus G. – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
While much has been written on the influence of Erik Erikson's contributions to education, little has been said about his place in terms of his contribution to the general theoretical notion of what it means to be a human being. This article aims to broaden current reflections on Erikson's position in the spectrum of work done on human development…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Educational Theories, Biographies
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Bakker, Nelleke – History of Education, 2020
The historiography of child guidance has focused primarily on the United States, where it first developed before travelling across the English-speaking world. The rapid expansion of child guidance in the interwar years was enabled by private philanthropy, which provided fellowships to foreign professionals to study in the United States. This…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Historiography, Private Financial Support, Fellowships
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Mintz, Joseph – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2016
Schön's concept of "reflection in action", particularly when interpreted from a sociocultural perspective, is often used as frame with which to consider the relationship between theoretical and tacit knowledge in the work of teachers. This paper presents an alternative interpretative frame for Schön which makes use of the ideas of…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Sociocultural Patterns, Reflection, Correlation
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Putnam, Susan K.; Lopata, Christopher; Fox, Jeffery D.; Thomeer, Marcus L.; Rodgers, Jonathan D.; Volker, Martin A.; Lee, Gloria K.; Neilans, Erik G.; Werth, Jilynn – Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 2012
This study compared cortisol concentrations yielded using three saliva collection methods (passive drool, salivette, and sorbette) in both in vitro and in vivo conditions, as well as method acceptability for a sample of children (n = 39) with High Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorders. No cortisol concentration differences were observed between…
Descriptors: Autism, Comparative Analysis, Science Experiments, Data Collection
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Jenkins, Melissa M.; Youngstrom, Eric A.; Youngstrom, Jennifer Kogos; Feeny, Norah C.; Findling, Robert L. – Psychological Assessment, 2012
Bipolar disorder is frequently clinically diagnosed in youths who do not actually satisfy Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text revision; DSM-IV-TR; American Psychiatric Association, 1994) criteria, yet cases that would satisfy full DSM-IV-TR criteria are often undetected clinically. Evidence-based assessment methods…
Descriptors: Evidence, Mental Health, Mental Disorders, Clinical Diagnosis
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De Bellis, Michael D.; Spratt, Eve G.; Hooper, Stephen R. – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2011
Child maltreatment appears to be the single most preventable cause of mental illness and behavioral dysfunction in the United States. Few published studies examine the developmental and the psychobiological consequences of sexual abuse. There are multiple mechanisms through which sexual abuse can cause post-traumatic stress disorder, activate…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Mental Disorders
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Stewart, John – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2011
British child guidance was a form of psychiatric, preventive medicine for children and young people and centred, at least in principle, on specialist clinics led by psychiatrists. From small beginnings in the aftermath of the First World War, child guidance expanded steadily, in terms of both numbers of patients and numbers of clinics, and came to…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Preventive Medicine, Parent Child Relationship, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Cornish, K. M.; Turk, J.; Wilding, J.; Sudhalter, V.; Munir, F.; Kooy, F.; Hagerman, R. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2004
Background: Fragile X syndrome is one of the world's leading hereditary causes of developmental delay in males. The past decade has witnessed an explosion of research that has begun to unravel the condition at its various levels: from the genetic and brain levels to the cognitive level, and then to the environmental and behavioural levels. Our aim…
Descriptors: Neurology, Brain, Developmental Delays, Genetic Disorders
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Zerby, Stephen A. – Academic Psychiatry, 2005
Objective: The science fiction film "Invaders From Mars" is used to teach principles of child development; clinical features of separation anxiety and nightmares; and clinical interventions, including child psychotherapy, child protective issues, and crisis management. Methods: Commercial films have been used as teaching aids in child psychiatry…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Film Study, Child Development, Separation Anxiety