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Tiffany Pempek Rahl – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Developmental research confirms the importance of early parental language input for building children's vocabulary and language skills (Hart & Risley, 1995). While reading with a caregiver is a common way for language input to occur, the approaches parents utilize often fail to capitalize on techniques for improving language and pre-literacy…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Toddlers, Program Effectiveness, Reading Strategies
Natalie Sung Ae Pak – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Rationale: Few communication interventions for Latino Spanish-speaking (LSS) families with young children with language impairments and autism have been experimentally tested. "EMT en Espanol" is a culturally and linguistically adapted language intervention that has been effectively implemented by LSS caregivers of children with…
Descriptors: Latin Americans, Spanish Speaking, Child Caregivers, Intervention
Jeanette Luedders Jones – ProQuest LLC, 2021
There has been limited research on interventions with young children encompassing "interoceptive awareness," the awareness and perception of sensations from inside the body. The information in this phenomenological study examines how participants experienced a bidirectional, reflective, online intervention program on interoceptive…
Descriptors: Intervention, Parent Child Relationship, Cues, Sensory Experience
Bucher, Eric Zachary – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The purpose of this action research was to understand how reflective, job-embedded early childhood science professional learning and development (PLD) impacted Early Head Start (EHS) teacher learning and their perceptions toward science with toddlers. Limited content knowledge and lack of formal preparation impact teachers' understanding of…
Descriptors: Science Interests, Scientific Attitudes, Science Instruction, Early Childhood Education
LeBarton, Eve Angela Sauer – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Previous investigators have found significant relations between children's early spontaneous gesture and their subsequent vocabulary development: the more gesture children produce early, the larger their later vocabularies. The questions we address here are (1) whether we can increase children's gesturing through experimental manipulation and, if…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Language Acquisition, Nonverbal Communication, Child Language