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Doan, Kim – Principal Leadership, 2010
Court appointed special advocates (CASAs) are volunteers who represent abused and neglected children in the court system. David Soukup, a judge in Washington State, created the first CASA program in 1977 to gather more information about the children whose cases were appearing before him. The likelihood of meeting a CASA may be equal to the…
Descriptors: Caseworkers, Child Advocacy, Volunteers, Courts
Gatto-Walden, Patricia – Parenting for High Potential, 2012
Many intellectually gifted children have equally compassionately gifted hearts. They care deeply about the well-being of others around them and throughout the world. These caring children innately live the guiding principle of brotherhood and interdependence among all life. They worry for themselves, and they worry for others. Some days they…
Descriptors: Caring, World Views, Gifted, Educational Change
Gallagher, Michael; Smith, Mark; Hardy, Mark; Wilkinson, Heather – Children & Society, 2012
This review summarises the research literature on children's and parents' involvement in social work decision making, which is regarded, in policy terms, as increasingly important. In practice, however, it tends to be messy, difficult and compromised. Different individuals or groups may have different understandings of participation and related…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Social Work, Family Involvement, Participative Decision Making
Stitzlein, Sarah M. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2015
Some parents and caregivers, frustrated by low academic performance of their local school, emphasis on testing, or the content of the curriculum, have worked independently or formed parent groups to speak out and demand improvements. Parents and families enact solutions such as opting out of tests, developing alternative curricula, invoking parent…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Dissent, Parent Attitudes, Educational Improvement
Te One, Sarah; Blaikie, Rebecca; Egan-Bitran, Michelle; Henley, Zoey – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
Recent social policy discourses in Aotearoa New Zealand focus on vulnerable children's well-being and the detrimental, long-term and costly impacts of child poverty. The discourse pervading much of the policy labels children and young people as "vulnerable" or "at risk" or "in crisis", a view, which we argue, is both…
Descriptors: Well Being, Child Welfare, Poverty Programs, Naming
Staudt, Marlys; Williams-Hayes, Mona – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2011
The objective of this descriptive study was to examine Child Advocacy Center therapists' attitudes toward treatment manuals and evidence-based practices and to gather information about the treatments they use most frequently. An online survey was sent to 30 therapists employed by 15 Child Advocacy Centers in a southeastern state. The response rate…
Descriptors: Surveys, Child Advocacy, Psychotherapy, Counselor Attitudes
Murris, Karin – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
Classical conceptual distinctions in philosophy of education assume an individualistic subjectivity and hide the learning that can take place in the space between child (as educator) and adult (as learner). Grounded in two examples from experience I develop the argument that adults often put metaphorical sticks in their ears in their educational…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Epistemology, Child Advocacy, Child Role
Wisneski, Debora – Childhood Education, 2012
Participating in the Save Our School march was an inspiring event, the reverberating impact from which will be long-lasting. The march, which was endorsed by the Executive Board of Association for Childhood Education International (ACEI), was an effort to call awareness to the struggles that public education faces in the United States. The guiding…
Descriptors: Public Education, Global Approach, Educational Principles, Public Opinion
Hicks, Lisa; Hancher-Rauch, Heidi; Casselman, Katelin – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2012
School and higher education partnerships are an excellent opportunity for all involved to receive mutually beneficial outcomes. This article describes the benefits of a P-12-university partnership, as well as specific examples of projects and assignments that can serve as advocacy resources, creative programming, program assessment, or to meet…
Descriptors: Child Advocacy, Partnerships in Education, Outcomes of Education, Program Evaluation
Cotnam-Kappel, Megan – Canadian Journal of Education, 2014
The following article relates a reflexive ethnographic research project that focuses on youth voice in relation to the process of choosing a high school and a language of instruction in Ontario, Canada. The purpose of this methodological article is to relate a story of research and explore the tensions between theory and practice experienced by a…
Descriptors: School Choice, Conflict, Youth Opportunities, Child Advocacy
Birnbaum, Rachel; Saini, Michael – Research on Social Work Practice, 2012
Objectives: This qualitative synthesis explores the voices of children in the context of child custody disputes over the last 20 years. The purpose was to (1) systematically retrieve qualitative studies to explore children's views and preferences in the context of decision making postseparation and divorce and (2) explore how children's voices are…
Descriptors: Social Work, Child Custody, Synthesis, Qualitative Research
Hite, John; Boulos, Jayne – Communique, 2011
On September 27th, Maine finally joined 47 other states in allowing the use of the term "school psychologist" for those holding a masters or specialist degree. Furthermore, Maine has become the first and only state to write the NASP Practice Model into law, thus holding school-based psychologists to the highest professional standards.…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, School Psychology, Barriers, Comprehensive School Health Education
Langford, Rachel; Prentice, Susan; Albanese, Patrizia; Summers, Bernadette; Messina-Goertzen, Brianne; Richardson, Brooke – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2013
Do early childhood education and care (ECEC) professionals make good advocates? Canadian advocates have fought for better child care policies since the mid-1940s. What has happened to this advocacy with the recent increased professionalization of the ECEC sector? How does increased professionalization limit, innovate or expand advocacy strategies?…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Child Care, Child Advocacy
Conroy, Pauline – Disability & Society, 2012
The voices of adults and children with disabilities who have experienced violence and abuse are slowly beginning to surface in the public domain. Segregated residential institutions run by religious congregations appear to be dangerous places for children with disabilities and perceived differences--according to the former residents, speaking and…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Child Abuse, Foreign Countries, Residential Institutions
Mitchell, Martin; Jacob, Dana – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2010
When asked once during an interview what her best quality is, Victoria Rowell simply responded with one word: Resilience. This article profiles Victoria Rowell, actress, author, dancer, and foster care advocate, who helps enrich the lives of foster youth through her charitable work and the development of the Rowell Foster Children Positive Plan.…
Descriptors: Dance, Foster Care, Resilience (Psychology), Youth