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Showing 1 to 15 of 67 results Save | Export
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Maleka Donaldson; Selma Benmoussa; Mia Hwang – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Making mistakes and receiving feedback are crucial elements of learning. Reading picturebooks with young children can help shape their perceptions of mistakes and model adaptive responses they can emulate, both in the short term and for years to come. This content analysis identified and analyzed the story characteristics of 25 recently published…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Error Patterns, Content Analysis
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Kersey, Alyssa J.; Cantlon, Jessica F. – Language Learning and Development, 2017
Counting is an evolutionarily recent cultural invention of the human species. In order for humans to have conceived of counting in the first place, certain representational and logical abilities must have already been in place. The focus of this article is the origins and nature of those fundamental mechanisms that promoted the emergence of the…
Descriptors: Computation, Brain, Cognitive Development, Number Concepts
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Ungar, Michael; Ghazinour, Mehdi; Richter, Jorg – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2013
Background: The development of Bronfenbrenner's bio-social-ecological systems model of human development parallels advances made to the theory of resilience that progressively moved from a more individual (micro) focus on traits to a multisystemic understanding of person-environment reciprocal processes. Methods: This review uses…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Individual Development, Holistic Approach, Children
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Reyes, Iliana – Reading Research Quarterly, 2012
The dual purposes of this review are, first, to synthesize the extant research on biliteracy, focusing particularly on children and youths and, second, to clarify key terms and phenomena in this developing field. The review is organized into three areas of research: (1) individual biliteracy development, (2) biliteracy in family and community…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Synthesis, Multiple Literacies, Literature Reviews
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Ponte, Petra; Ronnerman, Karin – Educational Action Research, 2009
Action research can be understood as a complex interplay between local circumstances and local research traditions, embedded in their turn in local intellectual-philosophical traditions, national as well as international. Because of this interplay it is questionable whether it would be particularly fruitful to look for 'typical local forms of…
Descriptors: Action Research, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy
Ollhoff, Jim – 1996
This paper explores several theories of human development, with particular attention to the development of social interaction. Part 1 compares and contrasts major developmental theories, including those of Freud, Erikson, Piaget, Kohlberg, Kegan, Fowler, and Selman. From birth to 1 year, infants are laying the foundation that will guide their…
Descriptors: Child Development, Friendship, Individual Development, Interaction
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Cole, Pamela M.; Putnam, Frank W. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1992
Proposes model based on developmental psychopathology for conceptualizing effects of child sexual abuse. Argues that incest has negative effects on self and social functioning, by jeopardizing self-definition and integration, self-regulatory processes, and sense of security and trust in relationships. Reviews self and social development…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Development, Incest, Individual Development
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Kahn, Peter H., Jr. – Developmental Review, 1997
Reviews literature on biophilia hypothesis that children have fundamental, genetically based propensity to affiliate with other living organisms. Identifies three concerns: (1) genetic basis of biophilia; (2) existence of seemingly negative affiliations with nature; and (3) quality of supporting evidence. Presents structural-developmental approach…
Descriptors: Affiliation Need, Child Development, Children, Developmental Psychology
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Josephs, Ingrid E.; Fuhrer, Urs – Developmental Review, 1998
Examines Simmel's principle of cultivation whereby the cultivated mind is constructed through ongoing transactions of people with their cultural environment, cultural forms currently overlooked. Cultural forms result from externalizations of former person-culture transactions. Argues that development is structured through person-culture…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Cultural Context
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Lewis, Marc D. – Child Development, 2000
Argues that dynamic systems approaches may provide an explanatory framework based on general scientific principles for developmental psychology, using principles of self-organization to explain how novel forms emerge without predetermination and become increasingly complex with development. Contends that self-organization provides a single…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages, Individual Development
Saraswathi, T. S.; Dutta, Ranjana – 1987
Third in a series, this review examines progress made in research in developmental psychology, primarily in India, between 1976 and 1984. Focusing on physical, motor, and mental development, Section I discusses physical development and growth norms as well as factors influencing physical development. Section II, centering on cognitive, perceptual,…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Foreign Countries, Individual Development
Schiller, Pam – Child Care Information Exchange, 1997
Summarizes findings in brain research that directly impact how caregivers interact with young children: (1) interplay between genes and environment; (2) contributions of early experiences to brain structure; (3) effects of early interactions on brain "wiring"; (4) the non-linear progress of development; and (5) children's biological…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Early Childhood Education
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Dalzell, Heidi J. – Roeper Review, 1998
Explores giftedness from infancy to adolescence within a psychodynamic developmental framework. Gifted development is discussed in terms of drive, ego functions, object relations, and self-experience. Also discussed are the history of giftedness, gifted infants and preschoolers, gifted school-age children, and giftedness in male and female…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages
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Elder, Glen H., Jr. – Child Development, 1998
When pioneering longitudinal studies of child development extended into adulthood, they generated issues that could not be addressed satisfactorily by available theories, including the recognition that individual lives are influenced by their ever-changing historical context and that human development concepts should apply to processes across the…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Child Development, Context Effect, Developmental Psychology
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Fish, Linda Stone – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2000
Describes a method for understanding child and relational growth, building on Wynne's (1984) epigenetic model of relational systems. Proposes that parent-child complementary relationships mature through Wynne's developmental stages via symmetrical struggles, and that these struggles are necessary ingredients in the development of the relationships…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Family Counseling, Family Relationship
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