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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Stefan Vermeent; Ethan S. Young; Meriah L. DeJoseph; Anna-Lena Schubert; Willem E. Frankenhuis – Developmental Science, 2024
Childhood adversity can lead to cognitive deficits or enhancements, depending on many factors. Though progress has been made, two challenges prevent us from integrating and better understanding these patterns. First, studies commonly use and interpret raw performance differences, such as response times, which conflate different stages of cognitive…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Trauma, Cognitive Processes, Children
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Alejandra Abufhele; David Bravo; Florencia Lopez-Boo; Pamela Soto-Ramirez – Comparative Education Review, 2024
The learning and developmental losses from preprimary program closures due to COVID-19 may be unprecedented. These disruptions early in life can be long-lasting. Although there is evidence about the effects of school closures on older children, there is scarce evidence on such losses for children in their early years. This article is among the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Child Development
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Savopoulos, Priscilla; Brown, Stephanie; Anderson, Peter J.; Gartland, Deirdre; Bryant, Christina; Giallo, Rebecca – Child Development, 2022
The cognitive functioning of children who experience intimate partner violence (IPV) has received less attention than their emotional-behavioral outcomes. Drawing upon data from 615 (48.4% female) 10-year-old Australian-born children and their mothers (9.6% of mothers born in non-English speaking countries) participating in a community-based…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cognitive Processes, Children, Family Violence
Danielle Dalgin-Cohen – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Trauma can have deep impacts on children and the development of their frontal lobe. It is within the frontal lobe that executive functioning skills such as time management, work completion, and organization of materials are housed (De Bellis & Zisk, 2014; Kavanaugh et al., 2016). Symptoms outlined as executive functions are those that are also…
Descriptors: Trauma, Early Experience, High School Students, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Amanda M. Ferrara; Carlomagno C. Panlilio – Grantee Submission, 2020
The present study investigated the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and reading comprehension as well as the relationship between current trauma symptoms and reading comprehension. Each of these relationships were investigated as being mediated by academic metacognition (i.e., knowledge and regulation of cognition while…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Early Experience, Child Development, Reading Comprehension
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Willis, Mariam – Parenting for High Potential, 2012
Empathy is the ability to understand and feel for the situation of another human being and is shaped by seeing others react when distressed; by imitating what they see, children develop a repertoire of empathic responses. When children see other people in pain, their brains become active in the same regions that process the experience of pain…
Descriptors: Gifted, Empathy, Emotional Development, Emotional Intelligence
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2011
Being able to focus, hold, and work with information in mind, filter distractions, and switch gears is like having an air traffic control system at a busy airport to manage the arrivals and departures of dozens of planes on multiple runways. In the brain, this air traffic control mechanism is called executive functioning, a group of skills that…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Brain
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Langer, Jonas – Cognition, 1974
Formulates further propositions towards a comprehensive structural developmental theory of cognitive change with focus on: a) organization of subject's assimilatory operations and accomodatory figurations; b) intrinsic coordinations between the theoretical and empirical cognitions constructed, respectively, by these two kinds of functional…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Early Childhood Education
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2006
Early experience has a powerful and lasting influence on how the brain develops. The physical and chemical conditions that encourage the building of a strong, adaptive brain architecture are present early in life. As brains age, a number of changes lock in the ways information is processed, making it more difficult for the brain to change to other…
Descriptors: Brain, Early Experience, Child Development, Aging (Individuals)
Sigel, Irving – 1968
Representational competence refers to the individual's capability to respond appropriately to external representations. For example, a child engaged in a grouping task may collect together all like objects even if the group contains varying representations of the object, including (1) the object itself, (2) a three-dimensional likeness of the…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Associative Learning, Child Development, Classification
Moore, Raymond S.; And Others – 1975
This paper is an interdisciplinary review of literature related to early childhood education over the past five years. Although some references to infancy and toddlerhood are included, the emphasis is on children's learning and education in the preschool and primary grades (age 3 through age 9-10). Chapter I, The Early Childhood Problem, is an…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Early Childhood Education