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Edita Gzoyan; Narine Margaryan – History of Education, 2025
During the Armenian Genocide, the Ottoman Empire's Young Turk government forcibly transferred and assimilated thousands of Armenian children into Turkish society. After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War, Armenian and international bodies and individuals began to liberate the transferred children. However, they encountered…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Cultural Awareness, Children
Nóirín Hayes – Education 3-13, 2024
The ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, particularly Article 12 on children's right to participate in matters affecting them, provides a rationale for including the voices of young children when seeking to better understand their lives. Early childhood educators collaborate and converse with young children in their daily…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Childrens Rights, Young Children
Jennifer Farrar; Evelyn Arizpe; Rachel Lees – Education 3-13, 2024
This article offers an update on key developments in research related visual literacy, children's reading and children's literature. Beginning with an overview of the field, we chart several distinctive 'turns' or research trajectories: the aesthetic, the intercultural or empathic, and the ethical. We then consider how questions of power,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reading Research, Visual Literacy, Visual Aids
Muireann Ranta – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2023
This article demonstrates how implementing a rights-based research methodology can contribute to the theory and practice of climate change research and education with young children. The argument stems from a child rights-based participatory study that sought to explore young children's own perspectives of Nature under the education right, Article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Rights, Children, Treaties
Hannah B. Bayne; Jaqueline M. Swank; Nicholas Gage – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Empathy is a key component of socioemotional skills and contributes to prosocial responses and relational closeness. There remain challenges to accurately assess children's empathy, particularly given the reliance on external observer reports, and the lack of frameworks for how empathy may manifest differently at various developmental stages. In…
Descriptors: Children, Empathy, Evaluation Methods
Christian Giang; Loredana Addimando; Luca Botturi; Lucio Negrini; Alessandro Giusti; Alberto Piatti – Journal for STEM Education Research, 2023
Technologies have become an essential part of the daily life of our children. Consequently, artifacts that imply the early adoption of abstract thinking affect the imagination of children and young people in relation to the world of technology, now much more than they did in the past. With the emerging importance of robots in many aspects of our…
Descriptors: Robotics, Freehand Drawing, Childrens Art, Science Fiction
Karen Coats – Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 2023
In 2016, "Last Stop on Market Street," an American picturebook by Matt de la Pena, won the Newberry Medal, a Caldecott Honor, and a Coretta Scott King illustrator honor. In March 2021, Dr Seuss Enterprises, after working "with a panel of experts, including educators," decided to cease publishing "And to Think I Saw in on…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Diversity, Reading, Childrens Literature
Anna Aluffi Pentini – Intercultural Education, 2024
The contribution deals critically with the issue of citizenship and children's rights, identifying a silent void starting from the change we have witnessed with the progressive questioning of the principles, secular, and religious, of adult authority and the sacrosanct affirmation rights of minors and their defence against violence and abuse. This…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Citizenship, Religious Factors, Child Abuse
Iris Duhn – Global Studies of Childhood, 2025
This article delves into the intricate relationship between children's rights and the broader landscape of human and more-than-human rights in times of planetary pluri-crises. While acknowledging the historical significance of the United Nation adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) as a late 20th-century milestone, this…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Climate, Children, Foreign Countries
García-González, Macarena – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
A long-asked question in children's literature studies is how the child reads the very same book we (adults) have read. In 1984, Peter Hunt argued for a "childist criticism" proposing that young readers' multiple individual responses to literature should inform adults' critical practice. In this article, I propose that affect theory and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Literary Criticism, Children, Affective Behavior
Sally Power; Chris Taylor – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
Wales is often compared favourably to other countries because of its commitment to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and lower levels of school exclusions. Systematic analysis of policy documents reveals the dominance of a rights-based discourse in approaching the challenge of school exclusions, which are explained in terms of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Discourse Analysis
Christina Belcher; Kimberly Maich; Kristin Legault; Bethany Torraville – Exceptionality Education International, 2023
This article investigates how picture books published in 2019 represent Autism to children, with special attention as to whether those representations overtly include terminology around autism or covertly present autistic characters. Although both overt and covert representations occur in children's literature, covert representation may or may not…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Labeling (of Persons), Children
Kristy L. Armitage; Sam J. Gilbert – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Humans routinely use external thinking tools, like pencil and paper, maps, and calculators, to solve cognitive problems that would have once been solved internally. As many youth face unprecedented exposure to increasingly capable technological aids, there is a growing pressure to understand children's cognitive offloading capacities and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Ability, Children, Problem Solving
Russell W. Dalton – Religious Education, 2024
Many children's Bible lessons, even those that are intended to be child-oriented lessons, are consciously or unconsciously designed in ways that serve adult agendas for children rather than serving the interests of children themselves. By engaging the growing movements of childism and childist biblical interpretation, as well as studies in how…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Biblical Literature, Children, Teaching Methods
Ignasi Grau – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) affirms parental rights in education through a simple statement: "Parents have a prior right to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their children." However, in subsequent international treaties, this right is framed with greater complexity. Notably, the International…
Descriptors: Parent Rights, International Law, Civil Rights, Children